Nigerians
uprooted by violence and living in camps (Image source: Thomson Reuters)
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More than 100,000 people
uprooted by violence and living in camps in northeast Nigeria are set to return
home soon, but many fear for their safety and ability to rebuild their lives,
aid agency staff said on Thursday. The Nigerian government plans to close in the
coming months camps housing 150,000 displaced people in Borno and Adamawa
states as security improves in the north, according to the U.N. Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
Thomson Reuters report continues:
The
army has this year recaptured much of the territory seized by Boko Haram in its
six-year campaign to carve out an Islamic state in the northeast, but the
militants have since struck back with a surge of deadly raids and suicide
bombings.
Most
people living in camps want to return home but are worried about the threat of
attacks and lack confidence in the military's ability to protect them, said
Stéphanie Daviot of the International Organization for Migration (IOM).
IOM donates
IT equipment and applications to Nigeria’s National Emergency Management Agency
(NEMA). © IOM 2015
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"They
also say that the economic situation is not stable enough to go back, as shops
and services have not been reopened, there is little work and their land has
not been preserved... many people do not have the money to restart their
lives."
Many
of those who have already gone home have found their houses and land destroyed
or occupied by others, Daviot added.
"Those
who return are not always welcomed back, some may be considered cowards by
those who stayed and tensions can arise."
The
humanitarian response has so far focused on providing short-term aid, but
greater assistance must soon follow to help the displaced move home and rebuild
their lives, OCHA said.
The
humanitarian community will only support reintegration efforts, including
providing cash payments and household supplies, if going home is voluntary and
conditions are good enough, Daviot of the IOM said.
Boko
Haram's insurgency has killed thousands of people and displaced 2.2 million -
more than 90 percent of whom are living with host families in local communities
rather than in camps.
"No
one wants to live in a camp, it is a last resort for those with no other
options," said Kasper Engborg, OCHA head of office in Nigeria. "For
those in camps, going home is the most pressing issue... despite the lingering
fear and uncertainty."
Hundreds of schools in the
northeast have recently reopened after being closed for a year and a half,
though many teachers and pupils are reluctant to return because of persistent
violence in the region, the United Nations said on Tuesday.
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