AFP Photo @luistatophoto- Boko Haram displaced feel forgotten amid Nigeria election fever - . Idriss Abdullahi was once a successful businessman and a husband to four wives, until the day he fled his home when Boko Haram insurgents advanced across northeastern Nigeria. . Five years on he lives beside dull farmland in a tented camp in Malkohi village, near the Adamawa state capital Yola, and tries to make a living selling firewood. . But the earnings are so meagre he has had to divorce one of his wives. . "Even an animal lives better than me," he told AFP in the camp he shares with 2,800 of his neighbours from the Borno state town of Gwoza, which the insurgents sacked in 2014. . More than 27,000 people have been killed since the Boko Haram conflict began in 2009 and some 1.8 million others are still displaced. . President Muhammadu Buhari came to power in 2015 on a pledge to end the insurgency, which at its peak saw the Islamists control an area the size of Belgium. . In Abdullahi's hometown, the wild-eyed leader of the jihadists, Abubakar Shekau, declared an Islamic caliphate. . An offensive involving Nigerian troops and foreign mercenaries pushed them back. But in recent months there have been signs of a resurgence. . Despite that, residents of Malkohi say they're ready to support Buhari at Saturday's rescheduled vote -- even if they can't return to Gwoza to do so. . "It's not that we actually love him," Abdullahi said of the president. "It's that he saved our lives from Boko Haram."

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AFP Photo @luistatophoto- Boko Haram displaced feel forgotten amid Nigeria election fever -
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Idriss Abdullahi was once a successful businessman and a husband to four wives, until the day he fled his home when Boko Haram insurgents advanced across northeastern Nigeria.
.
Five years on he lives beside dull farmland in a tented camp in Malkohi village, near the Adamawa state capital Yola, and tries to make a living selling firewood.
.
But the earnings are so meagre he has had to divorce one of his wives.
.
"Even an animal lives better than me," he told AFP in the camp he shares with 2,800 of his neighbours from the Borno state town of Gwoza, which the insurgents sacked in 2014.
.
More than 27,000 people have been killed since the Boko Haram conflict began in 2009 and some 1.8 million others are still displaced.
.
President Muhammadu Buhari came to power in 2015 on a pledge to end the insurgency, which at its peak saw the Islamists control an area the size of Belgium.
.
In Abdullahi's hometown, the wild-eyed leader of the jihadists, Abubakar Shekau, declared an Islamic caliphate.
.
An offensive involving Nigerian troops and foreign mercenaries pushed them back. But in recent months there have been signs of a resurgence.
.
Despite that, residents of Malkohi say they're ready to support Buhari at Saturday's rescheduled vote -- even if they can't return to Gwoza to do so.
.
"It's not that we actually love him," Abdullahi said of the president. "It's that he saved our lives from Boko Haram."


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