Since Nigeria’s army
began clearing large areas of the country’s northeast from Boko Haram, some of the 1.5
million internally displaced people have started returning home. But
thousands could now face severe food shortages as reconstruction lags behind.
Along the main roads
heading north from Adamawa’s state capital Yola, some trade has resumed in the
towns but ghostly pockets and haunting reminders of the insurgent takeover are
evident. Some three months after the fighting ended, the smell of rotting
corpses still clings to the air by the headquarters of the Church of the
Brethren near Mararaba.
Islamist militant group
Boko Haram grabbed swathes of Nigeria’s northeast last year, killing thousands
in an unprecedented land grab. It took over most of Borno state, the birthplace
of the group, and parts of Adamawa and Yobe while increasing incursions on
neighboring countries.
The army began pushing
back when Boko Haram was about 100 km (60 miles) from Adamawa’s state capital.
In the last few months, many people have returned to Adamawa but health
clinics, banks and schools are still lacking, especially in the northernmost
areas, and vast stretches of farmland between towns stand barren.
In the town of Michika,
which saw some of the fiercest fighting, residents are too afraid and lack the
equipment and manpower to farm, and at least for the moment they will not be
able to live off the land.
Meanwhile there is no
sign of government aid.
“Most people coming back
are in hardship because there’s no food. People are sick but there are no
hospitals … no vegetables, no lemons, no bananas … We’re not ready to go back
to farming. All our machinery was burned or taken,” a Christian community leader,
Sini T-Kwagga, told Reuters.
People will drive to
Mubi, a city about an hour’s drive south, to get goods but this vital route
will be blocked once the rainy season comes into full swing next month.
Many bridges were blown
up by Boko Haram, including the important link to Mubi, to try to stop the
offensive by Nigerian troops. The river is already starting to fill up with
early rains and men have to push cars through the muddy waters while women sell
mangoes to passers-by.
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