Monday, 13 April 2015

Does Unicef know that their so called AIDs MONEY is been diverted!! 800,000 children in Nigeria 'running for their lives', says Unicef

Children who fled their homes following an attack by Islamist militants, in North East Nigeria, wait to be registered at the camp for internally displaced people in Yola, Nigeria

Unicef please stop sending money to Nigeria if you don't try to see how that money is been spent! Then you come back later and write lousy reports like the one below...
800,000 children in Nigeria 'running for their lives', says Unicef
Report on first anniversary of Boko Haram kidnapping in Chibok reveals number of children affected in troubled north-east region has doubled in less than a year
 Children who fled their homes following an attack by Islamist militants, in North East Nigeria, wait to be registered at the camp for internally displaced people in Yola, Nigeria

 Children who fled their homes following an attack by Islamist militants wait to be registered at the camp for internally displaced people in Yola, Nigeria.
Fighting between Boko Haram, military forces and civilian self-defence groups in north-eastern Nigeria has forced around 800,000 children from their homes over the past year, according to the UN children’s agency, Unicef.

In a report marking the first anniversary of the Islamist group’s abduction of 276 schoolgirls from the Nigerian town of Chibok, Unicef says the number of children running for their lives in the country or crossing into neighbouring Chad, Niger and Cameroon has doubled in just under 12 months.

Despite steadily escalating its attacks in recent years, Boko Haram – whose name means “western education is forbidden” – achieved worldwide notoriety last April when it abducted the girls from their school in Borno state.

The girls, aged between 12 and 17, were snatched from their dormitories and loaded on to trucks. Although some managed to escape, others were paraded in a propaganda video, in which it was claimed they would be freed in return for the release of Boko Haram militants held by the Nigerian authorities.

President Goodluck Jonathan’s delay in reacting to the mass abduction – and his government’s failure to rescue them – is thought to have contributed to his defeat at the hands of Muhammadu Buhari in Nigeria’s recent election.

In a statement released on Tuesday Buhari said: “When my new administration takes office at the end of May we will do everything we can to defeat Boko Haram. We will act differently from the government we replace: we hear the anguish of our citizens and intend to respond accordingly.

“What I can pledge, with absolute certainty, is that starting on the first day of my Administration Boko Haram will know the strength of our collective will and commitment to rid this nation of terror, and bring back peace and normalcy to all the affected areas.”

Scores of girls and boys have gone missing in Nigeria – abducted, recruited by armed groups, attacked or forced to flee
Manuel Fontaine, Unicef
Manuel Fontaine, Unicef’s regional director for west and central Africa, says the Chibok kidnapping was one of a series of “endless tragedies being replicated on an epic scale” across the region.
source

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