The UN agency said
some 10 million U.S. dollars are needed to supply seeds,
fertilizers and irrigation equipment for displaced persons in
the area and the people who are hosting them, Farhan Haq, the
deputy UN spokesman, said at a daily news briefing here.
“FAO said for the
past few years normal agriculture and fishing activities have
been hampered by conflict,” Haq said.
“But this year,
significant territory previously controlled by Boko Haram has
been rendered accessible to humanitarian assistance,” he said.
FAO said there is
now a “critical opportunity to tackle the alarming levels of
food insecurity in northeast Nigeria.”
Boko Haram militants
are on the run from a multinational force in northeast Nigeria.
The seven-year Boko Haram uprising has killed more than 20,000
people, forced 2.2 million from their homes and spread across
Nigeria’s borders.
The resumption of
agricultural activities in the northeast Nigeria is of utmost
priority to ensure that people can produce enough food for
themselves. This includes those who have been internally
displaced by the conflict as well as communities who have been
hosting them.
These populations
need urgent assistance to recover their livelihoods, which are
mostly based on crop farming, artisanal fisheries and
aquaculture and livestock production. “For the last three to
four years this has not been possible due to the conflict,” said
Bukar Tijani, FAO assistant director-general and regional
representative for Africa.
More than 3 million
people are affected by acute food insecurity in Borno, Yobe and
Adamawa States in northeast Nigeria, FAO said.
Three consecutive
planting seasons have been lost due to the fighting in
northeastern Nigeria. Moreover, large influxes of people
escaping repeated Boko Haram attacks have put extreme pressure
on already poor and vulnerable host communities and their
fragile agricultural and pastoral livelihoods, exacerbating the
already precarious food and nutrition security situation, said
the UN agency.
Failure to rebuild
the rural economy will translate into lack of employment
opportunities with possible harmful consequences including youth
radicalization and enrolment into armed groups, resulting in
continued civil unrest, FAO warned.
In contrast,
restarting food production in the newly accessible areas will
have the additional benefits of e
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