More money needed to help displaced by Boko Haram
20 Sep VOA
The U.N. refugee agency is urgently appealing for $34 million to help
tens of thousands of people forced to flee their homes in the face of
increasingly violent attacks by Boko Haram in northeast Nigeria. While
75,000 people have fled into Cameroon, Chad and Niger to escape vicious
onslaughts by Boko Haram, the UNHCR says it expects that number to
increase to at least 95,000 by the end of the year.
UNHCR spokesman, Babar Baloch, said there is not enough shelter to
accommodate the influx of refugees into Cameroon. He said those newly
arrived are occupying school buildings and churches. Some are staying
with host families and others are living in the open and sleeping rough.
"Over the past weekend, newly arrived refugees told our teams at the
border area that insurgents had attacked their villages in the areas of
Gwoza, Bama, Pulka and Idagala in Borno State, and stole everything
before burning their houses," said Baloch.
"Some refugees are seriously traumatized having seen their relatives
being brutally killed." He said the refugees escaped their homes at
night and walked for days before reaching Cameroon. He said the children
are exhausted with many suffering from respiratory infections. He said
the villages are mostly empty on the Nigeria side, with only old and
disabled people remaining.
The UNHCR spokesman said insurgent groups have been known to chase
fleeing refugees into Cameroon. He said cross border attacks appear to
have subsided."But, one of UNHCR's main concerns is to relocate all the
arriving refugees from the border areas to the camps and further inland
... But, people who arrive are quite desperate and traumatized because,
as I was mentioning, some of them have seen their relatives being
killed," said Baloch. "We have heard some gruesome details in terms of
how these people have been murdered."
Nigerian authorities are asking the agency's support to better
protect nearly 650,000 people internally displaced in the six
northeastern States. The UNHCR is appealing for an additional $5.5
million to set up a protection monitoring system, to provide shelter and
domestic items to displaced people with special needs.
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