Victims of rape and kidnapping at the hands of Boko Haram are often
rejected and ostracised after they are released, reveals a new study by
UNICEF and International Alert.
As military forces reclaimed land captured by the jihadist group,
hundreds of women and girls have been released from captivity, said the
study. However in refugee camps or in their home communities, they face
persecution.
"As they return, many face marginalization, discrimination and
rejection by family and community members due to social and cultural
norms related to sexual violence," the report says.
"There is also growing fear that some of these girls and women were
radicalized in captivity.
The children who have been born of sexual
violence are at an even greater risk of rejection, abandonment and
violence."
All victims of sexual violence in Nigeria are stigmatised but those
returning from Boko Haram captivity face particular persecution because
communities fear they and the children fathered by jihadis have been
radicalised.
The report, released this week, is called 'Bad Blood: Perceptions of
children born of conflict-related sexual violence and women and girls
associated with Boko Haram in northeast Nigeria.' The study conducted a
number of interviews and discussion groups in Borno, north-east Nigeria.
"Many perceive these victims of conflict as being partly responsible
for the violence and losses suffered by entire communities during the
insurgency," report authors wrote. "As a result, children and newborns
as well as their mothers are being increasingly ostracized and are at
risk of further violence."
Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari declared the "technical defeat"
of Boko Haram at the end of 2015. However the militants, who no longer
control vast swathes of land in Nigeria, still carry out sporadic
attacks of villages and markets. Most recently 58 were killed in a
twin-bombing at a refugee camp, 55 miles outside Maiduguri.
The jihadist group, who have claimed allegiance to ISIS, have
exceeded their atrocities and were labelled the deadliest terror group
in the world according to the 2015 Global Terrorism Index.
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