There are indications that thousands of displaced citizens from Gwoza who have found a new town in Adamawa State called Daware in Fofure Local Government Area may never return to their original homes.
According to PRNigeria, the people left their town following the activities of Boko Haram insurgents in parts of North Eastern Nigeria.
Gwoza, a vast local government in Borno State has been consistently under attack since April this year when members of the Boko Haram sect fleeing from Sambisa Forest moved into their towns on motorcycles.
On 30 May 2014, the traditional ruler, the Emir of Gwoza, Idrissa Timta, was killed after his abduction along with the Emir of Uba, Ismaila Mamza, by armed men, in Hawul LGA on their way to attend the funeral of the Emir of Gombe, Shehu Abubakar.
And during the second week of August, the a son of Timta who was installed after his father’s murder ran away from the town after the terrorists finally overran the town, sacking the Police Mobile Unit training school and declaring it headquarters of their newly founded Caliphate.
A village head in Gwoza, Idrissa Lawan who is now a resident of Dawari following his displacement told our correspondent in an interview that majority of those who fled to Daware are no longer thinking of returning to their original homes.
Lawan told PRNigeria and members of Journalists Against Disaster Initiative (JADI) on a mission to evaluate the condition of internally displaced persons in Adamawa State that a resident of Gwoza who fled to Dawari settled down and after a month, returned home. On his way back to his new place of abode, about 300 others followed him and the population has swelled to over 3,000 since then.
PRNigeria gathered that although Daware had existed as a hamlet before now, the over three thousand fleeing residents of Gwoza and its environs have now turned it into a bigger village.
Officials of the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) and Adamawa State Government only recently discovered the now sprawling community located off Yola-Mubi highway following the invasion of Mubi by the terrorists and search was conducted to discover where residents fled to.
The condition given for their stay in Daware was that no temporary tents will be erected as the new residents have been allotted both farm and building plots to begin normal life but NEMA has continued to support the IDPs with essential food and non-food relief items.
The team also visited the temporary IDPs camp at Nyako Housing Estate in Yola, NYSC Permanent Orientation IDP Camp and and Malkohi where those camped in Nyako IDPs camp have now been moved to.
The National Emergency Management Agency has said that some of the common challenges affecting the smooth operations in the four Internally Displaced Person camps in Adamawa State have been identified, giving the total number of IDPs as 12,000.
The tour, which was led by Director General, National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), Muhammad Sani-Sidi had representatives of United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) and Journalists Against Disaster (JADI).
Sani-Sidi, gave told the IDPs that concerted approach will now be apply to address the challenges aimed at making life more meaningful for the displaced persons in the camps and ordered immediate additional supply of mattresses to replace those already carted away by displaced persons who had left the camps.
He also warned against shoddy treatment of people with ailment and approved special packages for voluntary teacher to improve the teaching of IDP children currently on the camps.
He noted that the issue of displaced person is causing great concern to the Federal government and citizens of the country, but gave an assurance that all necessary steps will be taken to address them including flushing out insurgents from their hideouts.