Mangoes and watermelons,
prayer mats and Chinese-made utensils are again filling the stalls of
Maiduguri's markets, as they recover after years of Boko Haram violence.
Food
may be returning to Maiduguri's markets, but they still have to be imported and
prices have shot up
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But
in the birthplace of Boko Haram, appearances are often deceptive.
The
eight-year insurgency has brought the Borno state capital to its knees, after
centuries as a commercial crossroads between the Sahel and central Africa.
The
historic trading hub has been transformed into a centre of humanitarian aid.
Life runs according to the rhythm of the aid agencies that have flocked there
in the last year.
But
Modu Kolo Dunoma, the head of the Monday Market -- the city's biggest and a
frequent target for Boko Haram's bombs and bombers -- told AFP: "We face a
difficult situation.
"Farmers
still can't go back to their farms and most of the food items are imported from
other states. Prices have really gone up."
A
sack of rice that once sold for ₦8,000 (US$25, €22) now goes for ₦17,000 as a
result of food shortages, spiralling inflation and an economy in recession.
"People
just can't afford to buy food," said Dunoma.
- Aid-dependent -
On
the edge of the city, never-ending lines of lorries spend days waiting to take
their cargoes to Dikwa and beyond to neighbouring Cameroon.
Maiduguri's
main source of revenue -- the transport of goods to land-locked countries such
as Chad, Central African Republic and Sudan -- is struggling to take off again.
The
army has reopened some main roads but ambushes still happen frequently and
vehicles are not allowed to travel without a heavily armed military escort.
Maiduguri's
needs remain huge, however, with the population having doubled since 2009, as
more than one million people sought safe haven from Boko Haram attacks.
Confined
to camps or living among the local population, they survive on external aid.
According
to the United Nations, nearly two million people in the northeast region are
currently suffering from severe acute malnutrition and 5.5 million are in need
of food aid.
The
international community belatedly realised the scale of the humanitarian crisis
in northeast Nigeria and most of the NGOs now in Maiduguri only arrived from
mid-2016.
Since
then, daily life in the camps is an endless round of food distribution. Huge
gleaming white 4x4 vehicles belonging to aid agencies ply the roads.
Long
queues form at bank ATMs every morning as people try to get money from cash
transfer schemes to see them through to the end of the month.
Muhammadu
Ali, a 48-year-old civil servant, fled the border town of Ngala with his wife
and 10 children. His meagre salary is not enough for his family to live on.
"How
can I feed them with 20,000 naira? We are totally reliant on aid," he
said.
- Property boom -
Not
everyone is suffering hardship. Certain sectors have even benefitted from the
influx of foreign non-governmental organizations and the displaced people.
"I
can tell you we make money," laughed Ali Garba Bashehu, the head of
Dolphin, one of the few estate agents in Maiduguri.
Property
owners who fled Maiduguri in their droves, thinking the city would fall to the
insurgents, sold their houses for next to nothing.
The
same properties are now rented out for a fortune.
"NGOs
don't know what to do with the money," said Bashehu, as he gave a tour of
Maiduguri's government reserved area, its high walls topped with barbed wire.
"You
see this compound surrounded by blue drums? The UN rents it for US$225,000 a
year, pre-paid!" he said.
Down
the road, he pointed out another rented by a French NGO for US$120,000 a year.
"This
hotel is fully leased by the year," he said stopping in front of a large
white building. "You can't book a room.
"A
house worth ₦1 million per year can cost up to ₦5 million today."
In
more modest areas, too, prices have soared.
Baba
Wuroma Usman, who is in his 50s, rented out a two-bedroom property for ₦100,000
three years ago. Now, he asks for double that.
- Corruption -
The
UN said that US$1.05 billion is required in Nigeria this year to fund its
humanitarian programmes. At a conference in Oslo in February, donors pledged US$672
million.
Despite
people's dire need for food, clean water, shelter and healthcare, there is
profiteering and corruption.
The
presidency has even admitted that nearly half of the food sent for the victims
of Boko Haram never reaches them, and Nigeria's anti-corruption agency has
launched several investigations.
In April, the country's top civil servant, Babachir David Lawal, was suspended for his alleged role in the fraudulent attribution of contracts for reconstruction in the northeast.
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