UNHCR struggles to help tens of thousands newly displaced by Boko Haram in Niger

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UNHCR struggles to help tens of thousands newly displaced by Boko Haram in Niger

UNHCR, 19 Jan 2016

URL: http://kora.unhcr.org/unhcr-struggles-help-tens-thousands-newly-displaced-boko-haram-niger/
Some 170 villages have been left empty in the Diffa region

UNHCR and its partners are struggling to help an estimated 100,000 people newly displaced in recent weeks in south-east Niger’s Diffa region in attacks launched by Nigeria’s Boko Haram insurgency group. Our team in Niger says the situation is very serious with acute shortages of shelter and non-food items for the displaced. These include local villagers, internally displaced people from Niger, people who have been displaced several times and Nigerian refugees who were staying with host families or in sites for the displaced in a 10 to 30-km belt of land between the River Komadougou and Niger’s Route National No.1. Some 170 villages have been left empty in the Diffa region.

The newly displaced have sought shelter alongside Niger’s National Route No. 1, which links the capital Niamey to the east of the country. The Niger army has not been able to ensure protection for villages and displacement sites because they are spread over a wide area and attacks usually come at night. Many of the newly displaced have sought shelter at Koublé, which is located some 910 kms east Niamey on National Route No. 1 and normally has a population of just 300. A UNHCR team visited last week and found a mixed population of Nigerian refugees, local villagers, internally displaced people. The local government had recently conducted a provisional registration at Koublé and put the number of displaced who have arrived there since November 2015 at more than 10,000 people from 20 villages, including Nigerian refugees who have fled their homes since 2013.

In Koublé, like elsewhere on a 100-km stretch of Route No. 1, people are living in makeshift shelters alongside the highway. Newly arrived families have few sanitation facilities and have to walk far to fetch water from distribution points. Our partner, Médecins Sans Frontières, is providing health care and sanitation but needs more support. And many children are unable to attend school. While the World Food Programme is currently meeting food demand in the Diffa region, there is urgent need for other assistance, particularly adequate shelter.

Help is needed urgently and UNHCR has offered to conduct a more comprehensive registration that will make it easier to determine needs, especially as many refugees and locals have been displaced several times in recent months and may have been counted twice or not at all. Providing assistance and shelter is all the more difficult because people are living in spontaneous sites rather than in a camp environment, security tighter and access to water, health care and sanitation facilities easier. At present, UNHCR and its partners are facing difficulties coping with the needs. UNHCR is currently looking at ways to redirect funding from activities which are of lesser priority to those of high priority mainly in the areas of shelter and sanitation.

The conflict in north-east Nigeria has forced more than 220,300 people to find refuge in neighbouring countries since 2013, including 138,300 in Niger (Nigerian and Niger nationals), 61,000 in Cameroon, and 14,100 in Chad. Over 2.2 million people are also internally displaced, mainly in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe states. There are between 60,000 to 100,000 IDPs in Niger, 92,600 in Cameroon and 52,300 in Chad.

Media contacts:
In Dakar (regional), Helene Caux, caux@unhcr.org, tel: + 221 77 333 1291
In Niamey, Benoit Moreno, morenob@unhcr.org, tel: + 227 9219 2417
In Nigeria, Hanson Tamfu, tamfu@unhcr.org, tel: + 234 90 275 73 068
In Geneva, Leo Dobbs, dobbs@unhcr.org, tel: + 41 79 833 63 47