David Miliband with the Kids. |
Nigeria's war zone.
Miliband,
president of the New York-based International Rescue Committee, dropped
to kneel then sat back to make eye contact with scores of delighted
children in a refugee camp in Maiduguri, the northeastern city that has 1
million residents and 2 million refugees, half of them children.
On
a tour of camps, Miliband told The Associated Press he was saddened
that so many children have been orphaned by the 6-year Islamic uprising
that has killed 20,000.
Maiduguri
is the birthplace of the Islamic extremist group Boko Haram and has
been attacked many times. A girl suicide bomber blew herself up at a
military checkpoint two weeks ago, killing seven people.
Last
week, the military said it arrested an 11-year-old boy trained as a
suicide bomber and infiltrated into a Maiduguri camp to attack refugees.
It said Boko Haram has infiltrated some camps since troops have
destroyed dozens of insurgent strongholds and freed hundreds of
captives.
Nigeria's military Sunday said the air force and ground
troops are striking Boko Haram camps deep in the northeastern Sambisa
Forest, an extremist holdout."It's important for us to be in the places which make the headlines, but also important to be in the places that don't," Miliband said.
At the makeshift camp set up at a youth corps training center, refugees have built round shelters from grass and plastic sheets, trying to recreate some semblance of their huts back home.
Miliband
asked one young boy what he wished for: "I want to go back home," the
child answered, "Help us to get back to our home."
Refugees told Miliband they want to go home, but only when it is safe.
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