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Monday, March 10, 2014

Amebo News : Face to face with death

boko-destroyed 
• How we escaped bullets during Boko Haram night attack on Catholic seminary school

Their accounts can move even the stone-hearted to tears. The 300 students and teachers of Maiduguri Diocese of St Joseph Catholic Minor Seminary School have seen death with the horrendous bombing and shooting in their school recently by Boko Haram insurgents, but they are alive to tell the story. Two guards in the school were not so lucky. They were killed by the mindless attackers.
Face to face with the rampaging Boko Haram who invaded their school at Shuwa, Michika Local
Government of Adamawa State in the night while studying in their preparatory classes, the students were compelled to jump the perimeter fence of the school and escaped into the nearby bushes. But their escape turned out to be an excruciating experience. “We were like walking in the shadow of death,” one of the students, Charles Aji told Sunday Sun.
“It was just few days after Boko Haram attacked the Federal Government College, Buni Yadi and slaughtered many students there,” Charles began his narration. “We were in preps classes when we started hearing gunshots. Then, our Vice Rector, Fr Joshua Ijah gathered us in a place and prayed for us and quickly told us we had to flee the school as Boko Haram were coming. Everybody was terrified. What of if they intercepted us while running or open fire on us in the bush? Many of us had asked, but there was no time for answer. Our vice just yelled at us saying, ‘Just run for your lives because time is running out. God will protect you.” He said time was indeed running out as any delay could be more dangerous and catastrophic.
“We jumped fences because we feared Boko Haram may already be at the gate. It was very dark outside there but we kept moving into the bush, though not sure of our safety. After sometime, we separated ourselves into different groups, some followed the vice rector and others followed some staff. We laid in the bush till daybreak in fear as our school was on fire while the Boko Haram were shooting,” he explained.
The 16-year-old boy said he would always remember his 10-hour experience in the dark, lonely and frightening bush. “We were just there hoping God spares our lives to see the break of the day,” he said.
Boko Haram had late February attacked Izge, a community located south of Borno and near Shuwa, the site of St. Joseph Catholic Minor Seminary School in the neighbouring Adamawa State. Two days later, the insurgents appeared at the seminary school to unleash more terror. “They burnt down the school and killed two guards attached to the Priest’s House,” a tutor in the school, Mr Jacob Julius who also survived the attack, disclosed.
Jacob said they were alerted by Shuwa residents about the invasion of Boko Haram insurgents, adding that the information helped the school authority to plan ways of evacuating the students and staff, hence the school would have lost hundreds of its students. “We heard sporadic gunshots and these shots were very close to the school. We were also hearing people screaming, shouting and it was then we knew there was problem and we had to plan how to escape before it is too late,” he explained.
He, however, said the fear of Boko Haram tracing them into the bush almost snuffed life out of many of them. “Each movement we heard, maybe, from insects or animals in the bush, was like Boko Haram were near us. Many students were panting, it was a harrowing experience, which words cannot capture. Such experience could cause older persons emotional imbalance or hypertension,” he stated.
Jacob disclosed that the insurgents conscripted a physically-challenged teacher to lead them to all the structures within the premises. He said they had wanted to kill the teacher after setting the school ablaze but the plea from one of the insurgents saved the cripple.
“One of our teachers, a cripple, could not flee when others were running because of his condition. So when the people came, they questioned him about the whereabouts of the students and teachers but he lied to them he was a visitor. They then conscripted him and pushed him in his wheel chair to lead them to all the structures in the premises. After setting fire on all the buildings, one of them ordered that the teacher be shot but another pleaded he should be left alone having assisted them do their work in the school. That was how they left him,” he said.
Sunday Sun gathered that the authority of the institution had already shut down the seminary to prevent further attack. Bishop of Maiduguri Diocese of the Catholic Church, Oliver Dashe Doeme, said Borno, Yobe and the northern part of Adamawa states were under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Maiduguri Diocese. He said the school would have lost “many bright future of Nigeria” like in the Buni-Yadi incident, had the authority not evacuated the students and staff. He expressed worry over the spate of Boko Haram attacks in the area, stressing that the development called for concern.
 

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