
A frail woman hesitates for a moment before handing over her sick child to a nurse.
"This
child cannot stand," says another medic as the severely malnourished
boy is carried to the intensive care unit at the Gwange therapeutic
feeding center on the outskirts of Maiduguri, the capital of Nigeria's
Borno state.
That scene, captured on video
by Doctors Without Borders (MSF), plays out countless times in the
northeastern state, where hunger is rampant, according to new numbers.
The group says 500,000 people are in urgent need of food, shelter and medical care.
Nearly
244,000 children are suffering from severe acute malnutrition in Borno
state and an estimated 49,000 of them, about 1 in 5, will die if they
don't receive urgent treatment, UNICEF said in a new report.
African most dangerous group
"Some
134 children on average will die every day from causes linked to acute
malnutrition if the response is not scaled up quickly," said Manuel
Fontaine, UNICEF regional director for Western and Central Africa, who
recently returned from a visit to Borno.
"A lot of these children are arriving in a very advanced stage of malnutrition, they are extremely weak," Claire Magone, MSF emergency coordinator in Maiduguri, told CNN on Sunday. Many more in
other parts of the state are still out of reach for the humanitarian
teams because of the volatile security situation, she said.
It's
difficult to know how many people have died in recent months. Doctors
Without Borders said a late June visit to the Bama area showed more than
1,200 graves had been dug since internally displaced citizens had
gathered in a hospital compound. Five children died while an assessment
was being undertaken.
A July return
visit provided this grim scene of what the group called a ghost town,
hundreds having been evacuated: "There are hardly any men or boys older
than 12. We don't know what has happened to them."
'True scope of this crisis yet to be revealed'
Since
taking office last year, Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari has
pledged to defeat the terror group Boko Haram, which operates mainly in
the northeast of the country but also conducts attacks across the
borders.
Despite some setbacks, the
Nigerian military, working with neighboring countries that include Chad
and Cameroon, which also have been affected, has been able to regain
significant territory.
As Boko
Haram is pushed out of more areas, the magnitude of the humanitarian
crisis aggravated by the extremist group's deadly insurgency is becoming
more palpable.
Hundreds of
thousands have been cut off from the outside world, in some cases for as
long as two years, Doctors Without Borders said in a statement. People
in those areas are relying entirely on outside help, the group said.
Boko Haram turning girls in to weapons
Reaching
some of those towns and villages is still very dangerous, Doune Porter,
UNICEF Nigeria communications officer, told CNN. "There are attacks on
the roads, there are land mines," she said.
"This is a problem that the government
of Nigeria cannot handle alone," she said. "It's a huge emergency that
requires an enormous scale-up of assistance from around the world."
Homes
and livestock have been looted or destroyed in the ongoing violence,
and people are unable to cultivate crops. As a result, malnutrition in
the state is rampant, said the charity.
"There
are 2 million people we are still not able to reach in Borno state,
which means that the true scope of this crisis has yet to be revealed to
the world," said Fontaine.
Urgent need for more assistance
Humanitarian
organizations have been able to provide support to some areas, like
Dikwa and Bama, and people who require urgent medical help have been
transported to facilities where they can receive treatment.
Children often are the most vulnerable.
"It
is heartbreaking to see children who are just very obviously emaciated
and in desperate, desperate need of help," said Porter. Severely
malnourished children are nine times more likely to die from diseases
like malaria or diarrhea, she said.
Last
Thursday, an aid convoy delivered 31 metric tons of food and a limited
amount of non-food items to residents in Banki near the border with
Cameroon, Jens Laerke, spokesman for the Office for the Coordination of
Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) told journalists in Geneva. The food
delivery is expected to last for less than a week, he said.
Since
the beginning of the conflict in 2009, nearly 2.5 million Nigerians
have fled their homes, according to the latest OCHA data.
More than 20,000 people have been killed in the violence and thousands have been abducted.
Boko
Haram, which in the local Hausa dialect means "Western education is
forbidden," is considered one of the most dangerous terror groups on the
continent.
It operates out of Nigeria and its purpose is to institute Sharia law in the country.
Boko Haram has recruited child soldiers and reportedly uses children as suicide bombers.
Post a Comment