The
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) friday received a grant of US $
3.4 Million for Integrated Provision of Life-Saving Emergency
Interventions for Vulnerable Populations in the north east of Nigeria,
from the Government of Japan.
The grant, according to
UNICEF, will be used for interventions focused on the Internally
Displaced Persons and conflict affected populations in the north east of
Nigeria in the sectors of Water Sanitation and Hygiene, Health,
Nutrition, Child Protection and Education.
The conflict in the north east of Nigeria especially in the states of
Borno, Yobe and Adamawa has caused large scale human suffering for the
populations in the areas especially children and women.
The
conflict has triggered major population movements and the number of IDPs
in the north east has almost doubled in less than a year, from an
estimated 647,000 in May 2014 to what International Office of Migration
reports is now around 1.2 million.
UNICEF estimated that
children "make up about 56 per cent of those who have been internally
displaced, with over half of them being five-years or younger."
UNICEF Country Director representative, Samuel Momanyi said: “This
grant is timely and will further boost the work UNICEF is doing in the
northeast. It will make a significant lifesaving contribution to
alleviate the suffering of the affected populations in the northeast
especially children and women.
Since 2000, the Government of
Japan has been a major donor to UNICEF supporting interventions in child
survival, prevention of infectious diseases in children and emergency
interventions in Nigeria, through the UNICEF/Federal Government of
Nigeria Programme of Cooperation" .
Credit: Paul Obi/ThisDay
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