Changing her son's nappy,
a wry smile flickered across Aisha's face as she recalled the power she wielded
as the wife of a leading Boko Haram commander, living in the jihadists' forest
stronghold in northeast Nigeria.
Thomson
Reuters Foundation report continues:
"I
had many slaves - they did everything for me," the 25-year-old said,
explaining how women and girls kidnapped by the Islamist militants washed,
cooked and babysat for her during the three years she spent in their base in
the vast Sambisa forest.
"Even
the men respected me because I was Mamman Nur's wife. They could not look me in
the eye," Aisha said in a state safe house in Maiduguri, where she has
lived for almost a year since being captured by the Nigerian army in a raid in
Sambisa.
Aisha
is among around 70 women and children undergoing a deradicalization programme -
led by psychologists and Islamic teachers - designed to challenge the teachings
they received and beliefs they adopted while under the control of Boko Haram.
Thousands
of girls and women have been abducted by the group since it began its
insurgency in 2009 - most notably the more than 200 Chibok girls snatched from
their school in April 2014 - with many used as cooks, sex slaves, and even
suicide bombers.
Yet
some of these women, like Aisha, gained respect, influence and standing within
Boko Haram, which has waged a bloody campaign to create an Islamic state in the
northeast.
Seduced
by this power, and relieved to escape the domestic drudgery of their everyday
lives, these women can prove tougher than men to deradicalise and reintegrate
into their communities, according to the Neem Foundation, which runs the
programme.
With
more women likely to be freed from Boko Haram or widowed as Nigeria's military
strives to defeat the militants, experts say insults, rejection and even
violence towards them as they return to their communities could hinder efforts
to repair the social fabric of a region splintered by Boko Haram.
"There
is a possibility of violence (when these women go home) because they were
married to Boko Haram militants," Fatima Akilu, the head of Neem, told the
Thomson Reuters Foundation.
"There
is still a lot of anger and resentment from communities that have been traumatized for years, and subjected to atrocities by the group," she
added.
NEWFOUND
POWER
While
other women huddled around the communal television in the safe house in
Maiduguri, the capital of Borno state, 22-year-old Halima recalled the
'beautiful home' built by her Boko Haram husband in the Sambisa, and the easy
life she enjoyed.
Trucks
arrived regularly with food and clothes, a hospital staffed with doctors and
nurses tended to the ill, and Halima was given her own room in the house she
shared with her husband.
"Anything
I requested, I got," said Halima, sitting under a tree in the yard and
lazily picking her toenails.
Life
in the Sambisa for women like Halima was a far cry from the deep-rooted
patriarchy in the mainly Muslim northeast, where rates of child marriage,
literacy among girls, and women in positions of power are far worse than in the
rest of Nigeria.
The
escape from reality, and taste of freedom and autonomy afforded to the wives of
Boko Haram militants, highlights the challenge facing Neem to deradicalize the
women.
Many
are not ready to relinquish their newfound power.
Despite
being kidnapped by Boko Haram when they attacked her town of Banki four years
ago, Aisha was not forced to marry Nur, the suspected mastermind of a suicide
bomb attack on U.N. headquarters in Abuja in 2011 that killed 23 people.
Aisha
was courted for months and showered with gifts by Nur, who has a US$160,000 state
bounty on his head, before agreeing to become his fourth wife. When she told
Nur to divorce his second wife - because she did not like her - he did so right
away.
After
arriving at the safe house, Aisha complained about being separated from Nur,
and asked the staff how they would feel if they were suddenly deprived after
years of regular sex.
"That's
when she threatened that she would soon rape one of the male staff," said
one of the support staff. "For almost two weeks, the men didn't come to
work ... they were all afraid."
GOING
HOME
The
aim of Neem's programme is to change the mindset of the women and girls, make
them think more rationally, and challenge the beliefs instilled in them over
several years by Boko Haram.
Neem
employs psychologists who treat trauma and provide counselling, while Islamic
teachers discuss religious and ideological beliefs, and challenge interpretations
of the Koran.
The
women and girls in the safe house were subjected to nine straight hours of
Koranic teaching a day by Boko Haram during their time in captivity in the
Sambisa forest, Akilu said.
"You
can treat a person's emotional state ... but if you don't change the way they
think and just release them into society, you perpetrate a vicious cycle,"
said Akilu, who used to run a state deradicalization program for Boko Haram
members.
Akilu
said she had seen huge improvements over the past nine months in the women and
girls in the safe house, with most now believing that the actions of their
former husbands were wrong.
"I
laugh at what he (Nur) was saying," said Aisha. "I now realize that
he is not doing the right thing."
However,
with the nine-month-long deradicalization programme drawing to a close, the
staff at Neem were anxious about how the women and girls would be received upon
their return home.
Female
former Boko Haram captives, and their children born to the militants, often
face mistrust and persecution from their communities, who fear they will
radicalize others or carry out violence, said the U.N. children's agency
(UNICEF).
But
Aisha is not worried about rejection or stigma. Her only fear is returning to
an ordinary life - one without power.
"Only when you get married to a rich man, or a man of authority, can you get that kind of power," she said. "But if I am single yet have plenty of money of my own, I will be fine."
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