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Nigeria's troubled northwest battles child malnutrition

Nigeria's troubled northwest battles child malnutrition
Médecins Sans Frontières 'MSF' doctor Ibrahim Fori Bwala, left, ....   -  
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Nasir Ghafoor/Copyright 2022 The Associated Press. All rights reserved

Nigeria

Four years ago gunmen attacked Halima Musa's village in northwestern Nigeria, killing her husband and the oldest of their seven children.

The family fled to the safety of a camp for displaced people, but now they are hungry, she said.

"It's been more than one year since the government brought us food items," she said from Sokoto camp.

It's 2 p.m. and she's preparing the family's first and only meal for the day. She's not sure where she'll find food the next day. "I and my children are usually begging," she said.

Northwest Nigeria's escalating violence has claimed thousands of lives and displaced hundreds of thousands more. Many, like Musa, are sheltering in camps that often have inadequate food.

The violence has exacerbated the chronic poverty in this part of the West African nation which has a 40% poverty rate, according to the latest government statistics, including some of the poorest citizens in the troubled north.

Many families have had to abandon their farmlands as they are forced to choose their lives over livelihoods.

The attacks have "pushed many communities to their limits, including about 500,000 people forced to flee from home," according to Michel-Olivier Lacharite of Doctors Without Borders, the France-based medical charity.

The group is preparing to provide food to up to 100,000 malnourished children this year in Nigeria's Katsina state alone, said Lacharite, head of the group's emergency operations.

Despite alerting the government to the problem, he said, "We have not seen the mobilization needed to avert a devastating nutrition crisis."

The violence in northwest Nigeria is blamed on armed groups that authorities say are mostly young semi-nomadic herdsmen from the Fulani tribe who are in conflict with settled farming communities over limited access to water and land. Some of the rebellious herdsmen are now working with Islamist extremist rebels in the country's northeast in targeting remote communities.

As Nigeria's jihadi insurgency in the northeast has abated somewhat, the violence in the northwest has worsened, according to authorities.

"The government gives them (displaced people) more attention in the northwest even now than the northeast," said Murdakai Titus with Nigeria's National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and Internally Displaced Persons.

"Northwest is given high priority … for intervention activities from the commission – relief materials, livelihood activities, training them to be self-reliant," he said.

The U.N. World Food Program Nigeria office is working to prevent acute malnutrition in children by providing nutritional assistance to children aged from 6 months to 23 months. Aid is also provided to pregnant and breastfeeding women in vulnerable households, said Chi Lael, a spokeswoman for the U.N. World Food Program in Nigeria.

Malnutrition remains a source of concern though, Lael said, pointing out that in certain areas, "children under five were twice as likely to be malnourished compared to those from the general population."

Manzo Ezekiel, a spokesperson for Nigeria's National Emergency Management Agency, said the agency knows nutrition must be improved for the internally displaced population.

Hannatu Ahmadu and her four children were on the run for a month after gunmen attacked her Takwo village in the Munya area of Niger state. They managed to find safety but they don't have enough food.

"As I speak with you, we have not been able to harvest our crops and we are currently here starving," she told AP from the Munya displacement camp in Niger state which neighbours Abuja, Nigeria's capital.

Ahmadu said erratic deliveries of food aid make it difficult to feed her children. "We only eat once a day," she said.

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