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According to Victim, Most Of Us Who Returned With Children Are Abused, They Call Our Children Boko Haram Children

According to Victim, Most Of Us Who Returned With Children Are Abused, They Call Our Children Boko Haram Children

Amina Ali, a Chibok schoolgirl who was rescued, has bemoaned the mistreatment moms endure when they bring their kids back after being held captive—children who are sometimes referred to as “Boko Haram children.” She claimed that moving from Chibok town to Yola was a result of this stigma. She talked about all the challenges she has as a mother, and how no one is there to help her take care of her child. She emphasized the difficulties caused by her father’s passing and her aged mother’s inability to work. CONTINUE FULL READING>>>>>

She said in an interview with Arise TV, ”I’m facing a lot of challenges as a mother, nobody is helping me to take care of my baby. My mom is old and she can’t work to help me. And I lost my daddy and even my brother’s business is not going well.

Most of us who returned with children are abused, they call our childs Boko Haram children. And that made me to leave Chibok town because the trauma is unbearable. The number of people that the Boko Haram people have killed in Chibok is uncountable. These people have destroyed the Chibok local government. And some of my friends, parents, and cousins have died because of the Chibok kidnapping.”

Amina Ali Nkeki is a Nigerian Former hostage of Boko Haram. She was one of the 276 female students that the terrorist groups kidnapped from Chibok in 2014. After 57 of the girls escaped in the first few months, the remaining 219 were held for several years. Amina was one of the first freed girls.

She was found on the 17th of May 2016 by joint task force along with a four-month-old child and an alleged Boko Haram member, Mohammed Hayatu, who described himself as her husband. CONTINUE FULL READING>>>>>

Victim Reveals "Sometimes In School, They Look Down On Us Because We Are Chibok Girls And That Really Hurt Me

Victim Reveals “Sometimes In School, They Look Down On Us Because We Are Chibok Girls And That Really Hurt Me

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