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4.7 million Nigerians face starvation in North-east

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About 4.7 million people in northeast Nigeria – where the jihadist group Boko Haram has waged an eight-year insurgency – could starve to death in the famine-threatened region, the United Nations warned on Tuesday.

According to the World Food Programme, the number is expected to rise 5.2 million by August if nothing is done urgently.

“We need $250 million to prevent famine in the coming months,” the WFP’s regional director Abdou Dieng told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in Dakar.

Yet a shortfall in funding means the U.N. agency can only provide aid to 1.3 million of those most in need next month, instead of the 1.8 million people it had originally planned to reach, said Dieng.

“If we don’t get the funding, hundreds of thousands of people could die of hunger,” he said, adding that hunger levels would increase as the rainy season restricted aid delivery and continuing insecurity limited the population’s ability to farm.

Aid agencies say the northeast is on the brink of famine after two years of missed harvests, with a third missed year looking likely.

The threat of mass starvation in four countries – Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen – is rising due to drought and conflict, and 20 million people are at risk in what could become the world’s worst famine for decades, the United Nations says.

Of the four countries, Nigeria’s humanitarian appeal is the least funded, the U.N.’s Financial Tracking Service (FTS) shows.

ALSO SEE: Famine threatens 1.5 million Nigerians in North-east

Nigeria’s aid response plan for 2017 has received $241 million of a requested $1.05 billion to date, of which the WFP’s demand for $300 million to provide life-saving food aid in the northeast has only been a sixth funded.

“Nigeria is not a poor country … many donors believe that the government should contribute more resources,” Dieng said. “But amid its recession (its first in 25 years) and falling oil prices, the country needs help now more than ever,” he added.

The conflict with Islamist group Boko Haram, which seeks to establish a caliphate in Nigeria’s northeast, began in 2009 and shows no sign of ending. It has killed more than 20,000 people and displaced more than two million.

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