UNHCR condemns brutality in Nigeria, fears new displacement
The past two months have seen multiple kidnappings and deaths, creating population displacement inside Nigeria and into neighbouring countries.
GENEVA, May 9 (UNHCR) - The UN refugee agency on Friday said it was deeply concerned at the recent wave of attacks on civilians in north-east Nigeria. "The brutality and frequency of these attacks is unprecedented," spokesman Adrian Edwards said in Geneva. "The past two months have seen multiple kidnappings and deaths, creating population displacement both inside Nigeria and into neighbouring countries," he told journalists.
Refugees and internally displaced people alike are reporting acts of extreme violence, and show clear signs of distress and fear. Some have witnessed friends or family members being randomly singled out and killed in the streets.
People speak of homes and fields being burned to the ground, with villages completely razed, or grenades being launched into crowded markets, killing people and livestock. There is mention of people being caught in fighting between insurgents and the armed forces, arbitrary arrests under the suspicion of belonging to insurgent groups, and other serious alleged crimes, including summary executions.
Terrorized students who had survived attacks on their schools in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states have told UNHCR how they saw friends being killed or kidnapped. From media reports, the April 14 abduction of more than 200 girls in a school in Chibok in Borno state appears to be just one in a series of similar kidnappings from schools in north-east Nigeria in recent months.
Next week will see the first anniversary of Nigeria's declaration of a state of emergency in Adamawa, Borno, and Yobe states. In all, 250,000 people are now internally displaced, according to the Nigeria Emergency Management Agency. Some 61,000 others have fled to neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger. Most are Niger nationals who were living in Nigeria, but 22,000 are Nigerians who have been made refugees by the crisis.
Edwards said the situation in southern Niger was particularly difficult, with poor security and remoteness making it more difficult to provide humanitarian help. In the Diffa region, just across the border from Nigeria, between 700 and 1,000 people are arriving each week.
"These people are fleeing attacks by insurgents or out of fear of retaliatory action by the Nigerian military. UNHCR teams in the area say 1,500 people have recently arrived in a single village to the south of Diffa town following an attack on the other side of the border by six insurgents on April 20," the spokesman said.
Some of the new arrivals lost everything in the attack: 35 houses and 25 shops were burned, food stocks were set on fire, and two men were wounded. Mahamadou, aged 34, said armed men set fire to his stock of peppers.
"My wife and my children started to scream and they quickly left the house," he said, adding: "I had found refuge in a tree just before their arrival, because I knew they were looking for men and that I could get killed. I spent the night in the tree, I did not sleep at all. In the morning, we fled to Niger."
At present the refugees are staying in abandoned houses that will be at risk of flooding when the rainy season starts in June-July. UNHCR is working with its partners to relocate the refugees to a drier environment.
Including the Diffa region and villages and other sites on Lake Chad, 100 kilometres to the east, UNHCR and its partner the International Rescue Committee have registered 15,700 people over the past six weeks. These are people who have fled the attacks of recent months, mainly in Borno state.
"At present we are monitoring the situation for possible new displacement in light of ongoing military operations against suspected insurgents just across the border," Edwards said.
A second area of potential new displacement is across the border from Borno state in Cameroon's Far North Region across the border from Gamboru Ngala in Borno state. Media reports say more than 100 people were killed last Monday during market day in Gamboru Ngala. Some 6,800 Nigerian refugees have arrived in the Far North Region since May last year. 2,500 of these have been relocated to Minawao camp, 150 kms from the volatile border area.
Neighbouring Chad has seen 1,553 people arriving from Nigeria over the past year.
Hélène Caux in Dakar, Senegal, contributed to this article
Correction: The figure in the final paragraph for arrivals in Chad from Nigeria was corrected from 550 to 1,553 on 9 May at 15:50 CET.
Related news and stories
Displaced people from climate frontlines raise their voices at COP27
UN warns of worsening conflict and displacement in Sahel without immediate climate action
Thirty years of hope and higher education for refugees in West Africa
Sudanese refugees in Chad face challenges to deliver education
Sudanese refugees and their hosts in Chad face challenges to deliver education
To support trafficking victims, UNHCR urges more protection services in Africa
Your search for « Nigeria » matched 2531 results. Only the first 1,000 results are displayed. Displaying page 1 of 112 pages.
-
Nigeria emergency
... Boussam Abdulahi, Nigerian refugee The Lake Chad Basin region is grappling with a complex ... Despite the return of Nigerian IDPs and refugees to accessible areas, the crisis remains acute. What ...... -
Nigeria
... in Nigeria, forced to flee their homes in the North-East due to over a decade of insurgency and conflict. They flee the farmer-herder conflict and banditry in other parts of the country. Nigeria is ...... -
UNHCR Nigeria Situation revised Supplementary Appeal - January - December 2017 (July 2017)
Jul 2017 ... REVISED, JULY 2017 Supplementary Appeal January – December 2017 NIGERIA SITUATION 2017 SUPPLEMENTARY APPEAL > NIGERIA SITUATION 2 UNHCR /July, 2017 COVER PHOTOGRAPH: A Nigerian returnee from ...... -
Burundi situation
... Burundi situation The people of Burundi are facing a crisis marked by economic decline, extreme food insecurity and a disease outbreak. While the worst of the violence has eased, the situation remains ...... -
2017 Nigeria Regional Refugee Response Plan - January - December 2017 (12 December 2016)
12 Dec 2016 ... NIGERIA REGIONAL REFUGEE RESPONSE PLAN JANUARY - DECEMBER 2017 CREDITS UNHCR wishes to acknowledge ... All statistics are provisional and subject to change. For more information on the Nigeria crisis go ...... -
Nigeria Regional Refugee Response Plan Jan-Dec 2016
7 Dec 2015 ... NIGERIA REGIONAL REFUGEE RESPONSE PLAN January- December 2016 Credits UNHCR wishes to acknowledge ... All statistics are provisional and subject to change. For more information on the Nigeria crisis go ...... -
Nigeria Regional Refugee Response Plan Jan-Dec. 2015 (Version of 20 April 2015)
20 Apr 2015 ... 1 NIGERIA REGIONAL REFUGEE RESPONSE PLAN January - December 2015 Version of 20 April 2015 2 Cover photograph: Nigerian refugees arrive in Bagasola, Chad, after disembarking from canoes that had ...... -
Nigeria Situation Emergency Response : UNHCR Revised Supplementary Appeal January - December 2015 (8 May 2015)
8 May 2015 ... 1 SUPPLEMENTARY APPEAL 2015 January – December 2015 Nigeria Situation Emergency Response Revised (8 May 2015) re 2 Cover photograph: Nigerian refugee children in Diffa, Niger. UNHCR / H.Caux 3 ...... -
Nigeria 2019-2020 Regional Refugee Response Plan (December 2018)
Dec 2018 ... NIGERIA REGIONAL REFUGEE RESPONSE PLAN 2019/2020 CREDITS: UNHCR wishes to acknowledge the ... All statistics are provisional and subject to change. For more information on the Nigeria crisis go ......