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New Amnesty report details rape, killings, mass burials inside Boko Haram camps

At least 2,000 women and girls have been abducted by Boko Haram since the start of 2014 and many have been forced into sexual slavery and trained to fight, says a new Amnesty International report released on the first anniversary of the abduction of the Chibok school girls.

The human rights watchdog said the 90-page report, based on nearly 200 witness accounts, including 28 with abducted women and girls who escaped captivity, and titled Our Job is to Shoot, Slaughter and Kill: Boko Haram’s reign of terror, documents multiple war crimes and crimes against humanity committed by Boko Haram, including the killing of at least 5,500 civilians as it rampaged across north-east Nigeria in 2014 and early 2015.

The Amnesty International report sheds new light on the brutal methods used by the armed group in north-east Nigeria where men and boys are regularly conscripted or systematically executed and young women and girls are abducted, imprisoned and in some cases raped, forcibly married and made to participate in armed attacks, sometimes on their own towns and villages.

“The evidence presented in this shocking report, one year after the horrific abduction of the Chibok girls, underlines the scale and depravity of Boko Haram’s methods,” Salil Shetty, Amnesty International’s secretary general, said.

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“Men and women, boys and girls, Christians and Muslims, have been killed, abducted and brutalised by Boko Haram during a reign of terror, which has affected millions. Recent military successes might spell the beginning of the end for Boko Haram, but there is a huge amount to be done to protect civilians, resolve the humanitarian crisis and begin the healing process.”

The report contains graphic evidence, including new satellite images, of the scale of devastation that Boko Haram has left in its wake.

On Boko Haram abductions, Amnesty International observed that the 276 schoolgirls abducted from Chibok gained global attention with the help of the #BringBackOurGirls campaign, but it noted that the missing schoolgirls are “only a small proportion of the women, girls, young men and boys abducted by Boko Haram”.

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“Boko Haram would take the women and girls they abducted directly to camps in remote communities or to makeshift transits camps such as one established in Ngoshe prison,” it said.

“From transit camps, Boko Haram would move them to houses in towns and villages and indoctrinate them with their version of Islam in preparation for marriage,” it said.

AI quoted Aisha, aged 19, as narrating how she was abducted from a friend’s wedding in September 2014 along with her sister, the bride and the bride’s sister.

It said Boko Haram took them to a camp in Gulak, Adamawa state, home to approximately 100 abducted girls; and one week later forced the bride and the bride’s sister to marry their fighters., while teaching Aisha and the other women and girls how to fight.

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“They used to train girls how to shoot guns. I was among the girls trained to shoot. I was also trained how to use bombs and how to attack a village,” Aisha was quoted as saying.

“This training went on for three weeks after we arrived. Then they started sending some of us to operations. I went on one operation to my own village.”

Aisha said that during the three months that she was held captive, she was raped repeatedly, sometimes by groups of up to six fighters. She also saw more than 50 people killed by Boko Haram, including her sister.

“Some of them refused to convert. Some refused to learn how to kill others. They were buried in a mass grave in the bush.

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“They’ll just pack the dead bodies and dump them in a big hole, but not deep enough. I didn’t see the hole, but we used to get the smell from the dead bodies when they start getting rotten.”

Regarding mass killings, Amnesty International stated that it documented at least 300 raids and attacks carried out by Boko Haram against civilians since the start of 2014.

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“During their attacks on towns, they would systematically target the military or police first, capturing arms and ammunition, before turning on the civilian population. They would shoot anyone trying to escape, rounding up and executing men of fighting age,” it said.

Ahmed and Alhaji, aged 20 and 18, were seated with other men, waiting for their throats to be cut after Boko Haram took over Madagali on 14 December 2014. Ahmed told Amnesty International that even though his instinct told him to run, he could not.

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“They were slaughtering them with knives. Two men were doing the killing…We all sat on the ground and waited our turn.”

Alhaji only managed to escape when a Boko Haram executioner’s blade became too dull to slit more throats.

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“Before they got to my group, they killed 27 people in front of me. I was counting every one of them because I wanted to know when my turn would come.”

He said that at least 100 men who refused to join Boko Haram were executed in Madagali on that day.

In Gwoza, Boko Haram killed at least 600 people during an attack on August 6, 2014. Witnesses told Amnesty International how anyone trying to escape would be pursued: “The motorcycles went to surrounding areas, each street corner, where they will shoot you. They are only shooting the men.”

Thousands fled to nearby mountains where Boko Haram fighters hunted them down and forced them out of the caves where they were hiding with tear gas canisters. The women were then abducted. The men were killed.

On burning and looting, the human rights watchdog said the satellite imagery it commissioned had enabled it document the scale of devastation wreaked by the sect.

“This includes new, before and after images of Bama commissioned for the report. These show that at least 5,900 structures, approximately 70 percent of the town, were either damaged or destroyed, including the hospital, by retreating Boko Haram fighters as the Nigerian military regained control of the town in March 2015,” it said.

Witnesses interviewed by Amnesty International described how Bama’s streets were littered with bodies and how people were burned alive in buildings. One woman said: “When the military got close to the barracks [in Bama] and almost took over, they [the military] later withdrew. Then the insurgents started killing people and burning houses.”

AI’s report also documented the reign of terror for those under Boko Haram rule.

“Soon after taking control of a town, Boko Haram would assemble the population and announce new rules with restrictions of movement, particularly on women. Most households became dependent on children to collect food or on visits by Boko Haram members who offered assistance, distributing looted food,” it explained.

“Boko Haram enforced its rules with harsh punishments. Failure to attend daily prayers was punishable by public flogging. A woman who spent five months under Boko Haram control in Gamborou told Amnesty International how she had seen a woman given 30 lashes for selling children’s clothes and a couple executed publicly for adultery.”

A 15-year-old boy from Bama, spared by Boko Haram due to his disability, told Amnesty International that he had witnessed 10 incidents of stoning: “They stone them to death on Fridays. They will gather all the children and ask them to stone. I participated in the stoning… They will dig a hole, bury all the body and stone the head. When the person dies, they will leave the stones until the body decays.”

According to the organisation, the report also highlights growing tensions between Christians and Muslims.

“Many Christians interviewed by Amnesty International believe that Muslims have informed Boko Haram of their whereabouts or failed to share information about impending attacks and this has left a legacy of distrust between some communities that previously lived harmoniously side-by-side. Whilst Boko Haram has destroyed churches and killed Christians who refuse to convert to Islam, they have also targeted moderate Muslims,” Shetty added.

“Amnesty International is calling on Boko Haram to stop killing civilians and for the Nigerian government to take all possible legal steps to ensure their protection and restore security in the north-east. The international community should also continue to assist the new government of Nigeria in addressing the threat posed by Boko Haram.

“The change of government in Nigeria provides an opportunity for a new approach to security in Nigeria after the dismal failure of recent years. The abducted must be rescued, war crimes and crimes against humanity must be investigated. Bodies must be disinterred from mass graves, further killings must be prevented and those guilty of inflicting this unspeakable suffering must be brought to justice.”

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