More than 5.5 million people living in conflict areas in
Nigeria, Cameroon, Niger and Chad, nearly half of whom have been displaced due
to ongoing attacks by the Islamist militant group, don’t have enough to eat or
else lack access to nutritious foods, according to the UN’s emergency aid
coordination body OCHA.
“These are people who have seen guys with guns show up in
their villages and kill their families, or have had their villages torched and
then they’ve fled,” Toby Lanzer, OCHA’s regional humanitarian coordinator for
the Sahel, told IRIN. “The impact has been devastating. They have no food.
They’ve lost their livelihoods. They’ve been thrust out of their villages… and
can’t get back to harvest.”
234,000 people have returned to Nigeria’s northeastern
Adamawa State during the past four months, following the government‘s recent
push for the displaced to go home. For many, there is nothing to return to.
Houses have been destroyed, shops looted, schools burnt and fields lie barren. Humanitarians
warn that the trail of destruction left by Boko Haram, marked pervasive fear
and insecurity, are hampering the efforts of returnees to rebuild their lives.
Main roads are the targets of frequent attacks, obstructing markets, and supply
and trade routes. While small villages in the countryside are most affected by
the conflict, a recent assessment by the Famine Early Warning Systems Network [FEWS
NET] said people in towns and cities also had little or no access to land and
are forced to buy their own food. For the most vulnerable, who cannot afford
rising market prices, there are few options but to seek help from friends, the
wider community, or beg.
Mohamed Ali, a 45-year-old farmer, recently returned to his
village in northern Adamawa, only to find himself unemployed and doing menial
jobs to survive. His field has been burnt to the ground and he has no access to
seeds, tools or fertilisers to rebuild his life. Nor has he any money. The loss of all these assets has had a severe
impact on Mohamed’s self-esteem, especially as he can no longer provide for his
family. “We cannot afford to buy food from the market and we now must depend on
the kindness of strangers to survive,” he told IRIN. “I was the breadwinner.
Now I have become a beggar.”
Oxfam’s country director in Nigeria, Jan Rogge: “Our
assessments indicate that 90 percent of the displaced across all the three
affected states have lost all assets they possessed before the insurgency.
Currently, only 10 percent of the respondents have indicated they possess some
assets such as motorcycles, mobile phones, radios and jewellery, and mainly
depend on their relatives and friends.”
Nigeria has been the worst hit. Some 2.1 million people have
been forced to flee their homes and 4.6 million are in need of humanitarian
assistance, according to OCHA.
“The ongoing
insecurity in the northeast means that farmers cannot access their fields to
plant and harvest crops,” Engborg said. “Food and productive assets have been
lost due to attacks and displacement, and raids on farms for food by Boko Haram
insurgents are still ongoing. This is a situation that is not just affecting
the displaced people, but the whole population of northeast Nigeria. Host
communities in particular are seeing their vulnerability to food insecurity
increasing.”
Displaced families have already exhausted their own
resources and with thousands of farmers not able to grow staple crops, the main
harvest season that begins in October will be below average for the third
consecutive year, FEWS NET says. As a result, much of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa
states could face a severe food crisis, while some areas, including Maiduguri,
will experience emergency (Phase 4) acute food insecurity.
Cecile Barriere, deputy country director of Action Against
Hunger, warned: “If we don’t do anything, the needs are going to be massive.”
n Cameroon’s Far North Region, for example, more than one in
three people are food insecure and one in 10 are severely food insecure,
according to the UN’s World Food Programme reports. This means they often have
insufficient food and certainly lack nutrition in their daily diet. OCHA says
an estimated 545,000 people overall are food insecure in the region, a number
that is three times higher than in 2013.
“Crop failure is expected this year as a result of the
widespread insecurity,” Elvira Pruscini, WFP’s deputy country director in
Cameroon, told IRIN. “Many of these farmers have been pushed away from the
border and no longer have access to their land and livelihood means.”
In Chad, where some 140,000 people are in need of food aid,
according to the WFP, the price of millet, a key part of the staple diet, has
risen by as much as 20 percent compared to the five-year average. This is
attributed to cross-border trade disruptions with Nigeria due to Boko Haram.
“There are issues with border closures, which means no free
movement,” said WFP’s programme advisor in Chad, Nitesh Patel. “Small-scale
agriculture for host populations has been disturbed and now [farming]
activities won’t be able to continue until the next harvest season.”
Additionally, for those displaced Chadians who normally
depend on fishing, moving inland away from the lake has meant a loss of their
traditional livelihoods.
In Niger’s Diffa Region, where the majority of the country’s
Boko Haram refugees have settled, an estimated 340,000 people are now going
hungry. The effect on malnutrition is already being seen across the region,
with global acute malnutrition rates exceeding 12 percent in Cameroon,
according to UNICEF, and 22 percent in Chad, according to the WFP.
“The situation is quite bleak, as whole populations have
been affected,” Patel told IRIN. “The biggest challenge right now is having
enough funds to respond to all those in desperate need and provide assistance.”
No comments:
Post a Comment