Chibok Girls: 500 local hunters ready to join search for the girls
TRADITIONAL hunters armed with homemade guns, poisoned spears and amulets have gathered in their hundreds, eager to use their skills and what they believe to be supernatural powers to help find the schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram.
According
to Associated Press (AP), Some 500 hunters, some as young as 18 and
some in their 80s, said they had been selected by their peers for their
spiritual hunting skills and had been waiting for two weeks in
Maiduguri, the Borno State capital, to get backing from the military and
get moving.
With
cow horn trumpets echoing eerie war cries from the screaming and
chanting men who twirled knives and swords with dexterity, occasionally
stabbing and cutting themselves with no apparent harm, the hunters
claimed their magic charms prevented any blood being drawn.
They
also trust amulets of herbs and other substances wrapped in leather
pouches as well as cowrie shells, animal teeth and leather bracelets to
protect them from bullets.
A
spokesman for the hunters, Sarkin Baka, stopped short of actually
criticising the military, adding that “we’re not saying we are better
than the soldiers, but we know the bush better than them.”
Military
spokesman did not immediately respond to an emailed question from AP on
whether it would take advantage of the hunters’ local knowledge.
The
hunters said they were reaching the end of their patience, adding that
“we are seasoned hunters, the bush is our culture and we have the powers
that defy guns and knives; we are real men of courage, we trust in
Allah for protection, but we are not afraid of Boko Haram.”
One
of them, Baban Kano, said “if government is ready to support us, then
we can bring back the girls. But if they are not, they should tell us,
so that we can disband and return to our homes and family.”
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