On a Friday night in September 2014, Boko
Haram fighters attacked the village of Guza in northeastern Nigeria, killing
and kidnapping young boys as they burned homes and looted.
Ismael,
now 15, survived that night of terror and hid in his house for 40 days, afraid
that if he ventured outside for even a moment, terrorists would abduct him —
the fate that has befallen many other boys in his region.
“My
elder sister advised me to dress like a girl and flee to the nearby villages to
save myself,” Ismael said through a translator in the town of Maroua, Cameroon,
where he recently arrived.
After
an odyssey that included more than two years in detention in Cameroon for
suspected ties to Boko Haram, Ismael is now being assisted by a local
organization, The Cameroon Institute for Children. Ismael will go to school,
and eventually to be reunited with his surviving family members.
But
for now, he is one of about 85,000 Nigerians who have fled to Cameroon to
escape the brutality of Boko Haram.
Struggling to cope
Authorities
in Cameroon, where Nigerians fleeing for their lives have been arriving for the
past few years, say the government is struggling with the economic, security
and humanitarian impact of the tide of refugees.
“It
is clear the war comes at a high cost,” Prime Minister Philemon Yang told a visiting
delegation from the U.N. Security Council on Friday. It is the first time the
Council has come to Cameroon, a sign of its concern that not enough attention
has been paid to the threat to peace and security that Boko Haram poses.
The
prime minister said his country's coffers have been severely depleted by the
drop in global oil prices. “We are asking that the international community
gives us support, that the international community supports our programs,
supports us financially and especially supports us eventually for economic
development in the region,” he told the Security Council envoys.
Refugees need assistance
In
addition to the more than 85,000 refugees it hosts from Nigeria, and more than
150,000 others who have fled sectarian violence in the neighboring Central
African Republic, Cameroon has also seen nearly 200,000 of its own citizens
displaced by Boko Haram, as the terrorists spread into isolated and insecure
areas in the country's Far North Region, close to the Nigerian border.
Boko
Haram has conducted 75 suicide attacks in Cameroon since 2014, according to Max
Schott, the chief U.N. humanitarian coordinator in the country. Even more
troubling is that the group uses women and children to carry out most of those
attacks.
“It
is essential to address the root causes of the crisis by addressing poverty,
marginalization and underdevelopment,” Schott told the delegation from U.N.
headquarters, “while continuing to expand humanitarian assistance.”
But
some progress has been made against the terrorists.
“The
enemy is now on the back foot, and being held on the back foot and scrambling
for cover in the forests,” Cameroon's defense minister, Joseph BetiAssomo, told
the Security Council visitors. A combination of better equipment and training
for his soldiers and improved bilateral cooperation with Nigeria has
contributed to the gains, he said.
International attention
The
delegation of U.N. Security Council ambassadors is on a four-country mission to
the Lake Chad Basin — Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria — to see first-hand the
effects Boko Haram have had on the population there.
“We
came in order to show this will no longer be a neglected crisis,” British
Ambassador Matthew Rycroft said.
The
diplomats met separately Friday in Yaounde with President Paul Biya and Prime
Minister Yang, as well as a number of ministers and U.N. agency
representatives. They then ventured north to Maroua, a 90-minute flight from
the Cameroonian capital, to meet with civil society representatives, displaced
persons, refugees and humanitarians. An expected meeting at an IDP camp did not
take place, but some residents came to see the diplomats at the airport and
discuss their situation.
“When
we go back to New York we will not sit idle,” Senegal's ambassador FodeSeck promised
reporters. “This visit must have some follow-up,” he added.
Pic
IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde is
greeted by Cameroon's Prime Minister Philemon Yang, right, upon arriving at the
Yaounde airport, Jan. 7, 2016
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