NewsDHQ Denies Terminating 10,000 Boko Haram Pregnancies

DHQ Denies Terminating 10,000 Boko Haram Pregnancies

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The Defence Headquarters, DHQ, has denied a report by Reuters that mass abortions were carried out on female victims of Boko Haram and Islamic State of West Africa, ISAWP.

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The new agency had reported on Wednesday that the Nigerian Army carried out the abortions against the wishes of the women for which at least 10,000 pregnancies were allegedly terminated illegally.

Reacting, the Director of Defence Information, Maj. Gen. Jimmy Akpor DHQ, described the report as false and concocted, adding that it was cruel on the part of Reuters to make such a weight allegation against the Nigerian Military.

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According to a statement he signed, Akpor said the news agency went too low as such was not expected from a ‘renowned’ news medium.

The statement read in part: “It took Reuters 13 solid years to craft an allegation of infanticide against the Nigerian military and the Nigerian nation. This shows that a news agency as “renowned” as Reuters is itself complicit in failing in its mandate to draw attention to and inform the public about supposed occurrences that violate not only the laws of armed conflict but also international humanitarian law.

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“Let us analyse the period from July 2021 to November 2022. A total of 82,064 Boko Haram fighters and family members have surrendered to Operation Hadin Kai troops. Out of this number, 16,553 were active male fighters, 24,446 were women, and 41,065 were children.

“The Borno State Government is camping and accommodating them family-by-family, as per households, without having to separate the children from their parents.

“In the same camp are thousands of pregnant women and nursing mothers. A total of 262 babies were born within 4 months (94 in July, 98 in August, 60 in September, and 11 in October 2022). This figure comprises 150 female and 112 male children. The children were neither aborted nor yanked from their mothers.

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“Hmmm! wickedness really runs in the veins of some people, and it surely runs deep in the veins of the Reuters team that concocted such evil for interrogation.”

Reuters in the report claimed that the investigation was based on the accounts of witnesses among them 33 victims, hospital staff, and security officials, as well as documents gathered.

According to the report, “Since at least 2013, the Nigerian Army has run a secret, systematic, and illegal abortion programme in the country’s northeast, terminating at least 10,000 pregnancies among women and girls, many of whom had been kidnapped and raped by Islamist militants, according to dozens of witness accounts and documentation reviewed by Reuters.

“The abortions were mostly carried out without the person’s consent—and often without their prior knowledge, according to the witness accounts. The women and girls ranged in age from a few weeks to eight months pregnant, and some were as young as 12 years old, interviews and records showed.

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“This investigation is based on interviews with 33 women and girls who say they underwent abortions while in the custody of the Nigerian Army. Only one person stated that she freely consented. Reporters also interviewed five civilian healthcare workers and nine security personnel involved in the programme, including soldiers and other government employees such as armed guards engaged in escorting pregnant women to abortion sites. In addition, Reuters reviewed copies of military documents and civilian hospital records describing or tallying thousands of abortion procedures.”


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