Akindahunsi Rachel and her family recount the terrible tale of Boko Haram

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Boko Haram

Certainly, the Boko Haram insurgency, which began in the early 2000s, has caused Nigeria to experience significant security problems, particularly in the country’s northeast. Attacks, kidnappings, and forced relocations have all been committed by the group.

Lovers are impacted by the unrest and bloodshed that rebel organizations bring about just like everyone else. Certain individuals may choose to relocate abroad in search of security and consistency.

Rachel Akindahunsi is a genuine person who, after nearly being kidnapped by Boko Haram in Nigeria, fled to Australia in order to seek protection until the terrorist group’s battle abated.

A forty-year-old woman named Rachel Akindahunsi manages and consults in a number of hotels in Ghana and Ibadan.

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Education for girls was the first concern for humanitarian Rachel Akindahunsi in the remote areas of northern Nigeria. She was starting a primary school for females due to Boko Haram’s insurgent attacks, which I assume infuriated the militants who oppose girls’ education. Consequently, Boko Haram made Rachel Akindahunsi a target when she was in Ibadan, Nigeria, and sent her a dire letter.

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Her home was then set on fire by unknown assailants after she left Ibadan for Austria, which increased suspicion.

A few weeks after terrorists destroyed the school, her patner Olawale Bamigbe was kidnapped in Borno state while he was inspecting the newly constructed school.

Rachel Akindahunsi told the Ghanaian police everything that had happened before she left for Australia.

Rachel Akindahunsi’s Ibadan home was burned on fire when she was fleeing to Australia, and her partner is still detained by the terrorist group.

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