Press Release

Women, girls in north-east Nigeria face severe crisis, urgently need increased support, including the 566 handed-over by the army last week

19 September 2016

UNITED NATIONS, New York - Violence by Boko Haram continues to cause immense suffering in north-east Nigeria, where 2 million people are displaced and 7 million urgently need humanitarian assistance. On Friday 16 September, UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, and humanitarian partners helped the Borno State government receive from the army 566 rescued women and children who will need humanitarian support. UNFPA is already providing immediate humanitarian relief to this group.

Since the beginning of this year, the Nigerian military has helped rescue more than 800,000 persons, most of whom have been deprived of all forms of humanitarian aid for years and need urgent life-saving support.

“Women and girls in north-east Nigeria face a severe crisis as they struggle to cope with acute malnutrition, sexual violence and exploitation, severe trauma, high rates of maternal death and other risks to their health and well-being,” said UNFPA Executive Director, Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin. “Meeting their urgent needs demands a strengthened response.”

Of the 7 million affected people in north-east Nigeria, about 1,750,000 are women and girls of childbearing age who need sexual and reproductive health services. These services include prenatal and postnatal care, emergency obstetric care for safe birth, prevention and treatment of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, treatment for rape and provision of psychosocial counselling.

Assessments supported by the United Nations indicate that a high proportion of women and girls in north-east Nigeria have suffered different forms of gender-based violence, including sexual violence. Meeting their medical, psychosocial and other needs is a major undertaking that needs intensified support.

UNFPA is working with partners to scale up its response, especially in Borno State, home of 70 per cent of displaced persons. The goal is to expand services for sexual and reproductive health and for preventing and tackling gender-based violence, so as to reach 4.5 million affected people.

So far in 2015 and 2016, UNFPA has reached 3.2 million people with information and services for sexual and reproductive health, and against gender-based violence, in areas affected by Boko Haram. Some 336 health personnel have been trained in emergency reproductive health care, 108 trained in the clinical management of rape, 88,000 pregnant women given clean delivery kits with soap, a razor blade, string and plastic sheeting to ensure safe births, 652 rape survivors given treatment, and 108,000 traumatized persons given psychosocial support and other services.

For 2016, UNFPA has received 40 per cent of the $11 million it needs for north-east Nigeria, and is appealing to the donor community to increase support to meet the urgent needs of affected people, especially women and girls.

 

For more information, please contact:

Omar Gharzeddine, Tel:  +1 212 297 5028; gharzeddine@unfpa.org;
Anne Isabelle Leclercq, Tel +1 212 297 5014; leclercq@unfpa.org;
Nelson Muffuh, Tel:  +1 646 915 7195; muffuh@unfpa.org.

 

 

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