Thousands of Nigerian refugees who fled to southeast Niger to escape the
Islamist group Boko Haram are in an "atrocious" situation, the United
Nations says.
"There is a psychosis among the people who were expelled from their
villages, their homes by Boko Haram. It's an atrocious situation." Toby
Lanzer, UN regional humanitarian coordinator for the Sahel, told AFP on
Wednesday during a visit to Assaga, one of the largest Nigerian refugee
camps in southeast Niger.
The camp, which has around 6,000 people, is about 10 kilometres (six
miles) from the regional capital of Diffa, near the Boko Haram
stronghold of restive northeast Nigeria.
"This is a very acute security crisis for those people, who are almost
without hope," Lanzer said.
They were "living peacefully" when "all of a sudden, the Boko Haram
arrive, force them out of their villages, steal their cattle," he said.
"I'll make a very strong plea next week at the UN General Assembly
and tell donors, 'We really must help the people of Diffa'," Lanzer
said, as he paid tribute to UN agencies deployed in Niger.
In the Assaga camp, set up by the UN three months ago, many refugees
live in abject poverty and sleep in makeshift shelters at the mercy of
mosquitoes and bad weather, an AFP reporter saw.
The first refugees were given tarpaulins and tents and regularly receive
food rations, but more recent arrivals say they have not yet received
any help at all.
"I have not eaten for days," Mohamed Ari complained to AFP.
Lanzer was visiting to assess the humanitarian situation in the Diffa
region, which has been weakened by successive years of drought and flood
and already hosts more than 150,000 refugees who fled the violence in
Nigeria since April 2013, according to the Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Niamey.
Since February 2015, Diffa has suffered several deadly attacks in Boko
Haram raids from neighbouring Lake Chad. In six years of bloodshed, the
Boko Haram insurgency to carve out an Islamic state in northeast Nigeria
has left at least 15,000 dead and left more than two million others
homeless.
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