SHOCKER: 117 Children Used By Boko Haram Since 2014
Since 2014 by Boko Haram, You Won't Believe the Number of Children Used in Suicide Attacks
A new revelation has been made about the alarming number of kids who were used as suicide bombers by the deadly Boko Haram sect.
The UNICEF revealed on Wednesday that an “alarming” number of
children, most of them girls, have been used by Boko Haram as suicide
bombers in the first months of 2017.
It is widely known fact that the Islamists have increasingly been
using children to attack crowded markets, mosques and camps for
internally displaced people in northeast Nigeria and the broader Lake
Chad region.
Experts said the number of children used in suicide attacks by Boko
Haram surged to 27 in the first quarter of this year, compared to nine
over the same period in 2016.
Since 2014, 117 children — the “vast majority” of them
girls — have been used to carry out attacks in public places across
Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon, said the report by the United Nations
children’s agency UNICEF.
Four children were used to carry out bomb attacks in 2014, 56 in
2015, 30 in 2016 and 27 in the first three months of 2017, reported
UNICEF.
“The increase reflects an alarming tactic by the insurgents,” said the report.
“This is the worst possible use of children in conflict,” said Marie-Pierre Poirier, UNICEF’s regional director for West and Central Africa.
In a separate statement, UNICEF said it was concerned that children
were being held by the Nigerian military for alleged association with
Boko Haram militants.
“They are held in military barracks, separated from their
parents, without medical follow-up, without psychological support,
without education, under conditions and for durations that are unknown”, said Patrick Rose, a UNICEF regional coordinator.
Last year, Amnesty International warned in a May report that
children were dying in the Giwa barracks detention centre in Maiduguri,
northeast Nigeria.
“Babies and young children have died in appalling conditions in military detention,” said the rights organisation.
On Monday, the Nigerian army released nearly 600 children, women
and elderly from Giwa barracks described as a “major step” by aid
agencies toward the protection and reintegration of the children back
into society.
Boko Haram has been largely weakened since Nigerian President
Muhammadu Buhari came into power in 2015, but the Lake Chad region
remains unstable with some areas still completely inaccessible.
The Boko Haram conflict has killed more than 20,000 people since 2009 and displaced more than 2.6 million from their homes.
Today the region is suffering from a severe food crisis. The UN
warned Tuesday of a growing risk of mass deaths from starvation among
people living in the Horn of Africa, Yemen and Nigeria.
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