Freed Cameroon Captives Says Separatists Chopped Off Their Ears and Fingers
Voice of America
BAMENDA, CAMEROON - Cameroon's military has freed nine civilians who say they were held hostage by anglophone separatists for close to two months. Some of the freed hostages say the rebels tortured them, chopping off their ears and fingers. Dozens of people on Monday visited the military camp in the English-speaking town of Bamenda. The visitors said they wanted to find out if their relatives were among the hostages freed by Cameroon’s army on Saturday.
The military said the nine former hostages are all males between 16 and 27 years old. Peter Atteh, 24, says he was abducted from the village of Pinyin by armed men on March 23. He says separatists accused him of collaborating with the military when he refused to join their cause. Atteh says while in captivity, he endured the worst moments of his life. "We were sleeping on the bare floor. We had no food to eat," he told VOA. "They were giving us plastic to defecate in, and later they tell us to go and throw it either in the bush or in the river. Even to urinate, we were given containers. You will urinate in the containers and the worse part of it is that we were being beaten. Beaten with a cutlass [machete].” Atteh said six of his fingers were chopped off with a machete when he made a failed attempt to escape. Separatists have said on social media that the kidnappers were criminals, not their fighters — a claim the military has rejected. All the freed hostages looked tired, hungry and unkempt. Two had parts of their ears chopped off. Two of the former hostages said they spent two months in captivity and that seven captives were freed after their families paid ransom. Atteh said three other captives who agreed to join the fighters were not tortured.More Related News
