Pro-Buhari group celebrate “return of normalcy” in Banki, Northeast Nigeria

An aerial view of Banki, which was recaptured by the Nigerian military in 2015 from Boko Haram, shows a mass of women and children returning from collecting wood in Banki, Nigeria, 28 September 2017. For more than 8-years, Boko Haram related violence has devastated the lives of families and in particular children across northeast Nigeria. Nearly 1 million children have been displaced by the crisis and around 20,000 people killed, amid horrific violations of child rights. Children who have been killed, maimed and abducted, widespread sexual violence and the forcible recruitment of women and children as ‘human bombs’. Attacks on children, as well as children forced to carry out attacks, are so common that they are almost expected or accepted as part of the conflict. UNICEF’s Deputy Executive Director, Justin Forsyth, visits Maiduguri, northeast Nigeria, from 27 September to 29 September 2017. On the trip, Forsyth visited a UNICEF supported clinic, providing inpatient therapeutic care in Maiduguri town. The clinic is providing critical support to children affected by severe acute malnutrition, including an intensive care unit. With Maiduguri hosting so many displaced persons, there is a serious strain on health services. Forsyth met a one month old boy who had been left in a bag by the roadside. Some people thought the baby was a bomb. However, Aisha a mother of seven other children realized it was a baby and rushed the boy, who is now named Mohamed, to the clinic. She is now the surrogate mother.    Banki on the border with Cameroon, has been almost been completely destroyed and now houses thousands of displaced persons who have gathered at a camp for their own safety and to access basic services. In Banki, Forsyth went to a UNICEF supported primary health care clinic that is helping to treat children with severe acute malnutrition, saving many lives. He also sat in on a class at a temporary school set up to provide some opportunities for children to res

The Buhari Media Organisation (BMO) has welcomed the return of normalcy to Banki, a town on Nigeria’s border with Cameroon that was sacked by Boko Haram terrorists in 2014.

Banki, in Northeast Nigeria, is 2.5 kilometres from the Cameroonian border and 135 kilometres from Maiduguri, the Borno State capital. It was attacked by Boko Haram terrorists in 2014 and it wasn’t until late 2015 that the town came back under the control of the Nigerian military. It was the beginning of the return to some sense of normalcy.

The BMO group said in a statement on Tuesdaysigned by its Chairman, Niyi Akinsiju, and Secretary, Cassidy Madueke, that “the fact that night activities are back in that town is major proof that the kinetic and non-kinetic approach of the President Muhammadu Buhari administration to waging the war against insurgency is working.

“Banki was one of the major economic hubs outside of Maiduguri with a bustling day and nighttime economic activities until Boko Haram took over the small town in September 2014 and thousands of its residents had to flee to neighbouring Cameroon and Niger.

“But today, the once deserted town is now on the path of normalcy, judging from viral video and pictures of what the Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum saw when he paid an unscheduled visit to the town at 10.30 pm recently after attending a meeting in Cameroon.

“What makes it particularly a good development is because Banki was like a ghost town up till six months ago, although the town was liberated from the terrorists in September 2015. We know that a UN report indicated that the town had only a few buildings still intact as of 2017, while many of its original inhabitants were too scared to return to their homestead.

“So it is against that background that we join Governor Zulum in commending President Buhari and the military authorities for providing the enabling background for the return of the displaced residents”. 

BMO also praised the Governor for rebuilding structures that were destroyed by the terrorists as well as his confidence-building measures.

“It is gratifying to note that since his emergence as governor in 2019, Professor Zulum has made it a priority to rebuild homes and other structures in towns and villages destroyed by the insurgents. 

“And just like he did recently for the returning residents of the fishing community of Baga, the governor also handed out N40,000 and bags of grains to each family to enable them to restart their lives as well as boost the local economy.

“And perhaps more heartwarming is the late-night visit to the community which we see as a show of support. “We also find it interesting that his latest visit to Banki is his 10th and this more than anything is a confidence booster for anyone who might still have any doubt about the town’s safety.

“For us, Zulum remains a shining example for other governors to emulate”, the statement added.
BMO also noted that the return of Banki to normalcy after seven years is another reaffirmation of the President’s promise to ensure that the security challenges in the North East are brought to an end.”

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