Blog entry by Trina Sidaway

Anyone in the world

The rainy season had nourished her father's grain, pushing the stalks knee-high. Her father, mother, two brothers and a younger sister were all at home. It was a pleasant evening in the summer of 2014, in her Nigerian village near the Cameroon border.

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Citing witness accounts and documents, the news agency reported on Dec. 7 that the army has run a secret abortion programme in the northeast, ending the pregnancies of thousands of women and girls freed from insurgent captivity.

Aisha smiled as she recalled her younger days, when she would pound, roll and fry "kuli kuli," a peanut treat she sold with her mother at the market near their farm.

Her family was sustained both by her mother's work and her father's cultivation of maize, guinea corn and millet.

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She longed to escape the brutality, hunger and fear that marked virtually every day of her captivity. Yet when her son, Bana, arrived, she could not help but love the boy. Almost immediately, she was pregnant and sick nearly every day.

After their arrival at the family's former home, within hours of the injections, Fatima started acting strangely, Aisha said.

She would not breastfeed, her eyes became distant and glassy, and she developed a fever. A local pharmacist told her the child must have been bitten by a bug and gave her a syrup to lower her temperature.

LONDON, Dec 14 (Reuters) - Britain continues to be hopeful that it can secure a trade agreement with the European Union but there are still gaps on key issues, a spokesman for Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday.

After leaving the camp, Aisha and her sister stayed for a short time with an aunt in the Nigerian capital, Abuja, but she treated them as a burden, saying they had "the attitudes" of Boko Haram, Aisha said.

The following day, they told Aisha she had a vaginal infection. They injected two vials of medicine into her buttocks, without telling her what it was, and gave her an assortment of pills, she said.

An hour later, she said, she was in wrenching pain and began bleeding heavily from her vagina.

They blew up the hut where the boy slept. Aisha, who was nearby, ran to save him but was too late. One morning about four years ago, when he was roughly 3, the military launched an airstrike on the camp.

Gunfire erupted about 5 p.m. and continued for hours, Aisha said. Amid the shooting, her mother collapsed, struck in the chest by a stray round.

Aisha, then 18, and her 14-year-old sister made frantic efforts to bandage the wound, but their mother bled out and died.

Felerin had suffered, too, telling Reuters she'd had a forced abortion and lost two young sons after soldiers injected them with poison at Giwa Barracks in Maiduguri. In the camp, Aisha found a new friend, Felerin, who held her as she cried over her losses.