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Boko Haram made them child soldiers. Will their communities take them back?

For nearly as long as the Nigerian government has been fighting Boko Haram’s insurgency, which began in the northern part of the country in 2009, it has been urging the group’s fighters to lay down their arms. 

But only in the last three years, as Boko Haram has splintered and lost ground, have its members begun to take up this amnesty offer en masse. Today, some 160,000 former fighters and their families have been “reintegrated” into Nigerian society, according to estimates by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime. 

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Accepting Boko Haram’s child soldiers back into Nigerian society has been controversial. But advocates say this radical act of compassion is the only way their society can heal.

The experiences of former child soldiers, however, point to how complex those efforts can be. Shunned by their communities, many have struggled to find a place for themselves outside Boko Haram’s orbit.

“How could we live alongside those responsible for such pain?” asks Bulami Goni, whose father was killed by Boko Haram.

But advocates for the former child soldiers say it isn’t impossible. 

“Kindness always pays,” says Bulama Maina Audu, who works with a group helping these young men return home. 

Abba Gana was only 10 years old when Boko Haram insurgents attacked his village in northern Nigeria in 2014. Along with the other boys his age, he was kidnapped and forced to herd the militants’ livestock.

By the time he was 15, Mr. Gana had joined the ranks of the group’s fighters, carrying out raids like the one on his own village. 

“Growing up with them, I thought I was fighting for a greater cause,” he says of his time with the group, whose goal is to create a fundamentalist Islamic state. Gradually though, the life of fighting and hiding began to wear him down. 

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Accepting Boko Haram’s child soldiers back into Nigerian society has been controversial. But advocates say this radical act of compassion is the only way their society can heal.

Then one day in 2022, he heard a government radio program urging Boko Haram members to surrender. “They said … that we are welcome back [to our communities] if we repent,” he recalls. 

For the first time, Mr. Gana says, he allowed himself to imagine that he might be able to go home. 

For nearly as long as the Nigerian government has been fighting Boko Haram’s insurgency, which began in 2009, it has been urging the group’s fighters to lay down their arms. 

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