Reverend Enoch Mark waited for his daughter as long as he could.
For half a year after Boko Haram gunmen snatched 17-year-old Monica from her dormitory in Chibok, he stayed on in the town even as militants repeatedly attacked it, hoping each day she might return.
“I wanted to run
somewhere safe, but I had be there when she came back,” said the father
of eight, whose family is among 276 others who suffered the same fate
last April.
But the days trickled on
with no news of Monica, and a year later Mark – no relation to this
reporter – speaks quietly about his new reality.
“After six months I
realised I had to move the rest my family somewhere safe, so we left
Chibok.” He took a deep breath before continuing: “Also, I’ve accepted
it isn’t possible that all our girls are still alive. But I’m a
reverend. I’ve buried other people’s children, I carry out condolence
visits. I have no choice but to be positive because if not, how can I
encourage my own community?
The abduction that catapulted Boko Haram
into the global limelight was just the tip of almost six years of
carnage from a group seeking to impose a caliphate on Africa’s largest
and religiously mixed nation. Countless other families have been left
adrift in a limbo of uncertainty. According to Amnesty International,
2,000 women and girls have been abducted since the start of 2014.
But as historic
elections this month ushered in a new government, many hope for a break
from a past administration often shrouded in secrecy and public blunders
in its dealings with the sect.
A key challenge for the
incoming government of Muhammadu Buhari, a former dictator who crushed a
similar religious sect during the 1980s, will be how it handles Boko
Haram.
Outgoing President
Goodluck Jonathan’s failure to decisively counter the threat was a key
issue in elections this month, with gains by the Islamist movement forcing a six-week poll delay as a regional force launched a successful offensive to drive them back.
It has been
battle-hardened troops from desert neighbours Chad, and to a lesser
extent neighbouring Niger, that have taken the lead in expelling Boko
Haram from the major towns in the north in just a matter of weeks.
Buhari appears to have
learnt from the past. Within hours of winning, the president-elect’s
first speech addressed the security situation head on.
“Boko Haram will soon know the strength of our collective will. We should spare no effort,” he said. “In tackling the insurgency, we have a tough and urgent job to do.”
On Monday, crowds
gathered in the capital, Abuja, to hold a rally to mark the anniversary
of the Chibok girls. “Security, security, security – that’s all I’m
asking from this government,” said Mohammed Salihu, a supporter who fled
his north-eastern home-state of Borno to escape Boko Haram’s bombings
last year.
For those caught
directly in Boko Haram’s bloody dragnet, hopes are painfully high.
“Buhari is a strong man, a military man. I know that had Buhari been
president when our girls were abducted, they wouldn’t have been gone so
long. I really believe that,” said Samuel Yaga, whose daughter Rebecca
is among the missing Chibok girls. “I’m eagerly and honestly hoping for
Buhari to bring them back.”
Still, the incoming
administration’s key task may be not just holding onto but rebuilding
the territories it has taken back from the militants. More than 1
million are scattered in camps across Nigeria and neighbouring Niger and Cameroon.
Ismail Gava, a resident
of Gwoza, which the sect held as its headquarters until last month, said
he welcomed Nigerian troops when they entered the town, but soon
realised the biggest opportunity was a means to escape – previously
forbidden when the town was under Boko Haram rule. “There are bodies
rotting in the streets there. At least I can try to make a new life
here,” said the farmer, who has since moved to a neighbouring state.
Meanwhile Mark, the reverend whose daughter is missing, has adopted a stoic tone, despite cautious optimism about Buhari.
“I was told my daughter
refused to give up when they came for the girls; she said she will
rather die than change [convert]. So they marked her,” he said.
“If really my Monica is
dead because she stood up for herself, then I’m the proudest father and
reverend in the world. And if she’s alive, I know she will come back.” -
culled
Hmm..where ever they
are,I hope they are safe and still alive.I dont know why i still find
it hard to believe that over 200 girls were kidnapped and cannot be
found...NO TRACE?
Its just shocking that
this has happened!...Where are these girls and how many are they that
they can be successfully hidden like sardine in tins for so ling?
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