Women in Kano are abandoning their
traditional religious dress after a spate of suicide bombings by young
girls with explosives under their hijab.
The commercial city was hit last month
by four separate attacks involving teenage girls in the Muslim dress,
leaving at least nine people dead and scores more injured.
Although no one has claimed
responsibility for the bombings, fingers have been pointed at Boko
Haram, the Islamist militants blamed for a string of attacks on the
city.
But the bombings have cast fear and suspicion on young women wearing the loose clothing, prompting many to dress differently.
“I no longer wear my hijab because
people now see any young woman in hijab as a potential suicide bomber
because of the recent incidents”, said 17-year old Hajara Musa.
“I now put on my shawl [headscarf] when
I go out pending the time the city gets over the trauma of this
frightening trend”, the fashion design apprentice told AFP.
Musa said she was recently barred from
entering a shopping mall while dressed in a hijab, which covers the
hair, neck and upper body, despite agreeing to be frisked.
“I was turned away because of my hijab, which I found very disturbing”, she added.
Increased security
The hijab is a common sight in
conservative Kano, an ancient seat of Islamic learning where it has
become a convention of modesty for women leaving their homes or meeting
men who are not relatives.
Many women wear the hijab with a traditional cloth wrapper that goes past their knees.
Adama Habibu, aged 21, said she
preferred to wear the hijab but the recent bombings had forced her to
stop to avoid attracting unnecessary attention.
“Wherever a young woman in hijab goes
people keep their distance from her out of fear she could be a suicide
bomber”, said Habibu, a student at Kano State Polytechnic, where a
suicide blast on July 30 killed six people and injured 20 others.
The blasts, one of which targeted an
upmarket shopping mall, have prompted increased security around
businesses, with more police visible around public buildings and
frequent patrols.
Shopping malls in the city have also
deployed more security guards at their entrances who sweep shoppers with
hand-held metal detectors and peer through handbags for explosives.
“I have stopped carrying a handbag
around because of the suspicion it raises. I now carry a small purse
wherever I go”, said another Kano resident, Hafsat Yaya, who declined to
give her age.
Men afraid
Men in the city also say they are more wary of young women in the hijab, said resident Bala Dawud.
“I shudder with fear when I find myself next to a young woman in hijab because she could be a suicide bomber”, he added.
He recalled how a crowd which queued up
at a cash machine melted away when a hijab-wearing woman joined the
queue and asked if it was working.
“As soon as she was told yes, she pulled
out her mobile phone and called someone, telling him she had found a
machine dispensing cash and before you knew it the whole crowd
dispersed, leaving the woman alone”, Dawud said.
Women wearing niqab, which covers the whole face except the eyes, draw even more suspicion, said resident Samaila Abdussalam.
Boko Haram, which wants to create a
hard-line Islamic state in northern Nigeria, is blamed for killing more
than 10 000 people since 2009 and their extreme tactics have been
denounced worldwide.
In April, they kidnapped 276 girls from
a secondary school in northeast Nigeria, triggering global outrage. A
total of 219 are still being held.
And the new tactic of employing young women and girls as bombers has sharpened the concern and outrage.
On 30 July, police in northern Katsina state arrested a 10-year-old girl with explosives strapped to her body.
A security source involved in forensic analysis of the Kano blasts cautioned residents against “hasty generalisation”.
“From our preliminary findings, all the
female suicide bombers were between 14 and 16 years which gives an idea
of the age group of the bombers”, the source said.
“We believe the explosives were remotely
detonated which means the girls were sent under duress. So, people
should be wary of young women who look nervous or fidgety in a crowd.”
Comments
Post a Comment