The Mercury News

Report: 200 starve to death in Nigeria

-

LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) — Nearly 200 refugees from Boko Haram have died of starvation and dehydratio­n in the northeaste­rn Nigerian city of Bama in the past month, Doctors Without Borders said Wednesday.

The refugees “speak of children dying of hunger and digging new graves every day,” according to a statement from the group, also known by its French acronym MSF.

“A catastroph­ic humanitari­an emergency” is unfolding at a makeshift camp on a hospital compound where 24,000 people have taken refuge, it said.

The doctors referred 16 emaciated children at risk of dying to their special feeding center in Maiduguri. One in five of the 15,000 children are suffering severe acute malnutriti­on, the group found.

“We see the trauma on the faces of our patients who have witnessed and survived many horrors,” said Ghada Hatim, head of the Doctors Without Borders mission in Nigeria.

Her team reached Bama on Tuesday following a military convoy from Maiduguri, the Borno state capital that is the headquarte­rs of Nigeria’s military campaign.

Though Bama is just 45 miles southeast of Maiduguri, ongoing clashes between the militants and troops make travel unsafe and farmers have not planted crops for 18 months, Dr. Christophe­r Mampula of Doctors Without Borders explained by telephone from Paris.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States