Arab News

Aid work hampered by Boko Haram terror activities

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DAKAR, Senegal: The devastatio­n wrought by Boko Haram, which has left millions of people in northeast Nigeria on the brink of famine, could exacerbate Europe’s migration crisis if the world fails to act urgently, the country’s chief humanitari­an coordinato­r said.

Nearly five million people in the region are desperatel­y hungry and risk starving to death this year if they do not receive food aid, according to figures from the UN.

This could drive even more Nigerians to flee the country and attempt the perilous journey to Europe via the Mediterran­ean Sea, unless the internatio­nal community ramps up support and funds, said Ayoade Alakija, Nigeria’s humanitari­an coordinato­r.

“With so many people facing famine, this is the wrong time to criticize us and simply say ‘ You are the giant of Africa.’

“The world could see a mass exodus from a country of 180 million people if support is not given, and fast... if people facing famine fall into famine,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview in the Senegalese capital of Dakar.

While the EU has been strained by the influx of 1.6 million refugees and migrants between 2014 and 2016, a greater number of people in northeast Nigeria, some 1.8 million, are displaced and unable or unwilling to go home, Alakija added.

“For Nigeria, this is an unpreceden­ted humanitari­an crisis of large magnitude. We, and the wider world, were largely unprepared for it,” she said, adding that Nigeria was struggling to respond as it deals with its first recession in 25 years.

Terrorist group Boko Haram’s eight- year insurgency in northeast Nigeria has killed at least 20,000 people and forced some two million to flee their homes.

The state’s handling of the situation in northeast Nigeria has been hit by allegation­s of officials stealing and selling aid, and committing sexual violence.

Alakija said the Borno state government had taken measures to improve protection efforts — such as having more female officials in camps for the displaced — and tackle corruption.

“But you need to put such incidents in the wider context of widespread suffering and desperatio­n,” she said. “We need to tackle the root cause of the crisis, not just these symptoms.”

The humanitari­an response has also been fraught at times due to tensions between the state and internatio­nal aid agencies.

The president’s spokesman in December said aid agencies were exaggerati­ng levels of hunger to get more funding from donors, while Borno’s state governor in January said many of the groups were profiting from the crisis.

“This arose from a lack of understand­ing and the fact that Nigeria has never faced this kind of situation before... there is no denial of the scale of the crisis within the country, but rather incredulit­y around what has been going on,” Alakija said.

“For the first six years of the insurgency, the previous government did not adequately acknowledg­e or respond to it,” she said. “It was not until (President Muhammadu) Buhari came to power (in 2015) that Nigeria, and the world, woke up and smelt the coffee.”

With Boko Haram’s insurgency in its eighth year and showing little sign of ending, many aid agencies are thinking beyond just emergency aid, and considerin­g how best to foster and improve long-term developmen­t and resilience- building efforts.

“The government is tackling the crisis on several fronts, not just handing out food parcels,” said Alakija. “We are focusing on rebuilding entire communitie­s, so that people can go back to their homes, jobs, and resume their lives as normal.”

 ??  ?? A malnourish­ed boy has his arm measured at a refugee camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria, in this file photo. (Reuters)
A malnourish­ed boy has his arm measured at a refugee camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria, in this file photo. (Reuters)

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