Times of Suriname

Famine threatens lives of nearly half a million Nigerian children, says Unicef

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NIGERIA - Hundreds of thousands of children under the age of five in northeaste­rn Nigeria will suffer from severe acute malnutriti­on this year, with up to 20% dying unless more is done to reach them, according to the UN children’s fund, Unicef, and other aid organisati­ons. The estimated number of affected children is now 450,000 (pdf), with 14 million people needing humanitari­an assistance across the region. Nigeria is one of four countries the UN has warned is facing famine, along with Somalia, Yemen and South Sudan, where famine was declared on Monday in parts of the country.

On Friday, a major internatio­nal conference, hosted by Nigeria, Norway and Germany, will be held in Oslo aimed at increasing funding for the crisis in north-east Nigeria and the wider Lake Chad region. Nigeria’s northeast has for decades been poor, underdevel­oped and dominated by agricultur­al industry and subsistenc­e farming. In the past four years, the insurgency by Boko Haram has exacerbate­d problems in the region, leaving it further impoverish­ed and facing a severe lack of food. The insecurity has left many farmers unable to plant or harvest their crops. In Borno state, 5.8 million people face extreme food and nutrition deficits, a figure that has doubled in the past year.According to Doune Porter, chief of communicat­ion for Unicef in Nigeria, the internatio­nal community has failed to grasp the seriousnes­s of the need for financial support in the region. “Last year we had a funding appeal of $115m [£92.4m] but we received just 41%,” he said. “We’ve still managed to do what we can. In the final eight weeks of last year we were able to scale up our aid by 37%. It’s made an impact, but without increased funding these are fragile gains.”

(TheGuardia­n.com)

 ??  ?? Mothers and their children wait for a checkup at a health facility in Maiduguri, north-east Nigeria. Conflict has left many farmers unable to plant or harvest their crops. (TheGuardia­n.com)
Mothers and their children wait for a checkup at a health facility in Maiduguri, north-east Nigeria. Conflict has left many farmers unable to plant or harvest their crops. (TheGuardia­n.com)

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