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UN reports alarming spike in girls and women used in suicide bombings by Boko Haram in Nigeria

In this Saturday May 2, 2015 file photo, women and children rescued by Nigeria soldiers from Islamist extremists at Sambisa forest arrive at a camp for the displaced people in Yola, Nigeria. Sunday Alamba File/AP

LAGOS, Nigeria – An “alarming spike” in suicide bombings by girls and women used by Boko Haram in northeastern Nigeria has children in danger of being seen as potential threats, the U.N. children’s agency said Tuesday.

The number of reported suicide attacks has jumped, to 27 in the first five months of this year compared to 26 all of last year, it said.

READ MORE: Hundreds of Nigerian girls rescued from Boko Haram put in military custody

Women and children carried out three-quarters of all such attacks with girls aged between approximately 7 and 17 years blamed for nine suicide bombings since July, UNICEF said in a collation of reports.

“Children are not instigating these suicide attacks; they are used intentionally by adults in the most horrific way,” said Jean Gough, UNICEF representative in Nigeria. “They are first and foremost victims – not perpetrators.”

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The agency is concerned children will increasingly be perceived as “potential threats,” putting them in danger of retaliation and jeopardizing their return home.

READ MORE: Nigerian military claims destruction of 10 Boko Haram camps

It’s not known how many thousands of children and women have been kidnapped by Boko Haram, with new abductions reported every week. UNICEF said it estimates that 743,000 children have been uprooted by the nearly 6-year-old Islamic uprising, with as many as 10,000 separated from their families in the chaos.

Nigeria’s military recently reported rescuing some 700 women and children from Boko Haram during a weeks-long offensive to oust the extremists from camps in its Sambisa Forest stronghold.

READ MORE: Boko Haram attacks biggest city in northeast Nigeria

Reporters have seen only 275 of those freed taken to the safety of a refugee camp on May 2 and then reportedly flown to an unidentified military facility last week, supposedly to undergo more trauma counselling.

Seventy per cent of that group is children under age 5, with 63 unable to identify relatives, the National Emergency Management Agency said Sunday.

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