Boko Haram insurgents |
SHOWBIZPLUSng gathered that the
National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) figures are the starkest indication
yet of the increase in bloodshed in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe that have caused
growing concern.
NEMA said in a presentation in
Abuja on Tuesday that people living in the states were “caught up in an
intensifying conflict”, which has been raging since 2009.
“The human toll: more than 1,000
people dead and 249,446 displaced between January to March 2014… One in five of
the total population are not living in their own homes,” it added.
Violence has increased in
northeastern Nigeria since the new year, including a high-profile attack on a
boarding school in Yobe, which saw dozens of students slaughtered in their
beds.
A state of emergency imposed in
the three states in May last year has largely forced the militants out of urban
centres but villagers in remote, rural areas have borne the brunt of continued
attacks blamed on the Islamist extremists.
NEMA said that some 3.2 million
people — nearly a third of the overall population in the three states — were
affected by the crisis, most of them women, children and older people.
A total of 244,000 were living
with friends or relatives and just over 5,000 were in camps.
“Immediate assistance” was
required for 1.5 million people while there needed to be an “urgent and
significant scale-up” of humanitarian assistance, especially of food, water and
healthcare.
Nigeria’s government has been
criticised for its apparent inability to end the Boko Haram insurgency, with a
focus on the military’s tactics to deal with guerrilla fighting by the
Islamists.
Military top brass, however,
maintain that a troop surge plus recent restrictions on the insurgents’ ability
to seek safe haven outside Nigeria has prompted them to lash out and attack.
Boko Haram, which wants to create
a separate strict Islamic state in northern Nigeria, was depleted in both
numbers and weaponry, officers say.
NEMA’s estimate on the current
death toll is the highest among agencies tracking the conflict.
Human Rights Watch said on March
14 that 700 people had died since the turn of the year and that there had been
“mass displacement” of residents, without giving exact figures.
The Council on Foreign Relations
think-tank’s “Nigeria Security Tracker”, which documents violent deaths by
perpetrator, said that 650 people had been killed between January 5 and
February 23.
The United Nations has said that
nearly 300,000 people had been internally displaced from the start of emergency
rule to January 1 but has not yet provided figures for this year.
AFP
10 comments:
Lack of security
this is outrageous
what has the Government done abt it?
nobody has been held accountable for these loss of life
So pathetic
This is really worrisome
Worst of all no solution to these crisis
We live in fear up north
I feel for the families that has lost a life in this crisis
may all their soul rest in peace
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