Africa's
Lake Chad region has been hit by a "perfect storm" of challenges,
Swedish diplomat Carl Skau said, including terrorism and the effects of climate
change
|
UN Security Council
envoys on Thursday travel to Africa's Lake Chad region, where famine, the Boko
Haram insurgency, climate change and poor governance have collided to create
one of the world's worst humanitarian crises.
AFP
report continues:
The
15 ambassadors from the UN's top decision-making body hope to draw global
attention to the emergency affecting 21 million people across four countries:
Nigeria, Chad, Cameroon and Niger.
The
visit could also pave the way to stronger action by the Security Council to
address what has been a largely ignored crisis, relegated to the bottom of the
diplomatic agenda as war in Syria and South Sudan escalated.
British
Ambassador Matthew Rycroft said the visit will "shine a spotlight of
international attention on the humanitarian crisis" at a time when donors
are asked to come up with new financing for the region.
The
crisis has been "largely overlooked" and the Security Council was
"perhaps a bit slow off the mark in tackling the threat of Boko
Haram," Rycroft told AFP.
Led
by Britain, France and Senegal, the council will meet with leaders, talk to
civil society groups and visit camps in Cameroon and northeast Nigeria
sheltering some of the 2.3 million people displaced in the region.
The
visit begins in Cameroon a week after UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres set
off alarm bells over the threat of famine in northeast Nigeria, the epicenter
of the Boko Haram conflict.
The
United Nations is seeking $1.5 billion in funding for 2017 for the Lake Chad
region -- almost half of which is needed for northeast Nigeria, where 5.1
million people face acute food shortages.
- 'Perfect storm' of
challenges -
Boko
Haram took up arms in 2009 in pursuit of an Islamic state in northern Nigeria,
but the insurgency has since spread with frequent suicide bomb attacks.
Africa's
second-largest oil producer, Nigeria has made inroads in its military campaign
to root out the Islamists, but at a high price for civilians.
Last
month, a Nigerian military jet accidentally bombed a camp for displaced people in
Borno state, killing at least 112 civilians, including six Nigerian Red Cross
workers, and wounding 100.
Compounding
the crisis, climate change and population growth have turned Lake Chad -- once
one of Africa's largest bodies of water -- into an environmental disaster.
The
lake's water basin has shrunk to barely 10 per cent of its 1960s levels.
The
ambassadors will encourage the four countries to come up with a new strategy to
address the crisis and its many facets, French Ambassador Francois Delattre
said.
Governments
should "adopt a comprehensive approach to address the root causes of
terrorism, including governance and development," he said.
Sweden,
a non-permanent council member and big humanitarian donor, hopes the council
will be more active in tackling the crisis.
The
Lake Chad region has been hit by a "perfect storm" of challenges,
Swedish diplomat Carl Skau said: "terrorism, trafficking, serious
underdevelopment, but also the effects of climate change."
"This
cannot be a one-off," he added. "We need a serious follow-up when we
come back."
Fourteen countries pledged US$672 million to the Lake Chad funding appeal at a donors' conference in Oslo last week, a tally UN officials welcomed as a good start to the aid effort.
No comments:
Post a Comment