Food reaching thousands sacked by Boko Haram - UN

Food for Displaced Persons IDPs

FILE PHOTO: Some internally displaced persons struggling for food

FILE PHOTO: Some internally displaced persons struggling for food
FILE PHOTO: Some internally displaced persons struggling for food

The UN officials said the successful delivery of food aid to thousands of people uprooted by Boko Haram violence in Chad and cut off from help since November may reflect improving security in the country.

Stephen Tull, Chad Coordinator for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said on Thursday in Ndjamena that WFP has delivered food to 5,000 people who had been forced to flee their homes by conflict at five sites north of Lake Chad border town Baga Sola.

He said the threat of Boko Haram militants and the difficulty in reaching some areas, partly because of the lack of roads, are hindering efforts to reach tens of thousands more people.

“It has been a challenge to push the government to let us get to where we need to go, even with the necessary military escorts.

“Yet I believe access was granted here as the military grew in confidence that it was gaining control of the area,” he said.

Tull said available data has indicated that more than 100,000 people are uprooted in Chad because of the violence in the Lake Chad region by militant group Boko Haram.

He noted that a regional offensive by Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon last year drove the militants from much of the territory it held in northern Nigeria, undermining its six-year campaign to carve out an Islamist caliphate.

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The OCHA coordinator said the militants have since struck back with a renewed wave of deadly raids and suicide bombings in the lawless Lake Chad area, where the borders of the four West African countries meet.

Mary-Ellen McGroarty, WFP Chad Country Director, said the violence has disrupted livelihoods including fishing and farming, hit cross-border trade and markets and left one in seven people in the country without enough to eat. “People have been really scraping the barrel to survive; some said that they have been surviving only on maize for weeks,” she said.

McGroarty said WFP was working to reach 17 more sites in the area north of Baga Sola, which have not received any aid, and provide food for some 35,000 displaced people by the end of the month.
“There are no roads so reaching these sites means a 300 kilometre (190 mile) round trip in the sand.

“We will like to move quicker but the challenges are enormous,” she said.

WFP Regional Director, Denise Brown, disclosed that because it was focusing on providing aid to the newly displaced, the WFP cannot get enough aid to those who have been uprooted for longer.

He said lack of funding has forced the programme to arrive at making very make tough choices.

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