The Buhari Media Organisation has rejected a report by the United
Nations World Food Programme that without a rapid response and greater
investment, Nigeria is at a risk of sliding into a hunger crisis this
year. The WFP had listed Nigeria alongside Zimbabwe, South Sudan, Haiti,
Central Sahel (Mali, Burkina Western Niger), Democratic Republic of
Congo, Afghanistan, Lebanon, Iraq, Southern Africa, Central African
Republic, Cameroon, Libya, Bolivia and Ethiopia.
In a statement
by Niyi Akinsiju and Cassidy Madueke, Chairman and Secretary of the
pro-Buhari group respectively, the BMO described the report as a “hollow
and presumptuous” which did not reflect true situation in the country.
“We acknowledge WFP’s humanitarian assistance in a part of North-East
Nigeria, but we are shocked that it listed the country among ‘potential
flashpoints’ to look out for in the New Year’.
“There is no
doubt that the UN agency and its partners require greater investment in
view of the scope of work they need to handle across the world in 2020,
but we won’t accept a situation where Nigeria is painted in a bad light.
“Yes, there is a crisis in a part of the North East which was
referenced in the report titled ‘WFP Global Hotspots 2020: Potential
flashpoints to look out for in New Year’, but there has not been a
recent upsurge in violence in the region of the magnitude reflected in
the report.
“Besides, the crisis has been largely restricted to a
part of Borno, which is just one out of 36 states making up the country
and we do not see how that could be interpreted to mean that Nigeria
may face a hunger crisis with the type of bumper harvests it has
recorded in recent years,” the statement read.
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