SOLDIERS, residents flee Borno towns
Chief of Defence Staff, Air Marshal Alex Badeh
| credits: http://www.mydailynewswatchng.com
| credits: http://www.mydailynewswatchng.com
These
are hard times for residents of border towns on Borno State following
the refusal of the military authorities to heed their calls for the
deployment of soldiers to protect the embattled villagers.
As a result, the residents, who are said
to be in the throes of a serious food scarcity, have started fleeing
their homes to hills and caves while reportedly feeding on wild fruits.
Speaking to journalists on Tuesday in
Maiduguri, the immediate past vice chairman of Gwoza Local Government,
Mr. Francis Nduka, and Caretaker Committee Chairman, Dr. Hamman Ahmadu,
said the people of Gwoza East, affected by Boko Haram insurgency in six
border villagers, had fled into Gwoza hills and took refuge in mountain
caves for safety.
They said the people said they would only return if troops were deployed in the area.
According to them, staying in the affected villages would be suicidal.
Nduka said, “Our people have been
gripped with ‘fears and trauma for over two weeks, and have no any other
place to flee than to run into caves of Gathahure, Gjigga, Kunde,
Hwa’a, Hrazah and Hembe hill settlements.
As fleeing hill dwellers cannot come
down to the plains for food and water, they have resorted to eating wild
fruits and roots to survive since the villages had been attacked and
the insurgents believed to be lurking around.”
He said other villagers had fled to
Maiduguri for safety and depending on the relief materials coming from
the Gwoza Resettlement Committee, led by Dr. Asabe Bashir, who is also
the Borno State Commissioner for Commerce, Tourism and Investments.
Ahmadu, on his part, said, “More than 50
per cent of Gwoza council has been taken over by the insurgents. They
have torched houses in six affected border villages and towns, including
Ashgashiya, the district headquarters, 10 kilometres from Cameroonian
territory recently.
“But my fears and concern about the
destroyed villages in this council is that these boys are forcefully
recruiting youths into the sect, since they succeeded in taking over
Gwoza East last month.”
He appealed to the military authorities
to deploy more personnel in the affected areas in order to wrestle them
from the insurgents, noting that only Pulka and Kirawa towns have troops
to protect peoples’ lives and property
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