Lake Chad Basin: thousands of children ‘in danger of severe acute malnutrition’

UNICEF is describing it as a “major humanitarian crisis.” This year alone, over 475,000 children in Africa’s Lake Chad Basin are expected to suffer from severe acute malnutrition, according to a new report by the aid organisation. Boko Haram violence has forced 1.4M children to flee their homes in the Lake Chad region. #ChildrenUprooted pic.twitter.com/4Cbk9IoNal— UNICEF USA (@unicefusa) August 25, 2016 Violence attributed to rebel groups such as Boko Haram is said to have inflamed the situation in a region already regularly struck by epidemics, droughts and floods. UNHCR spokesperson Adrian Edwards described the situation. “We have seen adults so exhausted that they are unable to move, children with swollen faces, hollow eyes and other clear indications of acute malnutrition,” he told the UN. “There is urgent need for armoured vehicles, military escorts providing, better security and protection for all of us as humanitarians to be able to more effectively reach vulnerable populations.’‘ Walk a virtual mile in shoes of refugee children on perilous journeys in Africa’s Lake Chad Region https://t.co/5W7SlKt2d4 #ChildrenUprooted— UNICEF (@UNICEF) August 25, 2016 Up to 1.4 million children are said to be among the 2.6 million people forced to flee their homes as a result of attacks in the area, which spans parts of Nigeria, Niger, Cameroon and Chad. This is a children’s crisis. #LakeChad #BringBackOurChildhood pic.twitter.com/GhVt7GLeQC— Unicef CHAD (@UNICEFChad) August 25, 2016 Some didn’t manage to escape. Since 2014, 86 children have been used in suicide attacks, the report finds. That’s nearly one in every four suicide bombers. The conflict started to escalate in 2013, seeing thousands of children forcibly recruited by armed insurgents.