close
Wednesday, February 2, 2022

Northern Nigeria to slide into catastrophic starvation from June: Report

According to the report, Nigeria’s insecurity and high inflation rates will likely worsen food shortage and starvation.

• February 2, 2022
malnourished children
malnourished children used to illustrate the story [Photo credit: Business Day]

Northern Nigeria is expected to plunge into catastrophic food insecurity from June 2022, a new report reveals.

Specifically, the World Food Programme (WFP) and Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said the conflict-ridden North-East would slide into starvation and death from June this year if humanitarian intervention measures were not sustained.

In a report seen by Peoples Gazette on Wednesday, the organisations spotlighted Borno as the area with the highest concerns following incessant insurgent attacks. The report detailed that around 12.9 million people across 21 states and the Federal Capital Territory were facing a crisis or worse levels of acute food insecurity.

“In Nigeria, while some populations in conflict-affected areas in the North-East are now projected to slide into catastrophic food insecurity at the peak of the lean season, from June 2022 onwards,” noted the WFP and FAO report,” adding that “it cannot be excluded that some may start to experience this even earlier, in the next months, and that the magnitude may be higher than what projections anticipate.”

If humanitarian interventions were not sustained, it projected a 5.1 million increase to 18 million between June and August 2022.

Titled ‘Hunger Hotspots’, the report pointed out that Nigeria, Ethiopia, South Sudan and Yemen required urgent attention.

According to the report, Nigeria’s insecurity and high inflation rates will likely worsen food shortage and starvation.

The organisations added that persistent attacks by non-state armed groups in the North-East, bandits and intercommunal violence in the North-Central and North-West would continue to disrupt agricultural and market activities, leading to reduced incomes and new displacements.

The report also stressed that difficult macroeconomic conditions would continue to constrain access to food for vulnerable households struggling to recover from the COVID-19 pandemic-induced economic downturn.

The WFP and FAO stated that hunger would be prevalent in areas where conflict, economic shocks, natural hazards, political instability, and limited humanitarian access put millions of lives at risk.

More from Peoples Gazette

Economy

Buhari regime will continue to borrow without subsidy removal: Femi Adesina

“You know how much could have been saved if the subsidy was removed and how it could have been diverted to other areas and spheres of national life.

President Muhammadu Buhari

Africa

Attempted Coup: Buhari praises Guinea-Bissau loyal troops

Mr Embalo assured Mr Buhari the situation had been brought under control and that “all is well, and normalcy fully restored.”

Politics

UK party members urge APC to postpone convention

“The chapter urged APC’s National Executive Committee (NEC) to immediately postpone the National Convention.”

Fly Emirate plane used to illustrate the story. [PHOTO CREDIT: Emirate Web Page]

Diaspora

580 companies collapse, 4,500 workers jobless due to poor electricity in Kabul

On December 14, 2021, Emirates announced the suspension of flight operations between Nigeria and Dubai amid a slot allocation row.

Africa

DR Congo militiamen kill 50 civilians

The province of Ituri and the neighbouring North Kivu province, long troubled by insecurity, have been under siege since May 6 due to violence by armed groups.

President Sissoco Embalo

Politics

Guinea-Bissau’s President Umaro Embalo survives attempted coup

“When added to successful coups in Mali, Burkina Faso, Guinea, and Chad…there is no doubt that West African leaders are nervously looking over their shoulders.”

Fly Emirate plane used to illustrate the story. [PHOTO CREDIT: Emirate Web Page]

Diaspora

Nigeria-UAE Spat: Buhari regime reinstates Emirates flights

On December 14, 2021, Emirates announced the suspension of flight operations between Nigeria and Dubai amid a slot allocation row.