Harsh conditions in IDP camps must be redressed to make their stay meaningful
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) were uprooted from their traditional homesteads by insecurity challenges that made their domicile in those places of abode untenable for continuing survival. They’ve been forced to take up residence in camps where the least that is expected are living conditions that should sustain decent if rudimentary existence, even when these conditions fall below the standards of living they knew in their beleaguered communities.
Neither is it expected that IDP camps should become a permanent abode, but rather that challenges which led to their displacement should be earnestly redressed by the authorities so they could return as soon as is practicable to their traditional homes. They are victims of emergencies, and emergencies should by no means translate into permanent conditions of living.
The experiences of IDPs across Nigeria fall far short of these expectations, as they face harsh conditions in camps where they’ve been resettled. Recent reports said three persons died in an IDP camp in Shiroro council area of Niger State for lack of healthcare and food shortages. The desk officer at Gwada camp, Hussaini Alhassan, was reported further saying two newborns died at birth owing to inadequate healthcare and lack of other basic amenities.
He spoke during the distribution of N30million worth of humanitarian relief items donated by a charity known as the North South Power Foundation (NSPF). The intervention, according to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN), covered 12 IDP settlements in Shiroro and Munya council areas of Niger State.
Alhassan also said IDPs who fled Kaore and Bassa communities in Shiroro because of insecurity had lived in Gwada camp for more than six years. He lamented that despite their long stay there, the camps yet lacked adequate healthcare services, also faced shortages of food and other basic necessities that make life difficult for displaced families.
Another official, Yusuf Kuta, who is the coordinator of Kuta camp, reported the death of an elderly woman at the camp. He added that about 300 displaced persons – mostly women and children – lacked food and other essentials, which made the intervention by NSPF timely.
Presenting the donated items, Head of NSPF, Dr. Kemi Adekanye, said the foundation was moved by the plight of the displaced persons, having observed their struggles with hunger and other needs. Represented by Dr. Samson Esumeh, consultant on public relations to the foundation, Adekanye said the gesture was in line with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) on food security and hunger elimination.
The occasion of NSPF’s donations freshly drew attention to living conditions in IDP camps, especially in northern areas where people were displaced by activities of bandits and insurgents. Surveys showed that having escaped attacks by violent criminals and armed gangs in their villages, many displaced persons now face new challenges such as harsh deprivations and rights abuses, including sexual harassment that women and girls in IDP camps reported. With little protection, IDPs are also at the risk of being kidnapped by bandits who operate close to resettlement camps.
An agency report early last year cited a female resident of an IDP camp in the Northwest saying since arriving there, she had suffered various forms of violence. “We experience different kinds of harassment from bad actors within our host community. Our rooms don’t have doors, making it easy for attackers,” she said.
Harsh conditions faced in terms of access to food and money forced some IDPs to resort to survival endeavours like gathering firewood from surrounding bushes of the expansive Lake Chad shores. But this only exposed them to hazards of raids by terror agents that their resettlement in camps was meant to shield them from.
In March 2024, a large group of youthful IDPs in the highly populated unofficial camp at Gamboru Ngala, Borno State, got abducted by terrorists when they went to fetch firewood in the bushes. Reports said a few of them managed to escape as the abductors herded away through the jungle, and traced their way back to camp. But many more remained in the hold of the terrorists, with the fate of some not certain even unto this day.
Security forces under the current administration of President Bola Ahmed Tinubu have done remarkably well in dealing terrorists and bandits a heavy hand and curtailing their exploits. We hope that this feat will translate to restoring peace to traditional communities from which the IDPs were displaced, so they can return to their normal lives in those communities.
But even while at the camps, their welfare must be safeguarded so that their lot and experiences at the supposed places of refuge would not on the contrary be double jeopardy.
The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has carried out a headcount of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) from the three communities recently attacked by suspected herdsmen in Akwanga, Nasarawa State.
Mustafa Maihaja, Director-General of NEMA, stated this on Saturday during the headcount in Akwanga.
Maihaja, who was represented by Mr Ladan Ayuba, Director in charge of North-Central, said the agency was in Akwanga to take inventory of the number of people displaced and the level of damage done for the purpose of providing relief materials to victims.
“We have the mandate of the DG to profile all the IDPs from Mante, Nidan and Numa villages of Andaha in Akwanga LGA, that were recently attacked.
“We also have the mandate to take inventory of the number of persons killed and the properties destroyed during the attacks in the communities,” he said.
He noted that the exercise was aimed at assisting the agency in its planning towards bringing succour to affected persons.
Similarly, Allu Maga, Executive Secretary, Nasarawa State Emergency Management Agency (NASEMA) said the headcount would also assist the state government in distribution of relief materials to victims.
Maga said that already, the government had taken care of the burial rites of those killed during the attack.
According to him, the government is also footing the bills of those injured during the attack, that are receiving treatment at various hospitals.
Reacting, Anthony Yamusa, District Head of Akwanga, who represented the Chun-Mada, Samson Gamu-Yare, expressed gratitude to the two agencies for the visit.
He further advised the people to avoid spreading rumours which were only escalating the situation.
News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that NEMA, NASEMA, in company of Sen. Philip Gyunka, representing Nasarawa North and security agencies, visited Mante, Nidan and Numa villages that were attacked by suspected herdsmen.
The United Nations International Children’s Education Fund (UNICEF) says over 3.6 million people lack access to potable water, sanitation and hygiene services in Nigeria.
UNICEF’s Representative in the country, Mr Mohamed Fall, made this known on Friday in a statement to commemorate World Water Day scheduled for March 22 with the 2019 theme: “Living no one behind”.
Fall identified 1.1 million as Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) as a result of violence and conflict, noting that many of them are out-of-reach in remote areas still impacted by conflict.
“About 800,000 people are in hard-to-reach areas and 79 per cent of these are children and women.
“In Nigeria, conflict has created huge challenges for people living in the Northeast of the country, where violence has affected their ability to access water and sanitation, leading to diseases such as cholera.
“In the North-east 5,365 people were affected by cholera, with 61 dying in 2017, while 12,643 people were affected in 2018 and 175 died of the disease,” Fall said.
UNICEF Executive Director, Ms Henrietta Fore noted that children below the age of 15 in countries affected by protracted conflict on the average, are three times more likely to die from diarrhoea due to lack of access to WASH facilities than as a result of direct violence.
Fore, who quoted UNICEF’s latest report titled: “Water Under Fire”, said the odds were already stacked against children living through prolonged conflicts.
“The odds are already stacked against children living through prolonged conflicts with many unable to reach a safe water source.
“The reality is that there are more children who die from lack of access to safe water than by bullets,” she said.
Fore said that UNICEF has intensified efforts to scale-up life-saving responses, especially in IDP camps to ensure quality and sustainability of WASH services and facilities.
She further noted that the agency was also working to minimise the risk of WASH-related diseases and provide preventive measures against cholera and other water-borne diseases.
According to her, without safe and effective WASH services, children are at risk of malnutrition and preventable diseases including diarrhoea, typhoid, cholera and polio.
“Girls are particularly affected: They are vulnerable to sexual violence as they collect water or venture out to use latrines. They deal with affronts to their dignity as they bathe and manage menstrual hygiene.
“And they miss classes during menstruation if their schools have no suitable water and sanitation facilities.
“These threats are exacerbated during conflict when deliberate and indiscriminate attacks destroy infrastructure, injure personnel and cut off the power that keeps water, sanitation and hygiene systems running.
“Armed conflict also limits access to essential repair equipment and consumables such as fuel or chlorine – which can be depleted, rationed, diverted or blocked from delivery. Far too often, essential services are deliberately denied,” she noted.
“Deliberate attacks on water and sanitation are attacks on vulnerable children. Water is a basic right. It is a necessity for life,” she added.
Internally-Displaced Persons ( IDPs ) are being disenfranchised and mischievous politicians may be manipulating votes in IDP camps, civil society activists have alleged.
Although INEC spokesman, Mr. Andya Terkaa, told The Nation that everything was being done to enable all displaced persons with PVC to vote, the Benue State Civil Society Coalition says it discovered arrangements were made for voting in only two out of the eight existing IDP camps.
Since the bloody bandits’ attacks that reached a high point in January last year, thousands of displaced Benue indigenes have remained in IDP camps amidst unconfirmed reports that some individuals who dared to return home were being shot by unknown assailants.
“We went to great lengths to sensitise IDPs to vote and more than twenty thousand of them collected PVC but only those in two camps are to vote,” the coalition’s Executive Director, Ms Helen Tegh Tegh told The Nation during an interaction at the office in Makurdi on Friday.
“The two IDP camps where voting is really taking place are Anyin and Ugba camps, both of which are in Logo local government area.
“For reasons of security, lack of transport fare and loss of homes during last year’s attacks, thousands of IDPs who were told to go and vote in their respective villages will not be able to use those votes,” Helen Tegh Tegh who is also the Executive Director of Community Link Initiatives stated.
However, INEC asserted that there is no problem to worry about.
According to INEC spokesman, Andya Terkaa, the commission did a profiling of ODPs and made provision for adequate number of voting points after realizing that most IDPs cannot go home to vote.
“The profiling data was taken to Abuja for further analysis and approval and now, the commission is providing IDP Voting Points so that people will not be disenfranchised.
“In normal polling units, there would be just one or two ballot boxes but several will be provided at the Voting Point, based on the profiling and if it means giving them fifteen ballot boxes, the commission will give them,” he explained.
Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) don’t expect to experience starvation in their camps. So it isn’t surprising IDPs at Teachers Village Camp in Maiduguri, Borno State, took to the streets on February 5 to protest food shortage in their camp. The Teachers Village Camp is one of the largest, with 20,000 displaced persons.
The protesters, mostly women and children from Baga, Kukawa and Monguno, blocked the Maiduguri-Kano Road and caused a gridlock. They complained that they had been neglected by the government. They also said only three in 10 people in the camp got food cards that were issued by the Red Cross earlier that day.
“It took the intervention of officials of the mobile police to bring the situation under control. The policemen dispersed the protesters when they reportedly fired canisters of tear gas at them,” a report said.
Fatima Ibrahim, an IDP from Kukawa, was quoted as saying food had been in short supply at Teachers Village Camp for two months now. She complained: “We are hungry; our children are seriously hungry. Thirty persons share a bag of rice. We are in need of foodstuffs; please tell them to bring food for us.”
Sadly, Boko Haram’s reign of terror, particularly in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states, has made about 1.8 million people homeless and caused a humanitarian crisis. The United Nations recently lamented the upsurge in Boko Haram attacks in the Northeast, and its effect on the civilian population: “It is heart-wrenching to see so many of these people living in congested camps, or sleeping outside with no shelter.” Lack of food compounds the problem.
This is not the first time IDPs have protested food shortage. In one striking case last March, hundreds of IDPs from Fufore and Malkohi camps in Adamawa State, mainly women and children, had appealed to President Muhammadu Buhari to intervene in their plight. The two camps had about 3,000 IDPs, largely from Borno, who had been waiting to be evacuated to their state of origin for over two years. The protesters had complained that many families in the camps were faced with critical living conditions as a result of lack of food.
There is no doubt that the huge number of IDPs in the various camps poses a serious challenge to the Federal Government and humanitarian organisations. According to the Vice Chairman of the Presidential Committee on Northeast Initiatives (PCNI), Tijani Tumsah, the Federal Government spent N10 billion on food for victims of insurgency in the Northeast in the last two and a half years.
Following the launch of an education intervention programme in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states on February 4, Tumsah stated that about N54, 000, the cost of a 25-kilogrammes food basket of seven items, was spent on a family monthly. With about 1.8m IDPs in the region, feeding the displaced persons obviously requires a lot of money. “Food is a major consumer of our funds,” Tumsah said. “Before the inception of PCNI, there have been various interventions by various organisations, but when we came on board, we have to coordinate and fill in gaps wherever they exist.”
Tragically, the number of IDPs has stretched food insecurity and malnutrition in the camps to emergency levels. A great number of IDPs need immediate food assistance. As the war on terror continues in the country’s Northeast, the IDPs’ food shortage problem is a terrorism-related issue crying for a solution.
Food abundance should be a priority in the camps. There is room for food supply by humanitarian organisations to support the government’s efforts. Food shortage worsens the woes of IDPs in camps that are supposed to soften their hardship.
The House of Representatives Committee on Internally Displaced Persons ( IDPs ), Refugees and North-East Initiatives on Wednesday faulted the recourse to teargas to disperse protesting hungry lDPs at Teachers Village camp in Maiduguri.
It asked the Federal Government to intervene by ensuring immediate supply of the desperately needed food items by the displaced persons.
It also demanded sanctions for the perpetrators and beneficiaries of the inhumane crime.
It said the committee is ready to share vital information capable of fishing out the culprits no matter how highly placed.
It, however, expressed regrets that 32,000 IDPs have crossed over to Cameroon between Mid-December 2018 and 31 January, 2019.
The committee, in a statement by its chairman, Muhammed Sani Zorro, said massive consignments of these food and non-food items procured with state resources are either at varying stages of expiration or being shared (in the open) to highly-placed politicians for use as campaign tools.
The statement said: “The House of Representatives Committee on IDPs, Refugees and North-East Initiatives wishes to express sadness over yesterday’s protest by Internally Displaced Persons (lDPs) at Teachers Village camp in Maiduguri, and the needless resort to the use of tear gas to disperse them by the police.
“It is on record that the authorities concerned have continued to deprive the starving and desperate IDPs of food and non-food Items whose everyday complaints, pleas, and outcries only fell on the deaf ears of insensitive officials charged with their care.
“Sadly, massive consignments of these food and nonfood items procured with state resources are now either at varying stages of expiration, or are being shared (in the open) to highly-placed politicians for use as campaign tools in the countdown to our general elections.
“Evidence also abound of the age-old diversion and illegal sale of humanitarian assistance items in the open market. This is evil at its best, reprehensible and unacceptable to all men and women of conscience.”
The committee appealed to the Federal Government to ensure immediate supply of food and essential items to the IDPs.
The statement added: “The Committee urges the Federal Government to act as a matter of supreme urgency by ensuring immediate supply of the desperately needed items without further delay and punish the perpetrators and beneficiaries of the inhumane crime.
“As part of its oversight functions, the committee is willing and ready to share vital information capable of fishing out the culprits no matter how highly placed.
On the general election, it pleaded with the Independent Electoral Commission (INEC) to allow the IDPs to vote wherever they are.
“Such flexibility should be extended to affected victims in Zamfara, Katsina, Kaduna and any other state(s),” the committee pleaded.
The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) on Tuesday dismissed as misleading reports alleging that some Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) staged a demonstration to protest lack of food at the Teachers’ Village IDPs camp in Maiduguri.
But a cross-section of the protesting IDPs, told NAN that they were demonstrating over lack of food and shelter in the camp since their arrival about 40 days ago.
The protesters were taking refuge at the camp since January, sequel to the displacement of households from their homes due to Boko Haram insurgents’ attack in Baga and adjourning communities in Kukawa Local Government Area of Borno.
In a statement, Mr Sani Datti, the Head of Media and Public Relations of the agency, said that the protest was not triggered by lack of food and starvation in the camp, but rather due to the suspension of registration of the displaced persons by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
Datti said: “for record and purpose of clarity, though there was protest by some IDPs living in Teachers Village Camp, Maiduguri, it was never caused by hunger or lack of food supplies.
“The protest was actually caused by interruption of profiling exercise of the IDPs by International Committee of Red Cross (ICRC), who were at the camp to extend their humanitarian support to complement the effort of partners.
“Consequently, some people outside made attempt to be enumerated and this prompted some IDPs in the camp to chase them away and it resulted in commotion and riot.
“However, the situation has been immediately brought under control by the security operatives stationed at the camp and normalcy restored,” Datti said.
Datti said that the agency had continued to provide food items monthly to the IDPs in camps, host communities and liberated areas in Borno and Adamawa States.
According to him, the agency had conducted the monthly food distribution exercise at the camp on January 15, 2019, for the households, adding that the food ration was expected to sustain the households for one month.
Some aggrieved IDPs had staged a demonstration on Tuesday in Maiduguri, to protest alleged lack of food and shelter at the camp.
Hundreds of the displaced persons took to the streets, blocked the Maiduguri-Kano Road, and destroyed billboards and campaign posters of political parties candidates mounted by the road.
It took the intervention of the police, military and other security operatives to disperse the protesting IDPs.
We ate raw cassava inside bush for several days fleeing from herdsmen –Pupils
In the last four years, a number of public schools in Agatu, Logo and Guma local government areas of Benue State have been brutally attacked by suspected killer herdsmen, leaving the pupils either completely out of school or learning in deplorable conditions. According to the state’s universal education board (SUBEB), more than 50 public primary school structures were destroyed this year alone, forcing more than 20,000 children out of school and over 16,000 housed in different Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps. INNOCENT DURU, who visited the volatile areas, reports that most of the pupils are psychologically traumatised after the attacks which led to the death of some of their colleagues and teachers. Some of the survivors said they fed on raw cassava for several days roaming about in the bush after escaping from those who attacked their schools
Some pupils of RCM Primary School, Odugbehon, in Agatu LGA standing in their vandalised classroom
RCM Primary School, Ikyule, in Logo Local Government Area of Benue State, established in 1972, was one of the choice schools for members of the community who wanted sound and qualitative education for their wards and children. The 46-year old school is reputed to have produced many alumni who have excelled in their various life endeavours.
Today, the school, which used to be the pride of the community, is in ruins following myriad attacks by suspected herdsmen who allegedly set it ablaze in 2014. The entire roof and ceiling of the one block of six classrooms, tucked deep inside the expansive compound, has completely fallen apart. What remains of the school is a naked body of blocks that stretched slightly above the lintel level. The decaying structure is also now without windows and doors. All fittings were vandalised during the multiple raids, community members say.
The brutal attacks forced the school to close down. So, on the day that this reporter visited, instead of school children running around the compound or learning in classrooms, it was cows that were found grazing on the premises now surrounded by thick bush and growing trees. Shepherding the cows was a dark, slim herdsman holding a long stick across his shoulders.
Following the mindless attacks and apprehension that the assailants were not far away, pupils and teachers fled the school. The closest school, NKST Ayilamo, which is about 10 minutes away on foot, was also not an option for pupils and their parents as the school had also at various times been attacked by suspected herdsmen.
This reporter went in search of the headmistress of the defunct school, Suen Dinnah. She lamented the fate that befell her school.
“Most of the pupils have left the community, while others have gone to other schools,” Mrs Dinnah said. “I have been trying to talk with the PTA chairman to see how we can renovate the school because it is not proper to abandon it like that.”
What the headmistress did not say is that a number of pupils whose parents could not send off to far-away schools have dropped out of school. Parents remain distressed and angry with government over the situation. “The government appears insensitive to the fate of the school,” said one parent who identified himself as Moses. “How can a school that has existed for decades not be renovated after it was destroyed by herdsmen? They are simply playing politics with our lives and those of our children.”
The local government, which is the home of former governor Gabriel Suswan, was like a war zone during the reporter’s visit. The Coordinator of Benue chapter of the Civil Society Action Coalition on Education for All, a national movement on education matters, Rosemary Hua, whose organisation collaborates with the United Nations International Children’s Emergency Fund (UNICEF), said even officials of the global body working to assist the embattled kids have refrained from going to Logo because of the level of insecurity in the area. Stern looking and combat ready security officers were seen taking strategic positions in different parts of the area. Some of them told this reporter they were on deployment to repel further attacks on the community.
Like RCM, Like NKST
RCM Primary School is just one of the schools that were either completely or partly destroyed across Benue State following incessant clashes between hersdmen and farmers. NKST Primary School, Ayilamo, also in Logo local government, suffered a similar fate. During a recent visit, this reporter saw pupils whose psyche appeared to have been battered by the horrors they have been exposed to since 2014 when suspected herdsmen began to attack their school.
For the past four years, parents say, sending their children to school daily has been like throwing them into the valley of death as they were not sure of their returning home alive. Two of the three school buildings were set ablaze during one of the attacks . One of the vandalised buildings, painted green, had piles of burnt iron chairs in it. It has since been abandoned and now ovegrown with weeds. Renovation of the other block of classroom had long stopped. The abandoned building was without ceiling, windows and doors. A good number of the pupils sat on broken tables and woods in the dusty classrooms.
In some of the classrooms, pupils in different classes were merged in a class. To differentiate between the classes, the pupils backed one another and had to wait for one class to finish lesson before another starts.
While expressing his desire to have good education, a primary six pupil of the school, Todo Gbawuan, lamented the poor learning condition in the school. “There is no feeling that we are schooling,” he said. “We lack all the basic things we need as pupils. To make matters worse, there is tension all over the place. We can’t concentrate even if we have the best of structures, furniture and books because of the herdsmen.
“Our ears and eyes are always divided between listening to lessons and watching out for the herdsmen, who always come unannounced. Please sir, help us.”
His school mate, Tehemba Yagba, a primary four pupil, also expressed frustration with the anxiety-filled environment in which they are learning. “We are always living in fears and there is no way we can concentrate,” he said. “When we see smoke or hear an unusual sound, we will immediately think it is herdsmen and begin to run. ”
Shedding light on the condition of the school, one of the teachers, who asked not to be named so he is not punished by government for speaking with journalists said: “Our buildings, furniture and books were razed by the herdsmen in 2014. From then till the end of last year, we were coming and running away from school. They still came to attack the school in January, forcing us to abandon school for seven months. We just resumed in August after those January attacks. For two years, we taught the pupils under the trees.
“It was recently that we adopted this motor gate approach where you merge pupils in different classes in one place. One group faces the front while another class faces the back. When one group is being taught, the other group would be idle because if both of them should be taught simultaneously, there would be distractions.”
The teacher added: “There has been some respite since the rainy season began because the flood obstructs the movement of the killer herdsmen. Our fears are about the coming dry season when there would be no flood to stop the herdsmen. We appreciate our security operatives for their efforts because if not for their presence too, we would not be here in the first place.”
Palpable fear was thick in the air at Tombo Community Secondary School when this reporter visited in October. Armed attackers had repeatedly struck at the school, leaving some of the structures there in ruins. Consistently apprehensive that the invaders could visit again, pupils said they were now always at alert like sprinters waiting for the blast of the whistle to take off. Any unusual movement by fellow pupils had sometimes caused others to run without waiting to know what was wrong.
The administrative block and a block of four classrooms of the school, founded in 1998, were burnt in 2014 by suspected herdsmen without anything done to renovate them since then. The roofs, ceilings, windows and doors of the buildings are all gone. Not even a blackboard was left on the wall to keep the memory that one of the buildings was ever used for learning. The blocks have also begun to fall apart.
One of the teachers in the school told this reporter: “We are in a war situation. We are not different from the people living in Liberia or Congo when those countries were gripped by civil wars. We are always on the alert because the herdsmen can invade the community anytime without minding the presence of security operatives in the community. The moment we observe that danger is lurking, we would dismiss the pupils and also run away.”
He added: “The population of pupils has dropped, while teachers from other communities outside this area have sought transfers because of the attacks. Vital records were burnt during the attacks. We were in school one day when they came and all we could do was run away. Since then, the government has not deemed it fit to do something about the buildings. There is no concern about the condition under which the pupils are learning. We were never used to this kind of unpleasant condition. We don’t get supplies of text books. We only buy from the market.”
Pupils abandon education, take to farming in Guma
It was 9 am one Sunny day in October when children of school ages should be in school. But instead of being in school, children in Uikpan, a suburb of Guma Local Government Area, were either heading to farm or hawking wares around the community. Some of the kids were seen bearing baskets with which they planned to bring back farm produce, while others were seen playfully brandishing cutlasses as they strolled to their parents’ farms barefooted in the company of their siblings and parents.
In the last four years, the kids have had to be out of school for about three years as a result of the attacks on their schools. Following their long absence from school, the pupils could hardly remember a word in English. Every word spoken by this reporter had to be interpreted to them in their native language.
The incumbent governor, Samuel Ortom, hails from the local government where 72 people were killed in January, this year. In fact, the natives said it is the worst hit of all the local government areas. Like what happened in Logo, the guide and other members of the community were also quick to tell our correspondent that they would not be able to go beyond certain areas to avoid being attacked.
The only public primary schools in Uikpan, LGEA Primary School, had come under repeated attacks, forcing pupils there out of school. At the time this reporter visited, what remains of the school, which shares the same compound with UBE Junior Secondary School, was being inhabited by mobile policemen drafted to the area to curtail the menace of suspected herdsmen. “It has been long I went to school,” a pupil of the LGEA Primary School, Sonu Vesue, said. “I have been going to farm instead but I sincerely prefer going to school. But I really can’t forget the attacks and they sadden me all the time.”
Another pupil of the school, Jessica Kaha, also lamented their ordeal. “ I stopped going to school since the crisis began. Our school and others are not operating again because of the attacks,” he said.
The community has three public secondary schools. One of them, Chombu Tar Comprehensive Secondary School, has been shut down since 2014 after suspected herdsmen attacked the area. It was completely deserted and overgrown by weed when this reporter visited.
The UBE Junior Secondary School and Mbabai Community Secondary School resumed academic activities in 2016 after they were attacked in 2014. Late last year, the latter was forced to close down after another attack, while the former closed down since January, this year.
The principal of UBE Junior Secondary School, Vitalis said: “ We don’t know when we will resume academic activities because security men are still occupying the classes. Most of the pupils may not come back because they have gone with their parents to other places to farm.”
Some parents were close to tears when asked about the interruption the attacks have caused their children’s education. “The future of our kids is very bleak,” an apparently crest-fallen parents, Raymond Kinda, said. “Our prayer is that our children should be better than us but how would this be possible when they don’t have the opportunity of completing ordinary primary school?
“There is no parent that would be happy that the children have at this tender age dropped out of school for no fault of theirs and engaging in farming and playing around every day.The government at all levels should do something urgently to restore peace to our communities, rebuild the schools and provide enabling environment for education and other activities to thrive again.”
On a meal of raw cassava
One of the worst hit areas is Agatu Local Government where hundreds of natives were reportedly killed with a large number of residential buildings and schools set ablaze.
The journey from Obagaji, the local government headquarters, which is considered relatively safe (although it was attacked) to Odugbehon, one of the affected rural communities dotted by bad and slippery roads, is nine kilometres that took close to two hours’ ride on motorcycle.
From Odugbehon to the other neigbouring communities also took a journey of five to eight kilometers. Every move through the bush path evoked fears as the attackers were said to have ambushed and killed many people on that road.
That is the distance and horrible path most of the innocent children had to cover as they fled from suspected herdsmen who invaded their schools.
“Some of the unfortunate kids were cut into two with swords by the attackers,” this reporter’s guide said.
Several months after the attacks on their schools, pupils of RCM Primary School, Ugboju, a suburb of the local government area, say they remain traumatised by the sight of the rubble of their school buildings razed by suspected herdsmen in 2016.
The five school buildings of three classrooms each were completely burnt down by the attackers. Pupils were then made to learn in harsh weather conditions under trees. One of the destroyed buildings has been renovated by the UBE but only a classroom is ready for use. Even that classroom has no furniture yet.
The pupils said the violence in their communities has done incalculable damage to their lives. “The herdsmen killed Godday, one of my classmates while we were fleeing,” a pupil, Benjamin Olotun, said. “The incident is still very fresh in my memory. When the herdsmen attacked our school, I escaped into the bush and ate raw cassava for several days. I hadn’t eaten raw cassava before and never thought of doing that but when hunger dealt with me inside the bush and raw cassava was the only available thing, I had to uproot and eat it. They (attackers) have affected our interest and love for education because our mind is always on the ugly experience and what lies ahead. We also don’t concentrate learning under a tree.”
Discussing the incident with Ehi Otobu, another pupil, was like opening an old wound. “When the herdsmen attacked our school, most of us could not run to our houses because they had set the buildings on fire,” Otobu said. “We ran into the bush without knowing the whereabouts of our parents and siblings. We fed on raw cassava for several days in the bush and drank water from the stream. We peeled the cassava with our teeth and ate them in the face of hunger. Thereafter, I was taken to the IDP camp where I reunited with my parents.
“The herdsmen burnt the entire buildings in our school. They also burnt all our books and furniture. We learn under the tree now and the moment rain wants to fall, we would all run home. We have been psychologically traumatised since the incident and still fear-stricken because the herdsmen can come here anytime”.
One of the teachers in the school said the herdsmen burnt four buildings comprising three classrooms each during the attack. “The incident took place on March 17, 2016 and all the furniture and books belonging to the school and the pupils were burnt,” said the teacher who asked not to be named because he is a civil servant and has no permission to speak to journalists. “The pupils have been learning in this manner since then. The school was established in 1943. All the records that were intact were burnt by the herdsmen.
“UBEC recently built a block of three classrooms for us but we are only using one of the classrooms. The other two classrooms are being used by artisans working on two new buildings funded by a non-governmental organisation.”
He added: “It is hell teaching and learning in this condition. We can manage to concentrate now that the rains are falling because the routes through which the herdsmen come here are flooded and they can’t wade through it to come and attack us. But we have fears as we are approaching the dry season because the routes would be free for the herdsmen to come in and attack us.”
There has also been no respite for pupils of RCM Primary School, Odugbehon, since the school was vandalised two years ago. The pupils had three of their four school buildings burnt by the herdsmen. What is left of one of the buildings, built with mud, could pass for a relic which reminds the community that a block of classrooms once existed there.
The other building, which has no roof and ceiling, has started falling apart and now serves as a breeding ground for rodents and other animals.
Following the shortage of classrooms, pupils in different classes are now cramped in a borrowed classroom at UBE Secondary School that shares the same compound with the vandalised school.
It is a daily battle with chocking heat for the pupils who give more attention to fanning themselves with their exercise books than listening to what the teachers are saying.
Apart from primary schools, the herdsmen also unleashed terror on secondary schools. One of them, Government Junior Secondary School, Okokolo, is reputed as one of the best in Agatu Local Government Area. Between 2001 when it was established and early 2016, the school produced outstanding pupils who have moved on to further education.
But midway into 2016, the school’s hope of celebrating 15 years of existence was shattered by the suspected herdsmen, who invaded the premises during school hours, killing one of the teachers and setting everything in the school ablaze.
Students and their teachers now hold classes under a tree located in a primary school beside the burnt school. Like other pupils learning in open places, it has been distraction galore for the UBE pupils. Their plight is aggravated by the sight of armed military men providing security for the people. For the pupils, seeing armed men while learning reminds them of the horror they suffered previously.
According to Benjamin Mathew, a Junior Secondary School (JSS) 3 pupil of the school, the attack triggered the litany of woes he and his colleagues, including their teachers, have been experiencing till date.
For Juliet Moses, a 15-year-old pupil of the school, the attack has killed her enthusiasm for education. According to her, going to school has become a matter of fulfilling an obligation and nothing more.
“Horror is all I see and think about in the class because of my last experience,” she said. “If there is an unusual movement in the bush, my heart would skip because I would think it is herdsmen coming again. If I hear the sound of knock-out, I would shudder thinking it is a gunshot. That is the mood here.
“My ambition is to study Law in the university but the condition we have found ourselves has cast shadows over my dream. I don’t concentrate in class anymore because fear is all over me. I have lost interest in education and all I am doing now is just to fulfil all righteousness.”
Parents lament children’s predicament
Parents of the beleaguered pupils have described the deplorable conditions in which their wards are learning as disturbing. They regretted that nothing tangible has been done to ameliorate the general condition of the affected schools, fearing that the consequence could be very grave for the future of their children.
“There is nothing we can do about the situation,” Isaac Nomsoor, a parent in Uikpan, said. “There is still tension everywhere as you can see. If you move down this area to places like Tse Orkpen, Atongo, Ortserga, Haaga, Chia, Akema, Baar, Tor Uke, Gawan, Tse Umande, you will see that people are no more living there because of the fear of herdsmen.
“The schools in all those places have not been functional for a long time. Some of the herdmen are still carrying guns.”
Also speaking, the head of Odugbehon community in Agatu, Bawa Haruna said: “As parents, we are not happy because our children are being denied their rights to quality education. The state in which the pupils are learning is not conducive. We are only encouraging them to go to school because any day wasted cannot be regained.”
Another parent, Jerry Eigie, said: “My heart bleeds for our children. If nothing is done to salvage the situation, their future will be hopelessly bleak.
“The government hasn’t really done so much for the affected schools. It could even be that the government is doing its best but the executors of the projects are not making us feel the impact. If we are not feeling the impact, it means the government has done nothing.”
The Chairman of the Benue State Universal Basic Education Board (SUBEB), Paul Tachin, however, said the state is doing its best in constructing new buildings and renovating old ones.
“We have been working but the effort is still lesser than what it is supposed to be,” Mr. Tachin said. “Some of the buildings we recently built or renovated were destroyed again. We need external intervention to help us overcome our challenge. We have 2, 723 schools across the state. Some are in difficult terrains but contractors are working on them.”
Benue can’t meet UBEC, SDG targets- Experts
Stakeholders in the education sector in Benue said the state cannot meet up with the targets set by the Universal Basic Education Commission (UBEC ) laws, the National Education Plan and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) going by the conditions of the schools and the pupils.
The key objective of UBEC, among others, include ensuring an uninterrupted access to nine-year formal education by providing free and compulsory basic education for every child of school-going age.
Goal Four of the SDG, on the other hand, seeks to ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all.
A former Minister of State for Education, Jerry Agada, who hails from the state, described the situation as pathetic. “ If anybody tells you that he or she likes the condition in which our children are studying now, he is lying, Mr. Agada said. “All the classes they are organising in all these camps are just makeshift arrangements. The displacement has actually affected the situation of learning in our primary schools.
“As long as they continue to stay in IDP camps, no teaching arrangement will be as effective as they are learning in their schools. Let nobody deceive you by saying that they are in IDP camps and learning normally. They are teaching them under mango trees, open air etc. it is just not convenient. Let the classrooms be rebuilt so that the children can learn in a proper way. Anything outside this would not augur well for the system.
Speaking on the state achieving goals set by various local and international groups on education, he said: “As long as the crisis is not completely over, it would be difficult for us to claim that we are going to meet all those development goals. Unless something drastic is done to reverse the situation, we would not be able to meet the target. If nothing urgent is done, it would affect their progress as far as education is concerned because whether you like it or not, children have to be taught in a conducive atmosphere, any other thing is just ad hoc.”
The Coordinator of the Benue chapter of the Civil Society Action Coalition on Education for All, Rosemary Hua , also said there is no way the state can meet UBEC and SDG targets.
“Some of them (pupils) have lost interest in schooling,” Ms Hua said. “How to bring them back now is another issue. Some of the female children have got married and some others now operate as sex workers. Some do menial jobs to get money and some others have been trafficked. Some of the adolescent girls are being used as sex machines. Those that are around 17 years old are worst affected.
“UNICEF is constructing temporary places in Abagana, Aghan, and Daudu to accommodate those children so that they can continue learning. They are not even allowed to go to Logo because of the insecurity there. UNICEF is afraid of going there. The government should have started something and invite this group but unfortunately, they were saying they didn’t have money.”
This report was supported by Wole Soyinka Centre for Investigative Journalism (WSCIJ) Regulators Monitoring Programme (REMOP) for the Education Sector.
But for natural disaster and war, there should be no reason why any citizen of a country should be displaced from his or her home. Even when the displacement is caused by natural disaster, it is the responsibility of the government at whatever level to make necessary provisions to cater for their temporary needs until they are fully rehabilitated.
Unfortunately, while we have not had much cases of displacement due to natural disasters, like in other parts of the world, Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camps have sprung up in many parts of the country more than ever before because of terrorists’ attacks and unnecessary community disputes.
Instead of being temporary abodes for displaced persons, the camps have remained permanent shelters with no hope of when many of the affected persons will return to their homes. Even when governments close some camps on the excuse that situations have normalised where the people were earlier displaced, some find it difficult to go back to their former homes for various reasons.
A picture by the News Agency of Nigeria of children in an IDP camp in Jos, Plateau State, published on the front pages of most national newspapers on Wednesday captures the plight of Nigerians in the various camps across the country.
It is sad that even the children have to queue to get whatever ration of food is available, not to talk of the men and women who have to cope with all manners of deprivations for no fault of theirs.
Life in the camps is indeed harrowing, with governments and agencies unable to meet the various needs of the displaced persons despite the huge amount of money governments and agencies claim to be spending.
Not minding the unfortunate situation the displaced persons have found themselves, some callous officials have been known to be diverting relief materials and embezzling funds meant to cater for the victims.
There are also cases of security men taking advantage of girls and women who they rape in exchange for foods they are entitled to. A report by Amnesty International which the Nigerian Army disputed exposed the sexual escapades of security men who are supposed to be guiding the camps.
The displaced persons are also exposed to various health risks with cases of epidemic proportion that are not usually given prompt attention.
More than ever before, governments and agencies responsible for taking care of the camps have to ensure that the displaced persons are not subjected to another round of hardship having been forced out of their homes due to circumstances beyond their control.
In accordance with the International Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, displaced persons “retain a broad range of economic, social, cultural, civil and political rights, including the right to basic humanitarian assistance (such as food, medicine, shelter), the right to be protected from physical violence, the right to education, freedom of movement and residence, political rights such as the right to participate in public affairs and the right to participate in economic activities.”
Displaced persons also have the “right to assistance from competent authorities in voluntary, dignified and safe return, resettlement or local integration, including help in recovering lost property and possessions.”
Unless the government abides with the above provisions, it cannot claim to be taking care of displaced persons as required.
The House of Representatives on Wednesday, advised the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) to immediately address the plight of victims of the recent flood in Ahoada, Ogba, Egbema and Ndoni communities of Rivers.
The advice is sequel to a motion, under matters of urgent public importance, moved by Rep. Uchechukwu Nnam-Obi (PDP- Rivers) at plenary, on the need to address the plight of communities sacked by flood in Rivers.
Moving the motion, Nnam-Obi, explained that the rise in sea level from persistent rainfall had wrecked havoc on coastal areas and the River Basin communities in some areas of Ahoada West/Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Federal Constituency of Rivers.
“The devastating flood in Ahoada West/Ogba/Egbema/Ndoni Federal Constituency in Rivers State has ravaged crops, farmlands, homes, schools and businesses.
“The situation is a serious humanitarian crisis as families are rendered homeless and their means of livelihood destroyed by flood.
“The health and sanitary conditions in the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) camps have become unbearable and could be deadly if urgent measures are not taken,” Nnam-Obi said.
Members unanimously adopted the motion through a voice vote, moderated by the Speaker, Mr Yakunu Dogara.
The House also called on the Federal Ministry of Environment and the National Inland Waterways Agency (NIWA) to come up with mitigating and palliative measures to prevent the spread of diseases in the affected areas.
The House, thereby, mandated its Committee on Environment to liaise with the Federal Ministry of Environment and other relevant agencies to ensure speedy compliance to call.