Boko Haram: Dapchi Student Narrates Her Lucky Escape From Terrorist Group
A 15-year-old student of Government Girls Secondary School in Dapchi, Yobe State, Amina Mallam Usman has narrated her dramatic encounter with Boko Haram terrorists and how she luckily escaped abduction.
Boko Haram terrorists had on Monday attacked the girls secondary school abducting many of the students.
In an interview with TheNation, Amina narrates what she witnessed.
According to her, when Boko Haram insurgents came to her school, they thought the men were soldiers, however ,on close contact they realized they were men from the underworld.
“When Boko Haram came to our school, we thought they were soldiers because they dressed like soldiers. We ran, and then one of them called us. One of them asked me to come to the car.
I got close to the car, and then one of them started laughing at me. I moved closer to them, thinking they were soldiers.
I soon realized that they were not soldiers. As I made to run away, one of them tried to grab me. I dodged him but he got my hijab.
I quickly removed my hijab and left him with it and ran away. I thought I was dead. They entered our hostel again, but some of us ran into the bush. I ran up to five kilometres and hid in one Fulani settlement called Miligia.”
READ ALSO: Boko Haram Attack: Parents Weep as 94 Female Students Go Missing in Yobe State
When asked how many students she saw in the invaders’ vehicles, Amina said:
“There were many students in the vehicles. They were up to 50 that were in the vehicles.”
She said she felt like the angels should take her soul the moment she realized the men were Boko Haram terrorists. She is not psychologically prepared to return to the Dapchi school.
Giving more details on the incidence, residents said it was clear from the behaviour of invaders on Monday that their mission was solely to abduct the students, TheNation gathers.
The Chairman, Forum of Parents of the missing Dapchi Girls, Mallam Bashir Manzo said when the gunmen demanded that they be shown the way to the school, some residents tried to play a fast one on them and sent them in a wrong direction.
However the gunmen soon found out their destination when they heard the students shouting.
Manzo, recalling the sequence of events on the fateful day, said:
“On Monday, Boko Haram entered our town and started shouting. We just came out from Magrib prayers when the shooting started. The shooting by Boko Haram sparked confusion at the school with everyone running helter-skelter.
When they came, they didn’t even know where the school was located. They came and asked some people to show them the girls’ school.
The first person they asked to show them the school took them to Central Primary School. They eventually found out the girls’ school when the students were screaming and trying to jump over the fence in a bid to escape.
They rounded up as many girls as they could lay their hands on and packed them into their vehicles. They then escaped.
The following day, the school authorities took a roll call of children in the school, but they did not give us the figure. The list we have here is from the parents that came themselves and reported that they had not seen their children up till this moment (yesterday).
When a parent comes, he gives us his name himself, the name of his child, his town, local government area and his phone number. We are not collating these names by any phone call or text message.
You have to come yourself and give your name and the name of your daughter that is missing, otherwise we will not accept anything short of that.
The list we have got now is one hundred and five students that have not been found up till today (yesterday). We had a report that these children were found at Gaidam and people celebrated. We even gathered that the children would be handed over to the governor here in Dapchi.
When the governor came, we were gathered at the house of the District Head and the governor told us that none of the girls had been rescued. The governor said he was not sure whether our children are in Boko Haram’s captivity, but we are sure that Boko Haram took our children. We have evidence.
When they took them (children), they were crying and screaming for help. They came through the Gumsa Road and went back on the same road.
Residents of villages along that road heard the children crying and screaming in the vehicles.
In one of the villages, residents overheard the insurgents saying they needed to tie the children well so that they won’t escape.
We are calling on those that would help us get back our children to help us. We are sure Boko Haram took our children. This one is an undisputable fact.
That is the truth. We gave our children to the school authorities and so they should bring back our children. We will go as far as meeting President Buhari .
They only came to get the girls and not to do anything in this town. We took the photographs of the store of the school and everything is intact. No single food item was removed.
We are not happy with the delegation of the Federal Government. They did not look for the principal or the parents of the missing girls or enter any office of the principal or a classroom in the school when they visited Dapchi.”
President Muhammadu Buhari on Friday said he was sorry that the attack which led to the abduction of pupils from the Government Girls Technical College, Dapchi, Yobe State, happened. He described the incident as “national disaster.”
The President said he shared the pains of the parents whose children and wards were abducted and would spare no efforts in ensuring that the pupils were rescued.
He said the Federal Government would be sending more troops and surveillance aircraft for a 24-hour surveillance of the area.
Photo credit: TheNation
This Boko Haram insurgence sadly has come to stay.