In Niger, more than 6 million people face food shortages
Humanitarian actors call for swift and adequate funding to respond to the unfolding crisis
Niamey, 12 March 2012 – Humanitarian actors are concerned by the early depletion of food reserves of many Nigerien families and warn of the risk of aggravation of the food and nutrition crisis if the aid response is not rapidly reinforced.
According to the national Early Warning System (SAP), more than 6 million Nigeriens need immediate assistance.
“The situation of populations, in particular women and children, is deteriorating quickly. We call for a rapid response, consistent and massive response to prevent irreversible situations and to promote durable solutions”, said Humanitarian Coordinator a.i. and also United Nations Resident Coordinator, Fodé Ndiaye.
“To cope with food shortage, families are forced to adapt their feeding and economical behaviors, notably by reducing the number of daily meals, by selling their assets, or migrating to urban areas or neighboring countries”, added Fodé Ndiaye.
The combination of different factors, from an agricultural and fodder deficit from last years harvest, roaring staple food prices, the decrease of the value of cattle and the high level of debt of households following past crises, has considerably weakened the revenues and access to food of many families across the country. For this people, the lean season has already started: they don’t have any more food reserve until the next harvest in October.
“I’m desperate. Last years’ harvest did not yield anything. Finding food for my children and I, even for one meal per day, has became as difficult as pushing a big rock in the sand”, said Hassana Souley, 36, widow and mother of 4 children, in Ouallam, one of the most affected departments, located 120 km north of Niamey. “I’m walking tens of kilometers a day in search of wood to sell and I do small jobs for some families in exchange of a meaningless quantity of food.”
In some communities in the region of Tillabéry, for example, more than 40 per cent of the households have left their villages earlier than usual in search of food or livelihoods, heading to urban areas. Nationwide, more than 33,000 children have already been taken out of school because of the early migration of their parents or to contribute to revenue generating activities. More than half a million children are at risk of dropping out of school due to the food and nutrition crisis.
In the hospitals and health centers of the most affected areas, the number of consultations has already doubled. Almost 394,000 children may be affected by severe malnutrition.
Furthermore, the recent influx of 30,000 people fleeing the armed conflict in Mali is adding more pressure on some communities already facing a critical food situation. These communities had already coped with the massive and unexpected arrival of migrants fleeing violence in Côte d’Ivoire and Libya.
Under the leadership of the Government, and since the first signs of early warning in September 2011, humanitarian actors are mobilized to prevent the impact of these shocks on the population and reinforce their adaptation capacity. This early response has proven efficient and one million vulnerable people have already been assisted.
Prevention costs less than treatment. The experience of the 2005 crisis has shown that one dollar invested in reducing risks could prevent a child from slipping into malnutrition, whereas its treatment costs $80.
An ambitious response plan has been devised by the government and includes the sale of cereals at moderate prices and livelihoods rehabilitation activities such as cash/food for work. The response also plans: targeted food assistance; seeds and cattle food distributions; support to cereal banks and to pastoral households; prevention and treatment of malnutrition and of associated medical complications, as well as the promotion of access to water and sanitation.
For the above reasons, humanitarian actors are calling on adequate funding to be able to take immediate action.
To date, the Consolidated Appeal launched by humanitarian actors – requesting $229 million – is only 30% funded. Similarly, the National Plan to support vulnerable populations is only 40% funded. Additional resources are immediately required to reinforce actions already taken and to promote the resilience of populations to recurring shocks, while still addressing the underlying and structural causes of vulnerability.
Read more
Blog: Hunger calls in Africa’s Sahel region
Report: Escaping the Hunger Cycle: Pathways to resilience in the Sahel (November 2011)
Video: Veterinary care program in Chad - we're vaccinating 1,000 animals/day, to help the resident in Guera region
Oxfam's response to the Sahel Food Crisis
Contact Information
For more information, please contact:
Franck Kuwonu, OCHA
Tel.: +227 96 00 94 96 or +227 20 72 61 04, email: kuwonu@un.org
Gaëlle Bausson, Emergency Capacity Building Project (NGO coalition of Care, CRS, MercyCorps, Oxfam, Plan, Save the Children, World Vision) Tel.: +227 92 40 74 24 or +227 98 02 99 30, email: gaelle.bausson@oxfamnovib.ne | gbausson.oxfam@gmail.com
-
Thx for speaking up for women: @MarsGlobal,#Mondelez & @Nestle have now moved from words 2 action http://t.co/laFtaWajFI #BehindTheBrands22 hours 49 min ago
-
UN agency and Slow Food group partner to boost livelihoods of small farmers http://t.co/l0YMT9yyk8 @SlowFoodHQ1 day 4 hours ago
-
RT @oxfamgbpress: Oxfam very relieved that Cyclone #Mahasen did not cause damage to vulnerable communities in Myanmar http://t.co/t2VwONPjs01 day 5 hours ago
-
RT @annamac33: The #ArmsTreaty can create a safer future for millions. Urge the US to sign! http://t.co/HRlNC8BcO31 day 6 hours ago
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @KristinDavis @GaelGarciaB @driverminnie @liviafirth @baabamaal @HelenLMirren @BoseOfficial1 day 6 hours ago
-
#FF Oxfam Global Ambassadors @AnnieLennox @djimonhounsou @angeliquekidjo @firthcom @coldplay @RahulBose1 http://t.co/rXOrgldjlt1 day 6 hours ago
-
Thanks for speaking up for women! @MarsGlobal #Mondelez & @Nestle have moved from words to action http://t.co/pMvtbhesPh #BehindTheBrands1 day 8 hours ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @IntermonOxfam @OxfamIndia @OxfamJapan @oxfamnovib @OxfamQuebec @Oxfam_mcm @OxfamItalia @oxfam_sol @oxfamfrance1 day 9 hours ago
-
#FF the Oxfams! @OxfamIreland @oxfamcanada @OxfamAustralia @Oxfam_DE @OxfamAmerica @oxfamgb @oxfamnz @oxfamhongkong @oxfammexico1 day 9 hours ago
-
Dismal levels of investment in agriculture a primary reason 1 in 8 people in the world are hungry http://t.co/orbRUxuVQo #govspendwatch2 days 9 min ago
-
'A Jungle of Humanity - and Disorder', an interactive feature from @nytimes http://t.co/DxmATtGICV #SyriaCrisis #Zaatari2 days 1 hour ago
-
RT @benphillips76 How to Start Development’s Gutenberg Revolution http://t.co/DbieZs9UBZ #govspendwatch2 days 2 hours ago
-
Social protection, #genderequality & #climatechange crucial to tackling inequality http://t.co/mKqSIBcceM via @guardian #govspendwatch2 days 4 hours ago
-
RT @louis_belanger Starting to see Syrian refugees all over #Beirut On promenade, on Hamra, outside grocery stores, in parking lots #Syria2 days 4 hours ago
-
Are governments meeting their #MDG spending targets? Read the blog http://t.co/3bF1lhH8AX #govspendwatch #MDGs2 days 5 hours ago
