
WFP Warns of Imminent Food Assistance Cuts in Nigeria as Violence and Hunger Surges Across the North
More than 1 million people in northeast Nigeria risk being cut off from emergency food and nutrition assistance.

More than 1 million people in northeast Nigeria risk being cut off from emergency food and nutrition assistance.

WFP will be forced to suspend all emergency food and nutrition aid for 1.3 million people in northeast Nigeria at the end of July. This is due to critical funding shortfalls which come at a time of escalating violence and record levels of hunger.

Boko Haram has displaced an estimated 1.78 million within the country’s borders—80 percent are women and children.

WFP is ramping up its lifesaving food and nutrition assistance program in West and Central Africa, targeting 7.3 million people during the ongoing June-August lean season, when food stocks run out and hunger peaks.

Amina was held captive for 11 months by armed fighters in Nigeria. She went on to run a WFP-supported soup kitchen capable of serving porridge and beans to more than 100 people a day.

Hunger is terrible, but especially cruel to children. And it’s a daily reality for millions of them – a scale that’s difficult for most of us to imagine.

Conflict is a vicious force, and one that’s pushed innocent civilians to the most extreme levels of hunger imaginable. Nearly all of them live in the same places.

WFP warns that it may soon be forced to cut food rations to more than half a million women, men and children in northeastern Nigeria unless urgent funding is secured.

Thanks to peanuts, this pre-packaged, ready-to-eat food doesn’t require water or cooking and it’s saving lives around the world.

WFP never abandons hope. We’re applying it in spades to roll back one of the most severe hunger catastrophes in our six decades of existence.