200 tonnes of date fruits donated by the Kingdom of Saudi to Nigerian Muslims found their way into the markets |
At least half of Nigerian
government food aid sent northeast for hungry people driven from their homes by
Boko Haram has been "diverted" and never reached them, a government
official said.
Reuters
report continues:
Some
1.5 million people are on the brink of famine in the northeast, where the
jihadist group has killed more than 20,000 people and forced 2.7 million to
flee during its eight-year uprising to create an Islamic caliphate.
A
programme was launched on June 8 by Yemi Osinbajo, acting president while
President Muhammadu Buhari is in Britain on medical leave, to distribute grain
to 1.8 million people still displaced by the insurgency, many of whom live in
camps.
"Over
1,000 trucks of assorted grains are now on course, delivering the grains intact
to beneficiaries since the commencement of the present programme as against the
reported diversion of over 50 trucks in every 100 trucks sent to the
northeast," said Osinbajo's spokesman Laolu Akande in an emailed statement
late on Saturday.
"The
issue of diversion of relief materials, including food and related matters,
which has dogged food delivery to the IDPs [internally displaced people] would
be significantly curbed under the new distribution matrix."
Akande
said 1,376 military personnel and 656 armed police would guard the food as it
was moved from warehouses and distributed to displaced people in Borno, Adamawa
and Yobe - the three states worst hit by the insurgency.
Boko
Haram controlled an area of the northeast around the size of Belgium in early
2015 but has since been pushed out of most of the territory by Nigeria's army
and troops from neighbouring countries.
But
the Islamists continue to carry out attacks in the northeast and neighbouring
Cameroon and Niger.
Boko
Haram killed 14 people in bombings and shootings in the northeastern city of
Maiduguri on June 7, in a large-scale attack quelled by the army after several
hours.
A
U.N. official said this month the World Food Programme had scaled back its
emergency plans in the northeast because of lack of funds, now aiming to supply
food to 1.4 million people instead of the 1.8 million previously intended.
The U.N. says it needs US$1.05 billion this year to deal with the crisis in northeast Nigeria - which, along with Somalia and South Sudan, is one of three humanitarian emergencies unfolding in Africa - but has only received about a quarter of that sum.
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