The news broke with a terse military statement: hundreds of captives freed from a Boko Haram stronghold in the Mandara Mountains. But behind the official language lies a human story of desperation and fragile hope. For the women and children who emerged blinking into the daylight, this is not the end of a nightmare, but the beginning of a long road to somewhere resembling normal.
The operation, a joint effort by the Nigerian army and local vigilantes, targeted a network of caves and makeshift shelters where the insurgents had held their prisoners for months, even years. Some of the freed captives, mostly women and girls, had been forced into marriage or labour. Children born in captivity knew no other life.
As they were loaded onto trucks and taken to a displacement camp in Maiduguri, the psychological scars became visible. One woman, clutching a toddler, whispered to a reporter that she had forgotten how to smile. The international community has praised the operation, but local aid workers warn of the immense task ahead: reuniting families, providing trauma counselling, and rebuilding lives shattered by extremist violence.
This is a victory, but a bittersweet one. For every person freed, there are thousands still missing. And the mountain itself, now silent, will haunt the survivors for decades.










