Nigeria receives 12,000 refugees deported from Cameroon

Food for Displaced Persons IDPs

FILE PHOTO: Some internally displaced persons struggling for food

Some Internally Displaced Persons struggling for food
Some Internally Displaced Persons struggling for food

Government officials on Saturday visited camps in Mubi, Adamawa, where over 12,000 Nigerian refuges repatriated by the Cameroonian authorities are temporarily camped, awaiting screening to ascertain their states of origin.

The officials were drawn from the federal, Adamawa and Borno state governments.

Alhaji Sani Sidi, the Director General of National Emergency Management Agency, who led the delegation, also addressed the deportees.

He said that they were in the state to officially receive and sympathise with the victims.

Sidi said that government was aware of the victims’ living conditions, adding that efforts were being made to provide necessary and emergency relief assistance to them.

Muhammad Sani-Sidi, Director General, National Emergency Management Agency
Muhammad Sani-Sidi, Director General, National Emergency Management Agency

“The agency and the affected state governments had prepared vehicles to convey you to designated Internally Displaced Persons Camps in Yola.

“While in the camps, you will undergo screenings in order to identify the areas where you come from,” Sidi said.

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Sidi said that 95 per cent of the IDPs were indigents of Borno, who hail from Gamboru, Ngala and Bama.

Alhaji Zanna Mustafa , the deputy governor of Borno, also addressed the IDPs.

Mustafa told the IDPs that after the screening in Yola, the Borno Government would transport indigenes of the state to Maiduguri, to link them up with their families.

He advised them to expose any member of Boko Haram living among them.

NAN reports that 80 per cent of the IDPs are women and children.

NAN further reports that NEMA expressed concern over the way and manner the IDPs were repatriated by the Camerounian authorities.

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