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Home»TheStories»Nigeria: MSF expresses concern over UN’s low-level humanitarian efforts in Northwest
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Nigeria: MSF expresses concern over UN’s low-level humanitarian efforts in Northwest

TheStoriesBy TheStoriesDecember 6, 2022No Comments4 Mins Read
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“We see children dying on the way to our clinics. We see children whose medical condition is so severe that we can’t do anything to save them”

The Country Representative of Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Nigeria, Dr. Simba Tirima has expressed grave concern over the United Nations’ low-level humanitarian efforts in the Northwest of Nigeria.

Tirima expressed the concern in a statement made available to THESTORIES on Tuesday.

According to him, aside from treating more than 140,000 children for acute malnutrition in Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto, Kebbi and Kano states, children whose medical condition is severe have had to die.

“The past few months have been incredibly difficult for the people of northwest Nigeria and our teams have seen unprecedented high numbers of malnourished children in the medical facilities where we work in partnership with the Ministry of health.

Rabi Auwali, 30, and her daughter Baraka, 10 months, during a consultation at an MSF-supported ambulatory therapeutic feeding center (ATFC), Maiyama Primary Health Center, Kebbi, Nigeria, 19 July 2022. Rabi lives in Andarai village, close to Maiyama. She had noticed that her 10-month- old daughter Baraka was sick. She was having diarrhea, fever and was losing weight. She took her to a nearby hospital but there was no improvement. Someone advised her to go to the MSF-supported ATFC at the Maiyama Primary Health Care Centre, where she has been coming regularly over the past weeks. “This is my 6th visit to this center”, she says.”I come here once week to collect plumpy nut for my baby. She’s doing much better now, and I did not have to pay.” Rabi has 9 children. Her husband is a small-scale millet and maize farmer. But the farm does not provide enough to cater to the nutritional needs of the entire household. “Whenever I see a mother with a sick child, I advise them to come this facility, as they will take care of your child well and at no cost”, she says. “I am so happy to see my child get strong again.”
Amaka Joseph, 35, prepares therapeutic meal for her children at an ITFC facility at Specialist Hospital Sokoto, Nigeria on Friday 22 July 2022 “When we began treatment, I started seeing improvement. Now they can eat well and play and this makes me happy” she said. She would leave her children in the care of her mother when she goes to her shop, so she suspects that maybe the hygiene of the children has not been up to par. “Now, I will take care of everything that has to do with these children, their food, their water and environment, I will make sure that everywhere is clean” says Amaka.
Portrait of Aisha Shitu (right) carrying her child, while MSF health staff perform a height assessment at the MSF Kofar Marusa ambulatory therapeutic feeding centre, Katsina State, Nigeria, June 2022.

“This year alone, we have treated more than 140,000 children for acute malnutrition in Zamfara, Katsina, Sokoto, Kebbi and Kano states.

“In Zamfara state, the admissions of children with severe acute malnutrition to our ambulatory therapeutic feeding centres are 39 per cent higher than last year. 

“In Katsina state, the figures have skyrocketed to almost 80,000 children treated for severe acute malnutrition while 12,700 of them required inpatient care.

“We see children dying on the way to our clinics. We see children whose medical condition is so severe that we can’t do anything to save them.

“Escalating violence, displacement, soaring food prices, epidemics and climate change are the factors triggering this alarming health and malnutrition crisis. 

“The scale of this crisis demands national and international mobilization for an adequate humanitarian response. We call on other organisations to join in and support the authorities in meeting the most urgent needs of the affected communities.

“The northwest continues to be largely ignored in the overall UN-led humanitarian response and plans in Nigeria, which focus on the plight of the northeast of the country. 

“Ensuring greater access to lifesaving nutritional treatment for the thousands of people who need it now and during the next lean season is essential if we are to avoid 2023 becoming another devastating year for children in northwest Nigeria”,  says Dr. Simba Tirima, MSF Country Representative in Nigeria

Humanitarian efforts MSF Northwest Nigeria United Nations
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