UN: 75,000 Children could starve to death as humanitarian crisis unfolds.
Boko Haram insurgency has disrupted farming and trade in northeast,
leaving 14 million people in need of humanitarian aid.
In Nigeria, 75,000 children risk dying in “a few months” as
hunger grips the country’s ravaged north-east in the wake of the Boko Haram
insurgency, the United Nations warned on Tuesday Boko Haram jihadists have laid
waste to the impoverished region since taking up arms against the government in
2009, displacing millions and disrupting farming and trade.
Nigeria’s president, Muhammadu Buhari, has reclaimed territory
from the Islamists but the insurgency has taken a brutal toll, with more than
20,000 people dead, 2.6 million displaced, and famine taking root.
UN humanitarian coordinator Peter Lundberg said the crisis was
unfolding at “high speed”.
“Our assessment is that 14 million people are identified as in
need of humanitarian assistance” by 2017, Lundberg said in the Nigerian
capital, Abuja.
Of them, 400,000 children are in critical need of assistance,
while 75,000 could die “in [the] few months ahead of us”, Lundberg said.
The UN hopes to target half of the 14 million people – a
population bigger than that of Belgium – with the Nigerian government working
to reach the rest.
But Lundberg said the UN did not have enough money to avert the
crisis and called on international partners, the private sector and Nigerian
philanthropists to “join hands” to tackle the problem.
“We need to reach out to the private sector, to the
philanthropists in Nigeria,” Lundberg said.
“We will ask international partners to step in because we can
only solve this situation if we actually join hands.”
Maiduguri, the capital of northeast Borno state and birthplace
of Boko Haram, has doubled in size to two million people as a result of people
seeking refuge in camps for internally displaced people.
Despite the World Food Programme warning of “famine-like
conditions”, the UN has not declared a “level three” emergency, the
classification for the most severe crisis that would draw more attention and
desperately needed funds to Nigeria.
Roddy Barclay, an intelligence analyst at consultancy firm Africa
Practice, said: “The humanitarian response hasn’t scaled up adequately to meet
a growing demand for food, particularly in the more remote camps in the
north-east.”
Nigerian vigilante and security sources said in September that
at least 10 people a day were starving to death in a camp for displaced people
near Maiduguri.
There is also the ongoing issue of insecurity. Despite the
recent military gains, Boko Haram is still active in the north-east and stages
attacks and suicide bombings.
“The Nigerian army has scored notable military successes in
containing Boko Haram. But that’s not to say they have stabilised the region
entirely,” Barclay said.
“Movement in remote zones remains high risk and the focus
remains overwhelmingly on furthering military gains rather than addressing the
very real socio-economic impact of the crisis.”
Those zones include the shared borders of Nigeria, Niger,
Cameroon and Chad in the Lake Chad Basin, said Ryan Cummings, director at
intelligence firm Signal Risk.
“The scale of the humanitarian disaster in north-east Nigeria
has been grossly underestimated,” Cummings said. “There’s an estimated one
million people still living in communities inaccessible because of the ongoing
insecurity.”
Now the fear is that Boko Haram will try to capitalise on the
failure of the Nigerian government – and the international community – to save
the hungry.
“There are many claims that resources allocated to IDP
[internally displaced people] camps are being misdirected into avenues of
corruption, so aid is not reaching the people,” Cummings said.
Boko Haram could prey on that anger, he said, warning, “They
could potentially end up being recruited back to Boko Haram”.
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