Mr Toby Lanzer the
Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel, said this while Spot-lighting the
desperate plight of millions in Africa’s Lake Chad basin.
No fewer than 11 million
survivors of the destructive Boko Haram insurgents are in desperate need of
humanitarian aids.
The top United Nations
humanitarian official for the Sahel region also called for international
solidarity with the people in urgent need.
Lanzer told UN
Correspondents at the UN Headquarters in New York that the Boko Haram crisis
did monumental destruction to the Lake Chad basin countries, which include
Cameroon, Chad, Niger and Nigeria.
The UN emergency official
regretted that the condition of the victims of the insurgents was dire adding,
“I wish I had good news, but I don’t”.
“About 11 million people
are in desperate need of humanitarian aid, 7.1 million of them are severely
food insecure.
“To say “food insecure”,
according to World Food Programme, is that they are living on the edge,
surviving on, if they can, one meal a day,” he said.
Lanzer added that among the
situation of children is particularly worrying.
“Some 515,000 children are
severely and acutely malnourished and their lives are at risk if aid does not
reach them urgently.
“No government on earth can
do what it takes to confront these numbers of severe food insecurity.
“This is a clear case where
international solidarity with the governments of the region is needed,” he
stressed.
According to him, the Sahel
region already has about 2.5 million internally displaced persons (IDP).
Lanzer said improving
security situation in the Lake Chad Basin region had revealed the depth of the
humanitarian suffering of survivors of the destructive insurgent group.
“The scale of humanitarian
suffering in the region has become increasingly evident with improving security
situation as a result of the military campaign against Boko Haram.
“This has allowed
humanitarian actors to reach many places which were impossible to get to
earlier due to insecurity.”
Lanzer regretted that
following the improved security situation, he personally saw communities that
were totally destroyed by Boko Haram insurgency during the period it held sway.
He also lamented over a
situation whereby some communities saw some age-grades completely wiped out,
particularly the aged and infants as a result of the years-long insurgency.
“We saw towns and villages
that were totally destroyed.
“Places that were
completely cut off for over three years and places devoid of two, three and
four- year olds because they have died,” Lanzer said. (NAN)
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