How I almost became a Boko Haram suicide bomber
BBC.COM | Tuesday March 22, 2016 10:20
Hauwa, not her real name, doesn't know her age, but she looks 17 or 18.
She had been held by Boko Haram for more than a year when her captors suggested the plan to attack the Dikwa camp.
In return for carrying out their mission, the three girls were told they would go to paradise.
But Hauwa knew that she had to defy them.
'Spiritual problems'
'I said 'No', since my mum is residing in Dikwa, I won't go and kill people there. I would rather go and stay with my family, even if I die there,' she tells me.
Both her parents and her siblings, except for one brother who had been captured with her, were staying in the camp at Dikwa in Borno state, along with about 50,000 others forced from their homes.
Hauwa, not her real name, doesn't know her age, but she looks 17 or 18.She had been held by Boko Haram for more than a year when her captors suggested the plan to attack the Dikwa camp.In return for carrying out their mission, the three girls were told they would go to paradise.But Hauwa knew that she had to defy them.'Spiritual problems''I said 'No', since my mum is residing in Dikwa, I won't go and kill people there.
I would rather go and stay with my family, even if I die there,' she tells me.Both her parents and her siblings, except for one brother who had been captured with her, were staying in the camp at Dikwa in Borno state, along with about 50,000 others forced from their homes.
Hauwa tells me how she ended up being lured into joining the group.
'I had spiritual problems and so the Boko Haram told me they could help get rid of them,' she tells me through a translator.
We don't know exactly what Hauwa was suffering from, but these so-called 'evil spirits' had caused her to soil herself and even put her hand into a fire.
Whatever the reason, she saw Boko Haram as the answer to her problems, and they took her in.
She remembers a typical day living with the militants.
'We were living in grass-thatched houses. When my husband was around, I cooked three times a day... the men would steal meat and bring it for us to cook.'
After a while, Hauwa separated from her husband and then got remarried.
Her second husband then ran away and when she refused to take a third husband, the group suggested their plan:
'They said since I refused to re-marry, I should take the bomb,' she says.
The Dikwa camp for internally displaced persons (IDPs) was 85km (50 miles) north-east of Maiduguri, the state capital of Borno and the birthplace of Boko Haram.
Hauwa knew it well and it was not far from the place she was being held by the militants, so the night before the attack was due to take place, she sneaked out very early in the morning.
Her plan was to alert her family and others staying at Dikwa of the impending attack.
But she was too late.
By the time she reached Dikwa camp, the two suicide bombers had already struck.
An army officer showed the BBC team the scene of the attack.
'This is the spot where the first explosion went off,' he said pointing to brown patches on the tarmac, where blood stains had been darkened by a layer of dust.
The camp stretches across both sides of the road and so residents still have to pass the scene of the attack every day to get water and food.
There are 15,000 people still living here and they are scared.
But they have nowhere safe to go, so they're staying here.
Now, they tell me, they cannot trust anyone, not even children.
An elderly woman, Falmata Mohammed, remembers the minutes before the attack.
'A soldier was trying to arrange our queues...There was this woman wearing a red veil and she had long hair.'
Falmata says she looked round when the woman began complaining about the soldiers, who were trying to disperse the crowds.
'As soon as we moved onto the road, she shouted 'Wayyo', saying she had a pain in her stomach… People rushed to help her and tried to lift her up and that's when the bomb detonated.'
'We saw fireballs around us,' she tells me, saying that suddenly she became aware that she was surrounded by dozens of mutilated bodies.
Hauwa didn't see the attack herself, but she was shown footage of the aftermath by military investigators.
She reflects on the fate of the two girls:
'It wasn't a pleasant thing to see. It wasn't good to carry a bomb to go and kill fellow human beings… I don't know if the other girls knew they would die when they went on the mission.'
For parents in this part of Nigeria, the fear of Boko Haram is all too real. The group is prepared not only to abduct their children, but to send their own young back as assassins in the very places they have sought refuge.
This is the same state where Boko Haram kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok in April 2014. Most of them are still missing.
Hauwa chose to defy the group and to escape, saving her own and the many lives of her would-be victims.
We talk about her future, but when the topic of children comes up, she laughs it off.
'I'd like to get an education,' she says.