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As reported by PUCH please read the story below.... na waoh
Apart from hunger and ill health ravaging  the camps of displaced Bakassi indigenes, TEMITAYO FAMUTIMI uncovers  the story of a 12-year-old girl whose refugee father has pushed into  servitude
In the dusty village of Akwa Ikot Eyo  Edem,  Akpabuyo Local Government Area of Cross River State, Edet Okon sat down in front  of St. Mark Primary School.
Sitting cross-legged on the concrete  floor on  one of the blocks of classrooms he now calls his home, the  40-year-old father  of three leaned forward to exchange pleasantries with this correspondent.
Okon’s immediate family members and 963  other  households had fled their ancestral homes in Efut Obot Ikot in the ceded Bakassi  Peninsula in March 2013.
In the beginning
They escaped the alleged sacking of their  villages and fishing posts by Cameroonian gendermanes in which some  Bakassi  indigenes reportedly lost their lives, while scores sustained  varying degrees  of life-threatening injuries.
The onslaught followed the Federal  Government’s handing over of the ceded Bakassi Peninsular to Cameroon in 2007,  in compliance with a 2002 International Court of Justice  judgment.
After having travelled by boat and foot  over  several kilometers to safety, they took shelter in two of the three blocks of  classrooms at St. Mark Primary School, and another classroom  block at Community  Secondary School in the same Akwa Ikot Eyo Edem  community.
Okon, like his fellow displaced Bakassi  indigenes, left behind all his property and means of livelihood, majorly  fishing nets and boats, as they ran for dear life.
The Cross River State Government took  responsibility for their feeding since they relocated from Bakassi. But  since  September 2014, relief materials, including food stuffs, have not  been provided  for the hundreds of displaced indigenes camped in the two  schools.
The camps had literally been turned into a  melting pot for hungry and largely sick refugees, many of who now live  on  handouts from churches and local farmers in the community.
His daughter now a collateral  
Okon, who joined our correspondent on a  tour  of the overcrowded refugee camps, appeared less bothered about the  life of  squalor they now lead.
The fisherman lost his first daughter,  Blessing, to the cold hands of death in September 2013, after battling  with  blood cancer for five months.
But Okon’s agony did not end with  Blessing’s  death. Indeed, he now lives in the pool of the anguish of a  man who has to  practically sell his child into slavery. To raise funds  for the series of  medical tests, drugs, feeding and hospital bills  incurred by Blessing, he opted  to secure loans from someone to save her  dying daughter.
With no property to guarantee the loan,  Okon  gave up his second daughter, Mary, as collateral to secure the sum  of N600, 000  given to him in installments.
Our correspondent gathered that the creditor  is a civil servant based in Calabar.
“I was desperate to save Blessing from  dying.  Her situation had become critical at that time. That was the only thing I could  do to salvage the situation. I am heartbroken,” Okon  said, as his voice faded  off, breaking down in tears.
As tears rolled down his cheeks, he recalled  the day he ‘sold’ her daughter into servitude.
“I don’t know what came over me. It was  sheer  desperation I gave out my daughter so that the man would accept to give us the  money,” Okon added, fighting back regrets of what many are  likely to regard as  condemnable.
Ufot
Our correspondent reached out to the  intermediary, Daniel Ufot. He helped Okon to negotiate the N600, 000  loan from  the creditor. On getting to the residence of the 59-year-old  Ufot, who lives  some five kilometres away from the camp, our  correspondent found Mary in his  residence.
Ufot explained that some plain-cloth  security  operatives keeping watch on the camp had asked him to bring  Mary from Calabar  to meet with his father who he had not seen in 19  months.
“I do not know Okon from Adam. But since  I’m  an expert in money lending, I offered to help him after having  learnt of his  predicament on how he had been battling to save the life  of his daughter.
“But unfortunately, he could not provide  any  form of collateral to secure the loan. But the creditor, in his  magnanimity,  agreed to have her daughter as collateral since she was the only valuable  ‘thing’ he could offer,” Ufot said.
In a chat with this correspondent, Mary,  who  was a junior secondary school 2 pupil before they left Bakassi in  March, 2013,  has since dropped out of school following their  displacement from the oil rich  peninsular. She shared horrible tales of  inhuman treatment in the hands of her  father’s creditor.
Every morning, Mary hawks bottle water on the  streets of Calabar, where, incidentally, Mary Slessor stopped the  killing of  twins. Observers may also spot the irony in the name of the  legendary  missionary and the enslaved Mary Okon. She added that on any  day she failed to  exhaust the sales of her wares, her new guardians  descended heavily on her,  beating her mercilessly in the process.
“The man my father is owing has three  female  children and some other relatives are also putting up with us in  the house.  They normally give me a revenue target of N1, 000 daily.
“And sometimes when the market is bad and I  don’t finish selling the water, they beat me up. They treat me very  badly. I  eat only once in a day and that is in the morning.
“I wash all their clothes, including the  ladies’ pants, and do other house chores, too. And if I hesitate on  washing  their pants, they get infuriated and throw objects at me at  will. I will not  feel happy if I go back there,” she narrated.
Yet, Ufot insisted that he only brought  Mary  to meet with his father as a respite since he had not set his eyes  on her for  about 19 months.
“There are no signs that they would be  repaying the loan. I only obeyed the instruction of the security men.  She will  be on her way back to the creditor’s place in Calabar,” Ufot  said.
When contacted, the Refugee Camp Leader,  Etim  Ene, confirmed to our correspondent on the telephone on Monday that Mary has  indeed returned to the creditor in Calabar.
Ene said, “Mary has been taken to the  creditor’s house in Calabar South. He was taken away by the guarantor, on  December 2.”
Efforts by our correspondent to trace the  address of the creditor, whose name is given as Asuquo Etim, said to be residing  on Atimbo Road, Calabar South Local Government Area, was  abortive. The creditor  is said to be an employee of the Cross River  State Urban Development  Agency.
Ufot had earlier refused to allow Mary to  travel with our correspondent to her master’s residence for fear of the  unknown.
Mary’s mother was away in the farm during a  visit by The Punch.
Nursing mother feeds on  garri
The expectation of a baby often brings  excitement and joy. But for displaced Bakassi indigenes camped in  dilapidated  and overcrowded classrooms in Akwa Ikot Eyo Edem village,  the birth of a  newborn baby cause them anxiety and sorrow.
Nkese with her baby, Bright
Thirty five-year-old Nkese Peter gave  birth  to her fifth child, Bright, on September 27 in the camp. On  sensing the  economic burden the new-born baby would have on the finances of the poor family,  Nkese’s husband, Simon, a Bakassi fisherman before  their displacement, tried to  make ends meet by taking to small scale  farming.
But bad yields, occasioned by his  inexperience with the agricultural activity, had made him record  successive  losses. Compounding their woes is the alleged failure of the  Cross River State  Government to provide the camps with food and other  relief materials for three  months running.
To keep body and soul together, Nkese, a  nursing mother, now survives on garri daily. Yet, medical experts are of the  opinion that a staple food like garri would do little in boosting  the  production of milk, a newborn is expected to feed on.
“Feeding is my major challenge. I’m  facing  hunger. I eat once in a day and that is garri, which I drink once in a day. The  simple question I want to ask the authorities is: When  are they coming to see  us and resettle us? We are really suffering. We  need assistance; we are not  finding it easy staying here,” the  distraught mother of five said in an  emotion-laden voice.
Like mother, like son
Following a request by our correspondent, the  only resident nurse in the camp, Patricia Asuquo, agreed to examine Nkese and  Bright.
“They are both anaemic,” the medical official  declared, as she pulled their lower eyelids down one after the other.
Facing two months old Bright, whose body  was  covered with rashes, Asuquo explained that the poor nutrition of her mother was  telling greatly on his feeding and resistance to “little  illnesses and body  reactions.”
“The baby is not sucking any nutrients  from  the mother. The mother is malnourished herself, so what do we  expect from the  child?” Asuquo lamented.
The medical official who is in the employ of  the state government explained that the poor nutrition of the  displaced  persons, coupled with the poor sanitary and unhealthy  condition of the camp,  was dealing a devastating blow to their health.
Health centre without  drugs
Yet, the health centre which the nurse  solely  oversees had run out of drugs as of December 1 when our  correspondent visited  there. The only drugs she dispensed were  Paracetamol and Vitamin C to patients  suffering various ailments such as pneumonia, typhoid and malaria fever.
“There is no drug, there is no food. My  job  was easier when there were drugs. Many of their children have rashes and poxes  but there are no anti-biotics to treat them. The situation is that bad.
“I think they need to experience a better life  than this. Many of those suffering ailments simply lie down  helplessly,” she  added as she took our correspondent on an inspection of the health centre.
While expressing concern over the  condition  under which they live, the nurse lamented that attending to  over 3,000  displaced persons in the two camps was overwhelming.
One of her major challenges, she added,  was  the fact that she had not had a break since 2013 when she was posted to oversee  the provision of primary health care to them.
“I’m overwhelmed. That is my challenge.  As a  health staffer, I am supposed to run shifts and have some off days. But since I  resume here in 2013, I work from morning till evening and  at times I spend the  night in the stuffy health centre. No offs, no  shifts, no leave, no  inconvenient allowances. The way they abandoned  them, they have also abandoned  me,” Asuquo said.
A 69-year-old widow, Bassey Eyo,  lamenting  the untoward hardship she had been going through since she  returned from the  ceded Bakassi peninsular, asked if it was fair for  them to be on the receiving  end of “utter neglect.”
“I have enough firewood to cook but there are  no foodstuffs. How long would I continue to sleep on empty  stomach?” she asked,  bursting into tears.
Leader of the Bakassi returnees in the  camp,  Mr. Etim Ene, said the aged in the camp now “look haggard  occasioned by hunger  and want.”
According to him, the young returnees  desperate to eke out a living are now being recruited by politicians as  thugs.
“It is running into months now since food was  distributed to us in this camp. Many of us have become sick due to  poor  nutrition. The sick ones among us go to the various churches for  feeding and  healing.
“It is saddening that the state  government  has totally abandoned the people of Bakassi. No help from the agencies. The  hunger is much especially among the elderly ones.”
But the authorities are always quick to  boast  having resettled and rehabilitated many Bakassi returnees while  also claiming  to have equipped them with skills capable of making them  self-reliant.
‘We are also hungry’
However, hundreds of returnees at the  Obutong  and Ikot Efiom resettlement centres, Bakassi Local Government  Area, disagreed  with the authorities during a visit by our  correspondent.
The returnees in the two resettlement  centres  were the first set of displaced indigenes that left the ceded  territories in  October 2009.
Inside the refugee camp
They moved into the mini-flats in the  resettlement centres built by the Cross River State Government in January  2010.
In spite of what many would describe as a kind  gesture from the government, the “resettled” returnees described  themselves as  “political orphans.”
General Coordinator of the two centres,  Prince Aston Joseph, said, “I hate to hear that we have been resettled.  They  provided over 2,800 households with 343 mini-flats and they call  that  resettlement.
“Bakassi people are fishermen and we  marry  more than one wife and give birth to a large number of children.  They allocated  us empty houses with no facilities. The only property  given to each household  is a single bed.
“Can you imagine how a family with  between  eight to 15 children will share a bed? When we moved in here in  2010, they only  fed us for three months and since then, they abandoned  us.
“No food, no rehabilitation, no  resettlement.  Their talk of empowerment is untrue. They only brought  forms for skill  acquisition and we filled and returned to them but we  haven’t heard from them  ever since. None of the skill acquisition  programmes has been implemented  here.”
Death by starvation
Lamenting the toll of hunger on the  Bakassi  indigenes, secretary of the returnee association in the two  resettlement  centres, Linus Asuquo-Essien, said one of them died of  starvation in  September.
The deceased, 38-year-old Edet Archibong, was  said to have been complaining of starvation for weeks and had been  living on  food donations from his co-returnees.
“We complained to the Bakassi Local  Government officials and the state government about the state of affairs with  Archibong but they did not respond. People were tired of fending  for him so he  was left alone.
“At a point he took ill and his condition  deteriorated in August. Those people who used to support him thought he had  Ebola and everyone distanced themselves from him. The government  officials  refused to come and we lost him in the process.
“We requested that the government people  should arrange for his burial, but they refused to heed our call. We had to  procure gloves and we did the interment ourselves,” Asuquo-Essien  explained at  the site where Archibong’s remains were interred.
But the Cross River State Government said it  remained committed to providing the displaced Bakassi indigenes with  “mass  care” and prioritising their “basic needs”.
Officials at the Governor’s Office,  however,  noted that it was true that the displaced Bakassi people housed in  schools-turned camps in Akpabuyo Local Government Area had stopped  receiving  food and other relief materials since September.
‘No food for Bakassi refugees  anymore’
Director General State Emergency  Management  Agency in the Cross River Governor’s Office, Vincent Aqua,  blamed the  development on the resolve of the state government to replace the distribution  of food and relief materials with “conditional cash  transfer of N5,000” to each  household.
“We decided to replace it (foodstuffs and  relief materials) with conditional cash transfer. It is easier and it  helps  them more as they can determine what they want to do with the  money they are  given.
“The Cross River State Ministry of Social  Welfare is where the conditional cash transfer is domiciled and they  are  working out the modalities and any moment from now they would start  getting  it,” Aqua said.
He argued that he was aware the Bakassi  returnees’ health would have been deteriorating due to starvation. “They could  have a drop in their health status in very recent times. But  their health  condition is not too bad,” he added.
According to the SEMA DG, the Bakassi  returnees in Obutong and Ikot Efiom resettlement centres have been  resettled  and would no longer enjoy the distribution of relief  materials.
“We can no longer give food to people at  the  resettlement centre. They have been given accommodation and equipped with skills  and empowerment tools. You cannot begin to carry out  rehabilitation for people  who have been resettled by the government,” he said.
Waiting for the UN
While thousands of Bakassi indigenes have  since relocated from the ceded territories and returned to Nigeria to  pick up  the pieces of their lives after their displacement, hopes of  reintegration have  continued to elude them.
Sadly, as thousands of them look forward  to  being economically empowered and become financially self-reliant,  there are no  accurate statistics of the number of displaced indigenes  who have yet to be  resettled.
Aqua acknowledged that there was “no  clear  cut programme” that has been put forward for the resettlement of  thousands of  Bakassi refugees who have yet to be catered for.
“We have not compiled their statistics. When  there is a programme we will begin to compile data to fit into the plan,” he  added.
Noting that Cross River State had been  carrying out “humanitarian disaster management” which runs into millions of  naira, the SEMA DG lamented that the Federal Government had done  little to  alleviate the suffering of the Bakassi indigenes.
He explained that the state government  was  now looking up to the United Nations to help resettle the thousands  of  displaced indigenes with a view to giving them a new life.
“There is an indication that the United  Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is interested in the resettlement of the  Bakassi people.
“We hope that by next year (2015) they  (UNHCR) will begin to discuss with us about resettlement. We also hope  that by  next year the Federal Government would move towards their proper resettlement,”  Aqua stated.
FG’s reaction
When contacted on the efforts by the  Federal  Government to permanently resettle the Bakassi refugees,  Director of Press and  Public Relations, Federal Ministry of the  Interior, Alhaji Ade Yusuf, said, “I  don’t have any information about  that. If I find out, I will get back to  you.”
But the National Emergency Management  Agency  explained that it was not aware that Bakassi returnees in housed  in refugee  camps and resettlement centres were starving.
NEMA South South Zonal Coordinator, Mr.  Ben  Oghena, told our correspondent that the Federal Government through  the agency  had over the years distributed “quantum of relief materials”  to the  returnees.
“The Cross River State government has not told  us that they have been overwhelmed. They should tell us. Then we  can see how we  can support what the state government is doing,” Oghena  stated.
Noting that NEMA had not been treating  the  plight of the refugees with levity, the NEMA boss observed that the  agency in  collaboration with relevant government agencies were looking  at “permanent  solutions” to the problems of the Bakassi people.
“It’s (Bakassi returnees displacement)  taking  too long and it’s the state (Cross River) and their local  government can tell  us what the plan is. The land where they will be  resettled must be provided by  them because it is not the Federal  Government that will do that,” he  added.
In 1994, the Republic of Cameroon led by  its  President Paul Biya, brought a case before the International Court  of Justice  to rule on the sovereignty of the oil-rich Bakassi  Peninsular.
Before then, there had been decades of  border  skirmishes and palpable tension between Nigeria and Cameroon  which almost  degenerated into a war in 1980.
After eight years of legal tussle at The  Hague, Netherlands, the ICJ in its judgment dated October 10, 2002,  ruled that  “sovereignty over the Bakassi Peninsula lies with Cameroon.”
The caveat, which followed the ICJ  verdict,  was that the judgment was “final, without appeal and binding  for the parties  (Nigeria and Cameroon).”
On August 14, 2008, Nigeria formally  handed  over the oil rich peninsular to Cameroon, withdrawing troops from the hitherto  disputed region whose population are predominantly  Nigerians of the Annang,  Efut, Efik and Ibibio ethnic stocks.
Source: Punch 
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