About 29, 581 Nigerians who
fled their communities in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa as result of insurgent
activities to Republic of Niger and Cameroun have voluntarily returned last
year, this is contained in a published report of humanitarian relief
intervention by the National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) which was
released recently.
The report says 13,046
Nigerian returnees from Niger Republic in May, 2015 and were received in
Geidam, Yobe State while Between April and December, 2015 NEMA received about
16,595 Nigerians that have voluntarily returned from Cameroon through the
Sahuda border crossing area near Mubi, Adamawa State.
"Some of the Nigerians that fled to Neighbouring countries
(Niger, Chad and Cameroun) were provided with humanitarian relief support by
the Federal Government of Nigeria through NEMA to alleviate their suffering.
The displaced Nigerians have also received humanitarian supports from the host
governments, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), the host
communities and Nigerian citizens living in the three host countries" the
report says.
There are presently 20,804
displaced Nigerians living the Republic of Chad, 80,709 in the Republic of
Cameroun and 138,321 in the Republic in Niger.
It noted that the agency
adopted a monthly Humanitarian Coordination Meeting; a forum consists of
relevant Federal government Agencies, UN Systems and International Non-Government
Organizations (INGOs) undertakes analysis of causes of humanitarian situations,
conducting of need assessments, and identification of priorities and provision
of humanitarian interventions based on their respective mandates. The system
operates through different sectors lead by national MDAs and co-lead by UN
Agencies.
The report added that due
to the successes recorded by the Nigerian Military with the support of
Multi-National Joint Military Task Force (JTF) in the fight against Boko Haram
insurgents, the humanitarian dashboard is fast changing. The focus is gradually
shifting towards Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Resettlement, Recovery and
dignified return of IDPs back home while process for the return of Nigerian
refugees from neighboring countries is equally on-going.
"NEMA will continue to support and work towards bridging the
identified gaps in humanitarian response through enhanced coordination,
capacity building and strengthening of collaboration with the affected States
and relevant stakeholders including line MDAs, local and international response
organizations and the UN system". the report says.
Sani Datti
Media and Public Relations (NEMA)
More photos below...
Media and Public Relations (NEMA)
More photos below...
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