B/Haram: 2.8m in need of protection, intervention – UNDP

The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has said about 2.8 million people are in dire need of protection and humanitarian intervention as the Lake Chad region continues to witness the ravages of the Boko Haram insurgency.

The UNDP Regional Director, Bureau for Africa, Ahunna Eziakonwa, said this Tuesday during a regional parley by representatives of the four affected nations in Niamey, Niger Republic.

Security experts, however, believe the figure is much higher and is expected to increase.

Eight governors and representatives from Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon, and Chad are currently meeting in Niamey, Niger, on Wednesday alongside several CSOs and stakeholders to deliberate on the crisis rocking the Lake Chad region.

The governors include the Governor of Extreme North, Cameroon; Governor of North Region, Cameroon; Governor of Diffa, Niger; Governor of Adamawa, Nigeria; Governor of Borno, Nigeria; Governor of Yobe, Nigeria; Governor of Hadjer Lamis, Chad; and the Governor of Lac Region, Chad.

The event, organised by the Lake Chad Basin Commission (LCBC), has technical support from the UNDP, African Union (AU) and the Crisis Management Initiative (CMI).

Mrs Eziakonwa said the unending conflicts across the four nations have eroded, “and in some cases ruptured, the bonds and relationships within groups and communities, with the poor bearing the greatest brunt.”

The Boko Haram insurgency in North-east Nigeria and neighbouring countries of Cameroon, Chad, and Niger has resulted in displacements, destructions of basic infrastructure, and environmental degradation on the Lake, severely impacting communities across the region.

“The conflicts have eroded, and in some cases ruptured, the bonds and relationships within groups and communities, with the poor bearing the greatest brunt. Extremists target public spaces, forcing people to make difficult choices between risking death by going to work to earn a meagre living, or risking the very survival of their families. Nowhere is this more evident than in the Lake Chad Basin with over 2.8 million people displaced across four countries,” she said.

She called on concerned authorities to fast track solutions that would end the conflict.

“The Lake Chad Basin countries have always been an important focus of the United Nations Development Programme. The 8 Provinces/Regions of the Basin are home to 19 million people, sharing borders, cultures, languages, currencies. Still, and perhaps more than ever, the Lake Chad Basin countries, with their specific and different contexts, challenge us to find the right solutions to issues of inequalities, deprivation, and poverty.”

She also said the second Governors’ Forum is a continuation of collective efforts to address a three-tiered crisis.

These she said include: “structural and persistent development deficit across parts of the region; (ii) a breakdown of the social contract that has fostered localised violent extremist insurgency; and (iii) an unfolding environmental catastrophe.

“While affected by the same crisis, we are cognisant that the situation differs among countries in the Lake Chad Basin and that our offer has to be harmonised yet differentiated. National responses must be complemented by cross-border interventions and regional collaboration.”

Leave a Reply