Young women fleeing from Boko Haram walk past burnt livestock in the village of Mairi, Borno state, in February 2016 |
Some 20,000 people have
been killed in the Boko Haram insurgency in Borno state in northeast Nigeria,
according to a report for the World Bank that puts the cost of destruction at US$5.9
billion.
AFP
report continues:
The
report lays bare the extent of the damage since the insurgency began in 2009
and which at one point saw the Islamists control swathes of territory across
the northeast.
It
is part of a Post-Insurgency Recovery and Peacebuilding Assessment, an
intervention programme involving the World Bank, European Union and the UN with
six northeastern states.
Assessments
in each of the states were carried out in areas including education,
healthcare, water, sanitation, housing, municipal buildings, energy,
environment, transport, economy and business.
In
Borno, sources with knowledge of the report told AFP on Monday that some 20,000
citizens are thought to have been killed during the violence -- a higher figure
than previous estimates.
In
addition, the majority of the more than 2.0 million internally displaced
persons came from the state.
In
the 27 local government districts that make up Borno, the fighting destroyed or
damaged:
-
956,453 (nearly 30 percent) out of 3,232,308 private houses
-
5,335 classrooms and school buildings in 512 primary, 38 secondary and two
tertiary institutions
-
1,205 municipal, local government or ministry buildings
-
76 police stations
-
35 electricity offices
-
14 prison buildings
-
201 health centres
-
1,630 water sources
-
726 power sub-stations and distribution lines.
In
some areas such as Bama, the destruction has been near-total, with only 20
percent of houses unscathed.
The
report also estimated parks, game, forest and grazing reserves, orchards, river
basins and lakes have been poisoned in 16 of the 27 areas, and 470,000
livestock killed or stolen.
The
source close to the Borno state government said the report has yet to be
approved by the bank and a decision was expected soon on funding.
But
given the cost of the damage — about US$5.9 billion — and Nigeria's struggling
economy caused by the global oil shock, matching external funding for
reconstruction could be problematic, the source added.
The World Bank in Nigeria
declined to comment.
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