When Boko Haram attacked
Falmaya Baba Gama's village last year in northeast Nigeria, executing a dozen
men and burning down the market, thousands of people fled across the border
into Niger, with some forced to leave behind their children amid the chaos.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
The
30-year-old and her seven children arrived safely in the region of Diffa, but
almost one year on, they are hungry, scared of further violence and haunted by
the bloodshed they witnessed.
"Even
now, the children dream about Boko Haram and cry," she said outside a
thatched hut, held together with sticks and plastic sheets, in Assaga - a
ramshackle site for the displaced located just a few miles from Niger's border
with Nigeria.
Gama
is one of some 240,000 uprooted people living in Diffa, a sweeping tract of
desert in southeast Niger sparsely populated with isolated villages and dotted
with shrubs and trees.
Many
of the displaced live in makeshift huts alongside the country's main highway,
having been driven from their homes in northeast Nigeria and southeast Niger by
Boko Haram violence.
The
militant group has killed more than 15,000 people and displaced some 2 million
in the West African states of Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria during a seven-year
campaign to carve out an Islamist caliphate.
Military
offensives mounted by a regional taskforce and Nigerian and Cameroonian troops
have pushed Boko Haram further back into the northeast corner of Nigeria,
prompting the militants to scatter and ramp up attacks across the border in
Diffa.
The
violence has traumatized many of the Nigerian refugees and displaced Nigeriens
residing in Diffa, and left them with scarce food or water, little opportunity
to work or trade, and vulnerable to disease and malnutrition, aid agencies say.
Niger's
President Mahamadou Issoufou said Boko Haram had not only caused significant
upheaval in Diffa and destroyed schools and health clinics, but also paralyzed
the region's economy.
Niger,
one of the world's least developed counties, has also been hit by plummeting
global oil prices and a soaring number of migrants passing through the vast,
landlocked nation, crossing the Sahara Desert on their way to the Mediterranean
coast.
"We
are facing a catastrophic humanitarian situation," Issoufou told the
Thomson Reuters Foundation in Niger's capital, Niamey, before preparing to
attend a panel on the Lake Chad Basin at this week's World Humanitarian Summit
in Istanbul.
NOTHING TO DO
In
Assaga, teenage boys slouch against tree trunks, seeking shade from the dry,
midday sun as they play on their phones, while their fathers and grandfathers
roam back and forth across Niger's east-west highway, swapping gossip and
sharing stories.
While
the road divides the site into Assaga Niger and Assaga Nigeria, there is little
tension between the two communities, said Nigerian refugee and father-of-six
Kyani Buaki.
Assaga
is one of 135 informal camps in Diffa, a region hosting 160,000 uprooted
Nigeriens and 80,000 Nigerian refugees.
"We
are the same people, us, our uncles, our grandparents - here, we are
together," said Bukai, formerly a headmaster.
Image
source: nationsonline.org
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The
road running through Assaga has afforded aid agencies easy access to the camp,
allowing them to provide food aid, and build health clinics, schools and
sanitation facilities.
Yet
many people fear this makes the camp an easy target for Boko Haram, following a
recent spike in violence in Diffa.
There
have been some 30 attacks by Boko Haram in the region this year, with half of
them since April, according to the U.N. Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
The
militants have carried out raids, suicide bombings and looted a health centre,
according to several aid agencies, and the government last month extended
Diffa's state of emergency, which was first declared in February 2015, by three
months.
"When
cars drive by, you sometimes see many people running away because they are
afraid of bombings," said Mustapha, a Nigerien farmer who fled his village
in Diffa and sought refuge in Assaga when he heard that Boko Haram were nearing
the border.
Many
of Diffa's markets, and several in Nigeria, have been destroyed by Boko Haram
or closed due to insecurity, leaving the young men in Assaga with little
opportunity to work or trade.
Some
men said they had resorted to picking grass or chopping wood in the hope of
selling it in order to feed their families.
"Living
here, we have fallen through the cracks, there is no market or business ... we
have nothing to do," said 25-year-old Adam Alhagi Bukai, who used to work
as a farmer in Nigeria.
FEARS FOR THE FUTURE
While
the security situation worries many of the displaced, a lack of food aid is the
most pressing concern ahead of the upcoming lean season and holy fasting month
of Ramadan.
"When
we arrived in Assaga (last year), we received maize, millet, oil and tomatoes
... now we haven't received any food for five months," said 18-year-old
Ataha Balai, a mother of two.
Some
450,000 people in Diffa, more than half of the region's population, lack enough
to eat, and a humanitarian funding shortfall is hindering efforts to ensure
food aid reaches those who need it the most, said the U.N. World Food Programme
(WFP).
"This
is worrying when you consider the threat that more people may be displaced in
the coming months by the insecurity," said Fodé Ndiaye, U.N. humanitarian
coordinator for Niger.
There
could also be pockets of displaced people in Diffa who have not yet been found,
as the insecurity restricts the reach and access of aid agencies, said Médecins
Sans Frontières (MSF).
U.N.
aid chief Stephen O'Brien said Diffa posed a unique humanitarian challenge,
where a combination of various factors could drive more displacement and make
it harder to deliver aid.
"These
vulnerable communities are facing climate related challenges such as
desertification, booming population growth, poverty, a lack of food and of
course, Boko Haram violence."
O'Brien
will speak at the World Humanitarian Summit, hoping to raise awareness and
funds for Niger's U.N. aid plan, which has only received a quarter of its $316
million target for 2016.
A
world away from dignitaries and diplomats, girls on the Nigerian side of the
Assaga camp giggle as they swing up and down on a water pump like a seesaw,
singing and making fun of each other as they fill up bright yellow and orange
jerrycans.
For
Assaga's older residents, such joy and positivity is unfathomable as they
ponder the future for their families.
"We
don't know when we'll be able to return home, but not until things are right,
the situation is normal, and there are no problems left," said 50-year-old
Bukai, choking back tears.
"There are still many
Boko Harams ... we can't go back."
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