The United Nations has made the first
food aid delivery to thousands of people displaced by Boko Haram
Islamists in the Nigerian town of Banki, where hundreds have starved to
death since March, the UN said on Friday.
Officials from the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) delivered 30 tonnes of
“various lifesaving food items” transported from neighbouring Cameroon,
the OCHA said in a statement.
The convoy reached Banki on Thursday and distributed food to the more than 25,000 people in the town, it said.
“An additional 700 kilograms of
supplementary food for malnourished children was airlifted from the
state capital Maiduguri to Banki on the same day”.
It was the first aid delivery to the
thousands of internally displaced in the northeast region in the last
four months following deadly Boko Haram raids.
They have been without food and basic
supplies and relied on paltry food handouts from soldiers who have been
sharing their rations.
Last month a soldier and a vigilante
assisting the military in fighting Boko Haram told AFP at least 10
people were dying from hunger every day, highlighting warnings about a
food crisis in the Sahel region.
The vigilante said the cemetery in
Banki, some 130 kilometres (80 miles) southeast of the Borno state
capital Maiduguri, was dotted with 376 graves of displaced people who
died of starvation.
The soldier said people had been reduced to “walking corpses” facing imminent death without food aid.
When Boko Haram intensified attacks on
villages in the area, residents fled to Banki where a military
detachment has been based since they retook it in September.
– Millions in need of food –
The United Nations said in May that 9.2
million people living around Lake Chad, which forms the border of
Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger, were in desperate need of food.
According to the OCHA aid distribution
in Banki and other areas recently liberated by the Nigerian military was
“scaling up” but more funds were needed to meet the “lifesaving needs”
of people affected by Boko Haram violence in northeast Nigeria.
Only 28 percent of the $279 million
required by the UN to help those affected by the violence has been
realised, leaving a $200 million shortfall.
The Borno state government and aid
agencies have warned about acute food shortages in the Lake Chad region
as a result of seven years of violence.
Boko Haram’s insurgency has left at
least 20,000 dead in Nigeria and devastated infrastructure in the
impoverished northeast. The unrest has also displaced more than 2.6
million.
Nigeria’s government has been
encouraging people to return home since the recapture of swathes of
territory lost to the Islamist militants in 2014 but most are still
largely reliant on food handouts.
There have been concerns about high
death rates from severe acute malnutrition in camps for the internally
displaced, while it is feared some inaccessible areas could be suffering
from famine.
A UN official compared the situation with the crisis in Dafur and South Sudan.
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