Amina Adamo, 25, is only too familiar with hunger; she has lived without food for days and with only very small rations for months at a time.
Inside her makeshift shelter at the Elmiskin internally displaced persons (IDP) camp in Jere, near Maiduguri, Borno State, she is one of the many people affected by food insecurity.
Amina fears hunger.
She relied on food assistance for almost five years, up until it was cut off three months ago.
The only food assistance available in the camp was meant for pregnant and breastfeeding mothers.
IDPs like Amina count on humanitarian assistance as their only lifeline. The ongoing conflict and rising attacks on humanitarians who are delivering aid to communities like hers have made life more difficult and hinder the provisions sent to families who need them most.
Amina’s journey to camp
Five years ago, Amina and her husband fled Bama, a garrison town near the Cameroon border, following an attack by non-State armed groups (NSAGs).
The groups’ violent campaign has pushed approximately 8.7 million people from their homes in various communities in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe – the states most affected by conflict in the region.
“We were sleeping when we started hearing gunshots. That was when we ran out of town. We walked for about six hours. We later got a vehicle to drop us at Bama in a parking lot. We started begging for money the next day in order to pay the driver,” she said.
Like Amina, many families in the camp rely on farming to feed themselves; going out into open fields to plant crops to harvest.
But the non-state armed group’s (NSAGs’) rising attacks against farmers have created fear, forcing people to choose between planting food and preserving their own safety.
The development has only increased food insecurity in many conflict-affected communities.
“We are making caps and engaging in small trade. This is what we are doing in order to make it through the day,” Ms Amina added.
Like Amina, like Aisha
Aisha Idri, a mother of three, was living a good life in Baga, a fishing community near Lake Chad, before armed men attacked her village in 2015.
She lost four siblings the night the attackers came, and she was forced to abandon her livestock and the family’s thriving fishing business.
Aisha now lives in one of the biggest IDP camps in Borno, where she receives food assistance from the World Food Programme (WFP), an arm of the United Nations..
“I am grateful that WFP supported me with food throughout my pregnancy. To ensure we have enough, we skip meals so what we are given lasts us longer,” she said.
The irony is that Aisha’s family used to provide food to their neighbours, via their fishing business.
But because of the conflict, they now wait expectantly to receive food each month, like many other families.
Zara’s story
Accessing farmland and fetching grass from the bush to feed animals may seem like mundane tasks.
But in this context, herders literally risk their lives.
In the North-west, only garrison towns are secure, as farmers are allowed to farm only within a certain radius, designated as a “safe zone.” Anything outside this zone is no longer considered secure.
Life choices have come down to this: stay hungry longer and stay alive, or attempt to plant, grow or raise your own food and risk death.
This is the cost of the conflict.
It is not only the visible bullets that kill people, and the traumatising violence that affects communities’ survival. It is the unseen threat of hunger, one that you cannot touch or see but that can be just as deadly.
It is hard to fight against bullets and weapons when you are unarmed. But hunger, though invisible, is one threat that we can collectively respond to and push back.
Zara Bulama lost her husband to the protracted conflict in Monguno, another garrison town. She travelled for about four days to locate her relative in Gongulong, a town near Maiduguri.
When IDPs are forced to flee for safety, they often travel to host communities that often are already under-resourced and barely getting by.
The influx of new families exacerbates the already stretched supplies of food, shelter and water, overwhelming the host communities and creating a source of tension between residents and newcomers.
While living in the host community, Zara was able to survive on the support provided by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and WFP, which gave her new hope.
She said, “I was a livestock farmer back home in Monguno before the conflict started. I was very happy when FAO gave me some goats to build my livestock business.
“FAO also provided feed for my goats. WFP also gave me some cash to feed my family so that I wouldn’t end up selling all my goats prematurely. We’re grateful to them.”
As lean season nears, hunger increases
Insecurity and conflict have plagued North-east Nigeria for almost 12 years, causing millions of people to feel the pain of hunger. As the North-east enters the lean season, food security assessments released in March 2021 indicated that looming food insecurity threatens an estimated 4.4 million people, 775,000 of whom are at extreme risk.
COVID-19 has only exacerbated the situation, causing economic shocks that have affected families’ ability to access or purchase food.
This dire humanitarian crisis is exacerbated by access constraints and other challenges that hinder the principled, timely and much-needed delivery of humanitarian aid.
In one of the latest security incidents, in April 2021, food warehouses in Damasak and the humanitarian office were burned to the ground by the non-State armed groups (NSAGs). This led to a temporary reduction in operations, which heightened the already alarming risk of severe food insecurity.
And as the conflict approaches its 12th year, with no signs of slowing, people’s needs continue to increase amid the backdrop of rising attacks on humanitarians and assets.
Security and access to affected communities are crucial to ensure the principled delivery of humanitarian aid.
Grim statistics
This year, an estimated 8.7 million people in North-east Nigeria need some form of humanitarian assistance, 6.4 million of whom are targeted to receive aid as part of the UN and partners’ Humanitarian Response Plan.
However, as of June 17 the plan is less than 20 per cent funded.
Defying the odds
Despite enormous risks to their safety, the United Nations (UN) and its partners continue to find ways to deliver aid and food assistance through a process called “localisation,” which allows partners and agencies to work with local non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to deliver humanitarian aid and assistance to unreached communities constantly under threat of violence from armed groups.
This process allows for local solutions to local problems.
To provide food to communities, the World Food Programme (WFP) works through partners such as Intersos and local NGOs like Salient Humanitarian.
On its part, the Nigeria Humanitarian Fund focuses on supporting local partners, ensuring they receive humanitarian financing to meet needs at the community level.
Meanwhile, the UN and its humanitarian partners are working around the clock to ensure that families have enough food to survive.
But there is no humanitarian solution to what is happening to millions of people in North-east Nigeria; peace is the only solution.
And without urgent action, thousands of families will descend into catastrophic food conditions during this lean season.
Thus as Amina, Aisha and Zara continue to hold on to the promise of peace, they need your support. Together, we can help them feed their families.