#Nigeria: #EuropeanUnion (#EU), #UN concerned by increasing attacks against #aidworkers https://bit.ly/2GnG9Xk https://www.instagram.com/p/B7t5AxTlYcN/?igshid=xlin254g2y31
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#Nigeria: #EuropeanUnion (#EU), #UN concerned by increasing attacks against #aidworkers https://bit.ly/2GnG9Xk https://www.instagram.com/p/B7t5AxTlYcN/?igshid=xlin254g2y31

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Boko Haram: Buhari, UN condemn killing of four aid workers
President Muhammadu Buhari and the United Nations Office or the Coordination of Humanitarian affairs (UNICA) in Nigeria have condemned the alleged execution of four aid workers by terrorists in North-eastern Nigeria. Buhari said that the defeat of evil by good is inevitable, no matter the pyrrhic victory evildoers seem to win. The President disclosed this in a statement by Femi Adeshina, Special Adviser on Media and Publicity to the President, in Abuja on Saturday. He expressed sadness over the development and commiserated with the family and loved ones of the aid workers. The ISWAP faction of Boko Haram on Friday shared a gory video recording that detailed the execution of four out of the five abductees that remained in their captivity. The aid workers were staff of Action Against Hunger (AAH) working in the region to provide humanitarian assistance. They had been abducted near Damasak, Borno State in July and had been held by the insurgents in spite of efforts to secure their release. The murder of the four aid workers has brought the number of the abducted humanitarian workers slain by Boko Haram to five this year. This leaves only Grace Taku, a female humanitarian worker of the AAH, in Boko Haram custody. Her captors have now declared her their âslave.â âEvil will always be defeated by good at the end of the day. Whatever seeming victory evil records, eventually rebounds on the evildoer. âWe are resolved to beat evil in this land, and we remain unrelenting till we achieve it,â the President said. He urged all insurgents to lay down their arms and rejoin decent humanity. The UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria, Edward Kallon, in a statement condemned âthe announced execution of four aid workers by armed groups in Nigeriaâs northeastern Borno State on 13 December, according to a statement released Friday night.â Kallon pleaded that Taku should be released at once. UN Humanitarian Coordinator said he was âdeeply saddened and outraged by the news of the tragic killing of four aid workers who were held captive by armed groups for almost five months. âMy thoughts go to their families, friends, and colleagues who are enduring unspeakable pain and hardship,â the UNOCHA statement quoted him. He said the four men were amongst the six aid workers who were abducted when their convoy came under attack near Damasak, in Mobbar LGA. âThey were working on a health project implemented by the INGO Action Against Hunger. One of the drivers was killed during the attack and another was reportedly executed on 24 September 2019.â Kallon maintained calls for the release of other humanitarian workers still in captivity. âI plead for the immediate release of Grace Taku, the only woman who was in the ACF team, and whose whereabouts remain unknown,â he said. âI also call for the immediate release of Alice Loksha, a nurse and a mother, who was abducted during an attack in Rann in March 2018.â He described December 13 as âanother sad day for the people of Nigeria and the humanitarian community supporting them. âThese colleagues were devoting their lives to helping the most vulnerable communities in Borno State. Despite the risks, they were driven by the values of solidarity and humanity.â He said the United Nations and NGO partners in Nigeria are working to bring vital assistance to over seven million people in the crisis-affected states of Borno, Adamawa, and Yobe. âThey are increasingly the target of violent attacks. Seven aid workers have been killed since the beginning of the year, amongst 26 UN and NGO workers have lost their lives in the conflict since 2011. âViolence against humanitarian actors jeopardizes access to much-needed assistance for people affected by the armed conflict,â stressed the Humanitarian Coordinator. âI renew the call for all armed actors to respect the principles of humanity, neutrality, independence, and impartiality which guide humanitarian assistance, and to ensure the protection of aid workers.â âThe armed group responsible for kidnapping six humanitarian workers in northeast Nigeria on July 18, 2019, today claimed that they have executed four hostages. This brings the number of fatalities to five. We extend our deepest sympathies to their loved ones and our colleagues in Nigeria.â Read the full article
I have added another bracelet to my wrist that I will wear everyday. The bracelet bearing the name and in memory of Kayla Mueller, humanitarian aid worker (killed in 2015) is important to me. God Bless her and her family. #Peace #Love #Light #AidWorkers
midnight flights
12:30 am my alarm goes off and I groan.  I hit snooze and 9 minutes feels like one. "Eee...Eeee... EEEEE" It goes off again. "No!" I think and turn off my alarm. "I'm never leaving Kurdistan." Despite the fact that I had piratically begged Bossman in polite ways to let me leave for the last three weeks. One month of cluster meetings, proposal writing, listening IDP stories, room service, meetings with partners, security briefings, babies crying, Chinese food, trips to the field, and more and I was ready to leave Iraq. But not at that moment. The bed was too inviting. Alarm off.Â
12:50 am. "Eee... Eee. EEE" "No! Really? Why was I so smart to set multiple alarms? Dear Lord, I don't want to get up." Snooze set. "EEEE" Lights flip on. Smart phone on. Run through the list of emails that came in from IHQ over the last two hours I slept. Relief that my assistant got my a room in Istanbul and I didn't have to figure that one out when I landed. Facebook next. Status update "I would like to speak to the person in charge who thought that a middle of the night flight out of every single country I work was a good idea. Seriously killing me."Â
Shower. Last minute packing. Valet to carry my things down. Done. Done with Kurdistan. Done with being part of the elite group of people who flew in to set up the response for 1.8 million IDPs who fled the most organized extremist terrorist group known to man.Â
4 security checks later, I was sitting on a plane with an angry Spaniard, crying baby, a tun of Kurds going on vacation, and a handful of aid workers, and German military.The usual crowd for an airplane. An hour delay on the tarmac and I was off to 9-hour layover in Instanbul. Â
I hate flying. I hate getting up in the middle of the night. I hate standing in line by myself. I hate going through customs. I hate going through security. I hate sitting in the airport lounge. I hate being crammed into a plane, being given breakfast at 4am, listening to crying babies, screaming men, and the indigestion of those around you. There is just nothing pleasant about flying. And yet I fly internationally, on average, weekly. Its part of my life. If I could own my own plane, I would. So much easier. So much more comfortable. Flying internationally makes me feel alone. It makes me feel culture-less. It makes me feel like a single woman- and incredible vulnerable. Men stare at me. I never fit in. And I think the vulnerability is the biggest thing. I do not like it.
Get me to the final destination please. Its why I want to stay in hard places and not get up because I hate flying so much. Its why my bed in the middle of a war zone sounded so much better at 12:30 in the morning than flying home to my apartment in Nairobi.Â