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Girls begged to be suicide bombers to escape Boko Haram – Rescued hostage

naijalog by naijalog
April 12, 2016
in Top Stories
Reading Time: 2 mins read
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Girls begged to be suicide bombers to escape Boko Haram – Rescued hostage
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A 16-year-old girl known as Fati (not her real name) has recounted her ordeal in the hands of the deadly Boko Haram sect. The girl who escaped her abductors -revealed that life under the terrorists group is so bad that girls are begging to become suicide bombers so that they can escape….

Read her interview with CNN below;

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“They came to us to pick us,” Fati recalls. “They would ask, ‘Who wants to be a suicide bomber?’ The girls would shout, ‘me, me, me.’ They were fighting to do the suicide bombings.”

Young girls fighting to strap on a bomb, not because they were brainwashed by their captors’ violent indoctrination methods but because the relentless hunger and sexual abuse — coupled with the constant shelling — became too much to bear. 

They wanted a way out, she says. They wanted an escape.

“It was just because they want to run away from Boko Haram,” she said. “If they give them a suicide bomb, then maybe they would meet soldiers, tell them, ‘I have a bomb on me’ and they could remove the bomb. They can run away.” 

There was no escape for Fati when fighters from Boko Haram descended on her village in northeast Nigeria in 2014. Her future “husband” was carrying a gun, and Fati’s parents had already spent a precious 8,000 naira (roughly $40) to smuggle her two older brothers to safety. There was nothing they could do. 

“We said, ‘No, we are too small; we don’t want to get married,'” Fati recalls. “So they married us by force.” 

After he raped her for the first time, Fati’s abuser gave her a wedding present — a purple and brown dress with a matching headscarf that she would wear for the next two years while under his control, whisked from hideout to hideout in order to evade Nigerian authorities. 

She says she met girls even younger than her in Boko Haram’s stronghold in the Sambisa Forest, kidnapped from their families to be married off, imprisoned and abused by their self-proclaimed “husbands.” 

“There were so many kidnapped girls there, I couldn’t count,” Fati says.

Among them, she says, are some of the more than 270 schoolgirls from Chibok, Nigeria, whose kidnapping in April 2014 shocked the world.

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