“I remember hearing gunshots and feeling afraid. I ran to save my
life and that of my six children, but I was not fast enough… I lost my
baby… but I had to remain strong for the others…”, recounts Zainab (not
real name) rescued from the Sambisa forest.
“We are looking for your men. Do not run,” she remembers the gunmen
saying when her village was stormed, leading to abduction of women and
children. Another survivor, a pregnant Fatima (not real name) watched
Boko Haram militants murder her husband and drag her three children
away. Afterward, she was taken to the Sambisa Forest and ended up giving
birth in the forest. She and her newborn were later rescued.
The above tales of horror orchestrated by Boko Haram insurgents at
the peak of their acts of terrorism in North-East Nigeria has been
strongly condemned by the internal community including the United
Nations (UN).
The plain truth, yet a sad commentary, is that at the receiving end
of the humanitarian crises arising from insurgency are women and
children. The number of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and the
refugees kept growing.
The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and the UN system in
Nigeria put the total number of IDPs at 1,235,294 while 2,120 refugees
and asylum seekers were registered as of 17 January 2015.
According to Assessment Capacities Project, Start Network (ACAPS),
the majority of IDPs are in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states, in the far
northeast, but 47,276 IDPs are in Plateau, Nasarawa, Abuja, Kano, and
Kaduna states.
However, the magnitude and severity of needs remain more pressing in
the northeast, where humanitarian emergency thresholds have been
exceeded and access was for a long time extremely challenging.
Thus, it is no longer news that hundreds of women and children were
abducted and held in locations hitherto held by the insurgents,
including the dreaded Sambisa forest. It is also not news that hundreds
of women and children have been rescued and are still being rescued by
the military.
That a number of the women and girls rescued were very traumatised
and found to be pregnant is also in the public sphere. However, that
every pregnancy, regardless of circumstances leading to it, must be safe
and delivered is the issue for the front burner of public discourse.
No doubt, the women and girls have gone through hell in the hands of
their abductors. Their rights have been infringed upon; they have been
brutalised and abused; and many have lost their lives in the process.
The lucky ones that are still alive are back and still far away from
returning to their normal self. They, obviously, need all kinds of
support: foods, non-foods, dignity kits, health support, education,
livelihood, among others.
Furthermore, every time there is a humanitarian emergency, the actors
in the humanitarian field are quick to rush and repeatedly provide food
and non-food items to the displaced population.
Of course, that reinforces the African proverb that says, ‘If you
resolve the challenges of feeding in the life of a poor man, then he is
no longer poor.’ But over time, the reality of other equally critical
needs set in. The pregnant women, the lactating mothers, women of
reproductive age and the children have to be catered for specially.
The United Nations through its specialised Agencies, Programmes and
Funds and the government, with the benefit of hindsight, always
anticipates this and in all cases, factors such into its response plans.
The United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) being the lead Agency of
the UN in the area of Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) is committed
to delivering a world where every pregnancy is wanted, every child birth
is safe and every young person’s potential is fulfilled. Its mandate
was determined by United Nations Members, including Nigeria.
Indeed, Nigeria is one of the countries whose 1965 appeal to the UN ultimately inspired the creation of UNFPA a few years later.
UNFPA in Nigeria is committed to save lives, restore dignity and rebuild broken lives of vulnerable women and girls.
Within the context of the insurgency in the North-East and its
humanitarian challenges especially as they affect women and children,
UNFPA is addressing gender-based violence in humanitarian settings
through a wide range of services, including counselling, post-rape
treatment, legal support, assistance with livelihoods, and support
through its Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) programs.
Working with and through the government of Nigeria including in the
states, UNFPA interventions in 2014 alone supported more than 16,000
safe deliveries in North East Nigeria; reached about 2.6 million women
and girls with SRH services including for Gender Based Violence (GBV)
management in North East Nigeria; and supported provision of modern
family planning services to an estimated 2 million women and Couple Year
Protection of 2.2million countrywide.
It is gladdening to note that through its interventions and support,
about two thousand maternal deaths were averted country wide while
another one thousand free fistula treatment surgeries were supported
with 97% success rate across the country.
Explaining the SRH support to the rescued girls and women, the
Director and Country Representative of UNFPA Nigeria, Ms Rati Ndhlovu,
observed that “Upon the arrival of rescued women and children in Malkohi
camp in Yola, UNFPA responded immediately by providing reproductive
health care and psychosocial counselling to survivors of violence.
“Women and girls who survive unimaginable trauma of captivity and
brutalizing violence need immediate and compassionate care and UNFPA has
been, as always, determined to ensure that they are given everything
they need to be able to heal with dignity, safety and a restored sense
of self-worth. After a few weeks of counselling, there was marked
improvement in the survivors.”
Restoring the livelihood and normal lifestyle of the rescued women
and children and those that are displaced by the insurgency and military
operations is the issue on the front burner of the UN system in the
country.
Of particular importance is ensuring that women can deliver babies
safely and that they and girls can maintain their health, dignity,
rights and self-worth even in the most challenging situations.
“Our efforts”, Ms Ndlovu added, “are focused on supporting women and
girls to restore their lives as quickly as possible and begin the
process of healing to be able to fulfill their potential and once again
resume productive lives.”
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