![]() ![]() The arrows and spears the Chibok townsmen had used against the British were then collected and sent to London where they are held in storage today. It took British forces another three months to annex Chibok, and only after they discovered their natural water source and “starved them out”, the report said. The fiercely independent “small Chibbuk tribe of savages”, as they were described in a report presented to Britain’s parliament in December 1907, had been “the most determined lot of fighters” ever encountered in what is now modern-day Nigeria. In defence, during an 11-day siege, Chibok townsmen shot poisoned arrows at the soldiers from hideouts in the hills. Keep reading list of 4 items list 1 of 4 Decolonising the museum list 2 of 4 The path to colonial reckoning is through archives, not museums list 3 of 4 ‘Today’s fake culture war resurrects an old colonial trick’ list 4 of 4 Rewrite the English department: Lessons in radical decolonisation end of list
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