According to the UN
children’s agency five-hundred children have been forced to flee Boko Haram
militants in the last five months after an upsurge in attacks in Nigeria,
Cameroon, Chad and Niger.
The additional numbers of
children made homeless has taken the total number of youngsters in the Lake
Chad region who have been forced to flee to 1.4 million, Unicef said in a
statement.
Nigeria was worst affected,
with nearly 1.2 million children — more than half of them under five — uprooted
by the Islamist insurgency, which is concentrated in the country’s remote
northeast.
Some 265,000 other children
have been affected in neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger, which Boko Haram
has increasingly targeted after they joined Nigeria’s military in a regional
counter-offensive.
“Each of these children
running for their lives is a childhood cut short,” said Unicef’s regional
director for West and Central Africa, Manuel Fontaine.
“It’s truly alarming to see
that children and women continue to be killed, abducted and used to carry
bombs.”
Boko Haram has been
fighting to establish a hardline Islamic state in northeast Nigeria since 2009.
At least 15,000 people have
been killed since then, some 1,100 of them in a wave of suicide bombings,
deadly raids and bomb attacks since Muhammadu Buhari became Nigerian president
on May 29.
Buhari has said he is
confident “conventional” attacks will be stopped by November, although suicide
and homemade bomb attacks could continue.
Help, funding needed
Earlier this month, the
International Organization for Migration revised upwards its estimate of those
internally displaced by the conflict from 1.5 million to more than 2.1 million
because of the recent surge in attacks.
The IOM’s head of mission
in Nigeria, Enira Krdzalic, said many IDPs living in host communities had yet
to receive basic food and shelter, calling for more to be done.
On Wednesday, the charity
Medecins Sans Frontieres also appealed for international help after 16 people
died and 172 fell ill in a cholera outbreak at three IDP camps in Maiduguri,
northeast Nigeria.
The UN regional
humanitarian coordinator for the Sahel region Toby Lanzer, told AFP thousands
of Nigerians who fled to a refugee camp in southeast Niger were in an
“atrocious” situation.
Unicef said it had
increased its operations in the Lake Chad region, including child vaccination
programmes, education and psychological counselling.
Nearly 65,000 children
under five had received treatment for severe acute malnutrition, it added.
But Fontaine said more
funding was needed because the agency had only received a third of the $50.3
million required to finance its operations in the Lake Chad region this year.
That has left more than
124,000 children hit by the violence unvaccinated against measles. Some 208,000
are out of school and more than 83,000 lack access to safe drinking water.

No comments:
Post a Comment