Genocide Watch exists to predict, prevent, stop, and punish genocide and other forms of mass murder. Our purpose is to build an international movement to prevent and stop genocide.
Kevin Sieff, The Washington Post
22 June 2016
Image: This March 7 photo shows Hamsatu, 25, and Fatima, 3, at the Dalori Internally Displaced Persons Camp in Maiduguri, Nigeria. Both had once been captives of Boko Haram. They did not know the fates of family members they had been separated from. (Jane Hahn for the Washington Post)
NAIROBI — Thousands of Boko Haram victims are now on the verge of starvation in northeastern Nigeria, months after being rescued from the radical Islamist group, the aid group Doctors Without Borders said on Wednesday.
At a remote camp of 24,000 displaced people in the city of Bama, an average of six people have died per day, mostly from diarrhea and malnutrition, according to the organization, also known by its French name Medecins Sans Frontieres, or MSF. Many more are on the verge of starvation.
“According to the accounts given to MSF by displaced people in Bama new graves are appearing on a daily basis. We were told on certain days more than 30 people were dying due to hunger and illness,” said Ghada Hatim, MSF head of mission in Nigeria.
The camp in Bama is one of many that now pepper northeastern Nigeria, where more than 2 million people are currently displaced. Many of their homes have been scorched by Boko Haram, which once controlled a huge swatch of the region before being forced to retreat by the Nigerian military.
The displaced now live in camps managed by the Nigerian military and the country’s own aid agencies. The United Nations has a presence as well, but international aid groups are far less present than they are in other humanitarian crises, in part because of the tense security situation and the military’s restrictions on their movement.
One Nigerian official described the city itself, which once housed roughly 350,000 people, as “a ghost city with virtually nothing functional.”
Although there has been significant international attention on the fight against Boko Haram and the pursuit of scores of schoolgirls kidnapped two years ago, victims who have already been rescued from the group continue to languish with little assistance. The recent report shows just how dire things have become for many of them.
“Of the 466 children screened by MSF medical teams at Nursing Camp,” Doctors Without Borders said in a statement, “66 percent were emaciated.”
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© 2016, The Washington Post