 4,000 internally displaced persons leaving in Kudenza, Maribain, Rideau, IDPs camp in Chican-Locogam and area of Kaduna State has received food, non-food items and relief materials to children, women, Rideau and aged parents to cushion their challenges of lack basic necessity of life facing in the camp. Plus TV correspondent Habila Daroufai was there and filed in this report as presented from our studio. The displaced persons from 20 communities are children, women, widows and aged parents seeking refuge following bandits' attacks on their communities. Most of the affected persons have fled their ancestral homes to the urban centers to seek refuge without means of livelihood. A 13 year old child in the camp narrated how a mother usually puts salt in water for her and her siblings to drink in order to prevent them from contracting diseases. Because of no money to go to school, my mom used to help us very well. We are ten in our family, in our mom's children we are ten, but in our dad we are more than ten. My mom in Appu Falls saw it in the water so that we would take them and sleep. We do not have food to eat and I cannot sleep like that. The place is not fine. Some people, some give us small money so that we can use and buy something that we can eat for a day, some we don't get. Now I started, I was in private school but since when it started my parents don't give money to pay them. They decided to remove me from the private. Speaking, the coordinator of justice development and peace characters, Robin Father Joshua Ache says donation of the relief materials is to show love to the IDPs and empower them. It's about 20 communities in this place. About 4,000 of them, you know, settling here in Melbourne, Rideau, from different communities. And for quite some time they've been here, you know, some of them having to feed from hand to mouth. Some of them crying in there, some of them not having even places to lay their heads. So we have just come, you know, to be our brother's brother and our sister's sister, to see how we are able to gift them these items we have brought so that we can cushion the challenges that they face. Also, the leader of EcoSmile Support and Empowerment Initiative, Blessing Sunday, says the IDPs are in dire need of basic amenities to live a better life as one of the beneficiaries lords the organization's kind gesture. We want them to be self-reliant, to be able to stand on their feet. That is why this training is going to commence next week or so so that we can see how we empower them. We train them on different skills, different vocational skills. They need medical care. They need some of these children are not going to school. They bring these things for us. We so feel happy too. We don't have food. Three, we don't have house. Four, we don't even have house. We have the general brothers that I get that are there for village, the children. So I don't have, I don't have general brothers now. I need government to help us so that we can go back to our village. The victims who are taking refuge in IDP camps for more than two years remain hopeful of returning to their ancestral homes one day if the government finds a lasting solution to insecurity. Thank you.