Despite Boko Haram losing many territories in the northeast as a result of a renewed military offensive, millions are still going hungry after years of attacks disrupted farming and supplies.
The US government will provide “more than $37 million in additional humanitarian assistance” the United States Diplomatic Mission to Nigeria in Abuja said. “Approximately five million people need emergency food assistance.”
The money for food would be directed to communities in the Diffa region of Niger and is part of a coordinated effort to get more food into the area.
Despite Boko Haram losing
many territories in the northeast as a result of a renewed military offensive,
millions are still going hungry after years of attacks disrupted farming and
supplies.
The United States on
Wednesday pledged $37 million in aid for victims of Boko Haram, government
officials said, as fears of a famine mounted in the ravaged Lake Chad region.
The US government will
provide “more than $37 million in additional humanitarian assistance” the
United States Diplomatic Mission to Nigeria in Abuja said. “Approximately five
million people need emergency food assistance.”
The money for food would be
directed to communities in the Diffa region of Niger and is part of a
coordinated effort to get more food into the area.
Returning this week from a
trip to Chad, Nigeria, and Cameroon, the regional director of the World Food
Programme, Abdou Dieng, told AFP that “the crisis of Boko Haram is just
beginning.”
“There are many places
where humanitarian aid can’t reach because of insecurity,” Dieng said, adding
that Boko Haram attacked a UN convoy just last week. “But we are even more
determined to stay.”
Dieng estimated that around
$600 million is needed to address the crisis but that so far “less than a third
of that money has been received”.
The Boko Haram insurgency
has claimed more than 20,000 lives since it began its quest for independent,
fundamentalist Islamist state in 2009 in northeast Nigeria. The conflict has
spread to Niger, Chad and Cameroon, forcing more than 2.6 million people from
their homes.
No comments:
Post a Comment