The United Nations has decried that worsening food insecurity may push 1.74 million children under the age of five in North East Nigeria into malnutrition.

A statement on Tuesday by the United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria, Mr. Matthias Schmale titled: “Surviving the Food Crisis in North-east Nigeria,” said today in north-east Nigeria, millions of people were facing the painful consequences of a deteriorating food security and nutrition crisis.

Schmale, who explained that: “Food insecurity means not knowing when or where your next meal will come from.

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“It means, in essence, not being able to meet the basic needs for yourself or your family. As a result, countless families are forced to make alarming sacrifices to survive. Many, particularly children, are at risk of not making it through the lean season.”

He noted that according to the latest food security assessments, 4.1 million people in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe States – three of the States in north-eastern Nigeria, were at risk of severe food insecurity in this lean season, lamenting that: “People’s resilience and coping mechanisms have been devastated by more than a decade of conflict.”

He said: “As food insecurity worsens, so does the risk of malnutrition. In 2022, 1.74 million children under five are expected to suffer from acute malnutrition across the north-east. Mothers who have lost their children to malnutrition can testify to the danger it poses and the sorrow and despair it brings. While visiting a nutrition stabilization center in the north-east, I saw the haunting sight of a child on the brink of death, and it is a memory that continues to leave me troubled.”

He noted that the food security situation is impacted by many factors, such as insecurity due to ongoing conflict, rising food prices and climate change, which is taking place in a region where people are already facing extreme vulnerabilities.

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North-east Nigeria has struggled through 12 years of conflict and instability due to the violence of non-State armed groups like Boko Haram.

He revealed that this year, 8.4 million people need humanitarian assistance, of which about 80 percent are women and children, adding that violence had displaced more than 2.2 million people from their homes.

“Livelihoods, health services, education and other essential areas have been devastated, depriving millions of people of critical support and the capacity to provide for themselves and their families,” he said.

Schmale lamented that: “People displaced by violence have few options. Many fled to garrison towns for safety, where going beyond the towns’ protective ditches to practice agriculture or collect firewood puts their lives at risk. Many vulnerable people have little choice but to resort to negative coping mechanisms to obtain food, such as survival sex, child marriages, begging, child labour or recruitment into armed groups.”

He gave a story of Hauwa, a mother in Rann, Borno State, with no access to food and must beg on the street to feed herself and her two children, decrying that this was not nearly enough, and hunger had turned her body into something she no longer recognizes.

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Hauwa was quoted to have said: “This is not my body.”

He said as part of the USD$1.1 billion required for the 2022 Humanitarian Response Plan for Nigeria, a $351 million multisector response has been developed to save lives and protect the most vulnerable, noting that funds are immediately needed, and every contribution can make a difference.