The United Nations says it is suspending humanitarian assistance
missions to Nigeria's Borno state pending a security review, after an
aid convoy was ambushed by unidentified attackers Thursday in northern
Nigeria.
| FILE - Internally displaced persons wait to be served with food at Dikwa camp, in northeast Nigeria's Borno state, Feb. 2, 2016. |
The U.N. children's agency, UNICEF, says an employee and a contractor
were injured in the attack and are being treated at a local hospital.
It did not elaborate.
The convoy was in Borno state, carrying humanitarian aid from the
town of Bama to Maiduguri, in the heart of the area where the militant
group Boko Haram operates. In a statement, UNICEF says the assistance
was "desperately needed."
"This was not only an attack on humanitarian workers. It is an attack
on people who most need the assistance and aid that these workers were
bringing," the statement continued.
The charity Doctors Without Borders warned this week that more than
500,000 people in Borno state urgently need emergency assistance.
It said 15,000 people in the town of Banki have been isolated by Boko
Haram violence and depend entirely on humanitarian aid. A Doctors
Without Borders representative said most Banki residents have been in
hiding for more than a year because of Boko Haram violence.
Months of food shortages have resulted in a catastrophic health
situation, with very high levels of malnutrition, particularly among
small children.
Voice of America
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