between their homes and places they were being displaced to. so this uncertainty of where the people were, if they were going to be safe and where they were going to be evacuated to has created really a catastrophic humanitarian crisis for the organizations that are working to deliver aid to the families but in general we have had families being displaced into specific towns and villages, people are taking shelter in schools, in homes, and there are also idp camps that are currently under construction. camps that are under construction specifically for the people that are being evacuated from aleppo these are not evacuations, it s forced displacement of tens of thousands of people who have
are empty. but if others they are liberating, setting free hundreds and in some cases thousands of local people. and you see that relief, that emotion, just imagine you had isis roll into town two years ago. you have been under that kind of oppressive, brutal, just heinous rule for two years and then all of a sudden you re free and you re able to leave. your village is your village again. what s happening with a lot of those people, they are then being taken off for processing. unfortunately the reality is some isis fighters will shave their beards, try to blend in with these people and be a problem later on. so they re having to go through and screen everyone. but what you ve been seeing in some of these idp camps, you re seeing kids finding their parents who they have not seen in two years. they parents been living under isis rule. can you even imagine what that is like, the emotional toll that has taken and the relief that is released when you finally lay
concern over this election. as you mentioned, it was postponed for six weeks after the military said they cannot provide security for the initial day six weeks ago. the election kmoo commission had to postpone election commission had to postpone by six weeks. i think all parties have since had a positive thing. more voter cards given out. also the military have had what seem to be substantial success against boko haram in the northeast. even yesterday saying they captured the boko haram headquarters. but yes, today, for voters, it s about getting their voices heard and getting what they feel are the biggest issues of the day, whether it s economy, electricity, boko haram, having those voices heard. in that region in the northeast, we have yet to be seen. it s said voter cards have been handed out to millions of voter up there. even in the idp camps, voting will go ahead. we have yet to see at the end of