The Star Malaysia

Bring back our school, say residents

Education in the last two years has come to a standstill in a Nigerian town after its only school was destroyed by militants.

- By PHIL HAZLEWOOD

THERE’S not much left of the Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, northeast Nigeria, where Boko Haram kidnapped 276 teenagers in the dead of night nearly two years ago.

Even the word “girls” on the school sign outside has been painted over in black –hidden from the world, just like the 219 students who are still missing.

Up the dusty track and beyond the heavy wrought-iron gates, soldiers stand guard with assault rifles, although there are few buildings and no people to protect.

Only the peeling light-green walls of the destroyed school’s main building remain. Metal beams that supported the roof lie rusting. Rough grass pokes through shattered concrete.

The government of Nigeria’s former president Goodluck Jonathan announced shortly before last year’s election that rebuilding work had begun at the school.

But apart from piles of breeze blocks, there’s no evidence of any constructi­on to the school. The sprawling site is silent apart from the sound of cicadas and gusts of hot wind through the desert scrub.

Ayuba Alamson Chibok steps through the rubble where the girls’ dormitorie­s once stood, picking up a bed frame from the scorched earth -- one of the few signs the site was once inhabited.

“If the government wanted to do something, let them call the contractor... to put somebody on the ground,” the town elder said in anger.

“Education here in Chibok has really come to zero level. This is the only school we have in Chibok and it has been destroyed.”

The second anniversar­y of the mass kidnapping on April 14 will bring renewed attention to the remote town in southern Borno state, which was little known until two years ago but is now synonymous with the brutal conflict.

Parents of the abducted girls plan to gather at the school on the day itself to pray for their safe return, said Yakubu Nkeki, from a support group helping those left behind.

But 16 fathers and two mothers will not be there, he said. They have either died or are now among the estimated 20,000 killed in the nearly seven-year Islamist insurgency.

Others live with the physical and psychologi­cal effects of the disappeara­nces. High blood pressure and stomach ulcers are common, he said.

Yet despite the global outrage online at the kidnapping and promises of action, many people in Chibok say they feel abandoned.

“Nothing has been done,” said

Nkeki, a primary school teacher, questionin­g why nearby towns recently liberated from Boko Haram have since been able to re-open schools.

The Government Girls Secondary School was the only state-run school in Chibok but it has been shut since the kidnapping. Calls for a boys school have come to nothing, he said.

“Really, Boko Haram has achieved its aim by saying they don’t want Western education,” he added.

Hardship

In the town, life goes on as best it can. Upturned bicycles are repaired in the street, hawkers trade groundnuts from seethrough plastic buckets and boys push wheelbarro­ws full of tart oranges.

The single main street, like the dirt road into and out of the town, is unpaved. Every vehicle kicks up choking dust. Electricit­y cables hang to the ground from damaged poles.

In January, three suicide bombers killed 13 people in Chibok. At the mosque, worshipper­s, including young children, are now screened outside for explosives.

Vigilantes assisting the military stand guard with single-shot, home-made muskets in a town that has been largely inaccessib­le because of insecurity.

“We have hardship,” admitted Buluma Dawa, a 56-year-old bookseller. “There is no light, no water, no road and the security we have isn’t enough for us in Chibok.”

Dawa and others are at a loss to explain why, suggesting the state government has no interest in developing rural areas.

“We hope that on the second anniversar­y (of the kidnapping), we pray that people will remember Chibok because... nothing is improving at all ...

“We have a lot of children living at home without doing anything ... they will suffer, there is nothing else. If there is no education, there is no way we can progress and go far.”

Some of the missing schoolgirl­s’ parents can be found in Mbalala, a ten-minute drive from Chibok through an area still known for Boko Haram activity.

There’s little movement in the market place, only the sound of children playing, the bleating of goats and an imam’s sermon over the loudspeake­rs of the mosque.

Young girls in blue and white hijabs sit on piles of mud bricks; boys wash a goat tethered to a pole while others fetch water from a well, pouring it into plastic buckets.

Yawale Dunya is among the men sitting mostly silently on benches in the shade of cracked mud-brick houses or cross-legged playing cards.

The 41-year-old farmer has been able to do little else since his 15-year-old daughter Hawa was abducted. His fingers pick distracted­ly at prayer beads.

Military successes against the insurgents have kept his hopes alive of Hawa’s return and he runs through the scenario repeatedly in his head.

“When I see my daughter coming back to me I will feel joy in my heart.

“All the sickness and other problems will disappear and I will be very happy,” he said. – AFP

 ??  ?? Bleak future: Without a school, these children will not get an education or find jobs and will continue living in poverty – AFp
Bleak future: Without a school, these children will not get an education or find jobs and will continue living in poverty – AFp
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? rebuilding required: Although the previous government had promised to carry out work on the destroyed school, it still remains in a state of disrepair. — AFp
rebuilding required: Although the previous government had promised to carry out work on the destroyed school, it still remains in a state of disrepair. — AFp

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