Two hundred children could die every day in north-east Nigeria hunger crisis

STARVATION IN IDPs NIGERIA
Rakiya* attends the Save the Children stabilisation centre with her child Saliha*aged 20 months. Rakiya* became displaced after insurgents burned down her house in Konduga, in Borno state
© Save the Children

New data from Save the Children reveals that up to half of all under-fives in some areas are suffering from acute malnutrition STARVATION IN IDPs NIGERIA

STARVATION IN IDPs NIGERIA

A new survey from Save the Children has found that up to half of all under-fives are acutely malnourished in some parts of north-east Nigeria where it is feared 200 children could die every day in a hidden hunger crisis.

STARVATION IN IDPs NIGERIA

Screenings carried out between June and last month regularly found between 40% and 50% of children under-five to be acutely malnourished in some places. The figure could be even worse in areas that are out of reach because of insecurity, the charity says. Save the Children is warning that the hunger crisis threatens to overwhelm a desperately under-funded humanitarian response.

Ben Foot, Country Director of Save the Children Nigeria, has just visited intensive care units for malnourished children on the outskirts of Maiduguri, the capital city of Borno state and says the agency’s unit is struggling to cope.

“Children are arriving here fighting for their lives. Our intensive care unit is already over capacity and we are having to move severely malnourished children to mattresses on the floor. Our medical staff are working around the clock but in the absence of new funding it won’t be long before we could be in the painful position of having to turn away sick and starving children.”

One of the children in the unit last week was a very thin and distressed one-year-old girl named Saliha* whose mother had fled to Maiduguri after her husband was killed by insurgents in Konduga, to the south. The woman’s other child, aged two, had died of measles before she could reach help.

‘I never want to go back,’ the mother said. ‘All I want is for Saliha to get well.’

A vital funding conference expected to be held in Geneva in early December could help to provide the money needed to prevent the hunger crisis from spiralling out of control, Save the Children says.

“The really shocking aspect of the international response is the absence of key international donors,” Foot said. “With the UK, US and EU accounting for two-thirds of the aid provided, other countries need to step up.”

North-east Nigeria’s humanitarian crisis – the result of a brutal seven-year insurgency which has forced a million children from their homes – has been described by the United Nations as the most neglected in the world.

Another mother at Save the Children’s clinic said her husband, uncle and three or her children had been murdered in front of her. Her two-year-year old daughter had been acutely malnourished, under-developed and suffering from pneumonia when she arrived. Doctors had saved the toddler’s life but feared that her mother, who had nothing, would be unable to keep the girl and two other children healthy.

With a United Nations appeal only 38% funded, 75,000 severely malnourished and starvation children could die within a year unless they receive immediate humanitarian aid, the UN says.

“Children are presenting in desperate conditions and facing severe malnutrition, often in combination with other life-threatening illnesses like pneumonia, malaria and diarrhoea,” said Ben Foot. “For some cases this may be the second or third time they have fought malnutrition so their immune systems are already severely weakened. We just don’t have the resources to enable us to follow up on cases effectively.”

Ben Foot added: “The international community needs to wake up to the scale of the crisis unfolding in north-east Nigeria. We need a humanitarian response plan of at least $1bn for 2016/2017. That’s double the amount requested this year. And only one-third of that request was met. Repeating this performance will cost thousands of children their lives.”

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Save the Children has provided treatment to 12,000 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition and starvation in north-east Nigeria. In September, it opened a new stabilisation centre to provide lifesaving care to a rising number of children suffering from the most severe form of acute malnutrition with complications such as malaria.

STARVATION IN IDPs NIGERIA

The charity is providing emergency food assistance to 7,500 families, and aims to reach 5,000 more in the next few weeks. The food assistance comes in the form of electronic vouchers, which are managed through a mobile phone platform. Save the Children has built latrines and water pumps, is providing care for 3- to 5-year-olds and is training foster parents to care for children who have been separated from their own parents.

Notes to editors

·Malnutrition screenings conducted by Save the Children in north-east Nigeria between June and October among communities with high numbers of displaced people in Jere and Konduga Local Government Authorities in Borno State regularly found between 40% and 50% of under-5s to be acutely malnourished in some locations. The data is consistent with screenings carried out over the same period by other groups: http://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/10.28.16%20-%20…

·According to the UN, 75,000 children could die from hunger in NE Nigeria over the next year. This amounts to 205 per day.

STARVATION IN IDPs NIGERIA

*Name changed to protect identity

Spokespeople are available in Nigeria and in the UK. To arrange an interview, please contact:

Tracy.manners@savethechildren.org and r.treadway@savethechildren.org.uk

Or call +44 (0)20 7012 6841 during office hours (UK) or +447831650409 out of hours.

Date of Publication:  NOV. 2016

SOURCE: SAVE THE CHILDREN

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