UN Interagency Standing Committee (IASC) says the humanitarian crisis in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states needs renewed support in the face of the recent upsurge in violence and growing humanitarian needs.
IASC, made up of senior officials from UN agencies and NGOs, said this in a statement in Abuja at the end of a five-day visit of the mission to Nigeria.
The statement said the mission also raised the alarm on the development as number of people facing food insecurity had recently increased to three million, up more than 10 per cent from October 2018.
“During the mission’s visit, the UN senior officials met with Ministry of Budget and National Planning, Borno State Governor and a wide range of UN agencies, humanitarian NGOs and partners in Maiduguri.
“They also visited several camps for internally displaced persons and some of the towns most affected by the crisis in Borno State – Damboa, Dikwa, and Rann,” it stated.
It quoted Reena Ghelani, Director of Operations and Advocacy Division for UN office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNCHA), as saying that “the crisis in the Lake Chad Region is far from over.”
“This is not the time for the humanitarian community and the rest of the international community to spare any effort.
“We have met with women, children and men who have been forced to flee multiple times and urgently need protection and assistance to survive and rebuild their lives.
“Millions of people here still need our urgent support. We cannot let them down.
“Some of the people we met have been living in camps for internally displaced persons for several years.
”They deserve the helping hand that will lift them out of the crisis, whether it is a small mill to restart some kind of business or skills to make a living,” the statement further quoted Ghelani as saying.
UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria, Mr Edward Kallon, said ”all actors, including the government and private sector in Nigeria, need to join forces to help those affected by the crisis recover in dignity and restart their lives.
“Aid agencies have significantly scaled up and reached some two million people with aid this year.
“However, much more support is urgently needed. We are extremely worried about the tens of thousands of people who have recently fled rising violence and are still sleeping outside in the open,” he said.
With the rainy season progressing, they will face increased risk of diseases and need immediate protection.”
He added that violence continues to disrupt livelihoods and deepen the impact of chronic vulnerabilities such as food insecurity, malnutrition and epidemics in affected communities.
UN and its partners have appealed for $848 million to provide life-saving assistance to 6.2 million people in 2019.
Six months into the year, the response plan is 32.6 per cent funded due to the support of generous donors.
Significant additional funding is, however, urgently needed to sustain the humanitarian response and avoid an interruption in life-saving services that would further exacerbate the dire situation.
In total, 7.1 million people need life-saving assistance across the states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe.
Some three million people are facing food insecurity while malnutrition is threatening the lives of more than one million children.
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