THISDAY

UN Says $1.05bn Required to Help 6.1m People in North-east

- Adedayo Akinwale in Abuja

The United Nations has revealed that humanitari­an partners will require a sum of $1.5 billion to reach 6.1 million people who are in dire need of humanitari­an assistance in the North-east ravaged by Boko Haram insurgents.

It lamented that the humanitari­an crisis in North-east continues as hostilitie­s between Nigerian security forces and nonstate armed groups enter their ninth year, adding that civilians still bear the brunt of the conflict that has resulted in widespread displaceme­nt, lack of protection, destroyed infrastruc­ture and collapsed basic services.

United Nations Humanitari­an Coordinato­r for Nigeria, Edward Kallon disclosed this in a foreward he wrote on the Humanitari­an Response Plan, January-December, 2018 posted on the UN website.

He said the food and nutrition crisis is of massive proportion­s, as an estimated 7.7 million people in the three most affected states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe now depend on humanitari­an assistance for their survival.

He said though the federal government succeeded in opening new areas in mid-2017 that enabled the humanitari­an community to provide muchneeded life-saving assistance, but stressed that despite these achievemen­ts, many challenges remain as the conflict and population movements continue.

Kallon stated that humanitari­an assistance has prevented people from slipping below emergency thresholds, but it has not addressed underlying vulnerabil­ities, pointing out that in the absence of a political solution, the crisis would likely continue into 2018.

He stated: “In 2016 and 2017, in close cooperatio­n with the Government of Nigeria, the humanitari­an community provided life-saving assistance and helped stabilise living conditions for millions of people. Mortality and morbidity were reduced and a further spillover effect prevented. In 2017, the response was scaled up and, as of October, had reached 5.6 million people.

“Some major successes were achieved, including a decrease in the number of food insecure people from 5.1 million to 3.91 million, the rapid containmen­t of the cholera outbreak through the innovative use of an oral cholera vaccine, improved agricultur­al production through assistance to 1.3 million farmers and access to a higher number of affected people. These results can be attributed to strong coor- dination, extensive engagement and generous funding.

“While a robust humanitari­an response will be essential – especially in hardest-hit Borno State – the protracted nature of the crisis creates new needs which require longer-term assistance. For the 1.6 million who are displaced from their homes, and the communitie­s that host them, we need to find durable solutions. This requires longer planning horizons, more strategic interventi­ons and flexible, longer-term funding.”

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