UN supports 1.2m farmers in North-East
Peter Lundberg, United Nations Deputy
Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria, recently disclosed to newsmen in
Maiduguri that the global body has distributed fertilisers, seeds and other
inputs to 1.2 million farmers that were displaced by the Boko Haram insurgency
in the North-East of the country.
Lundberg said this was done as
part of effort to assist farmers who had returned to their homes in liberated
communities. He added that the UN and its partners are also providing food
support to 1. 3 million displaced persons on monthly basis in the region.
He said the measure was part of a
comprehensive support programme to enhance food security and tackle
humanitarian crisis occasioned by the insurgency. “For the UN, food security
situation is one of the major issues.
“This means that hundreds and
thousands of people do not have enough to eat as a result of the lean season
currently at its peak and compounded by insecurity, which means people cannot
farm like they used to,” he said.
He added that the UN had targeted
about 6.9 million out of the 8.9 million displaced persons for immediate
humanitarian assistance in Adamawa, Borno, Yobe and the Lake Chad Basin. “The
UN is committed to provide humanitarian support to people who fled the
conflict; people who have lost everything, people who endure tremendous loss,
pain and suffering, and yet stand tall.
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