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UN diverts $8 million in humanitarian funding to Nigeria flood response


Residents leave the flooded areas with their belongings in Maiduguri, northern Borno state, Nigeria, Sept. 15, 2024.
Residents leave the flooded areas with their belongings in Maiduguri, northern Borno state, Nigeria, Sept. 15, 2024.

The United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has approved the immediate release of $8 million dollars to support victims in flood ravaged Maiduguri, in Nigeria's Borno state. Severe flooding there last week killed dozens of people and displaced hundreds of thousands of others.

Mohammed Malick Fall, the U.N. resident coordinator, announced the new funding to journalists in Maiduguri while visiting flood victims over the weekend.

The visit was to assess the extent of damage caused by the flooding and to ramp up lifesaving assistance.

Fall announced the allocation of $8 million from the humanitarian fund to support disaster response and management.

"We're all behind you not only in sympathy but in solidarity. We will not spare any of our resources in this response,” Fall said. “Probably we might not be where we want it to be in terms of resources, but as we speak, we'll try to refocus resources that have been designed for some other intervention to see how we can bring them toward scaling up and speeding up this response. We'll prioritize our response around the immediate need."

The U.N. has provided hot meals and facilitated food air drops in hard-to-reach areas cut off by flood waters.

Last Thursday, a dam burst caused millions of liters of water to pour into communities in Maiduguri. State authorities say the flood killed dozens of people and affected more than 1 million others.

Many are taking shelter in camps. The disaster follows an alarming malnutrition crisis caused by conflict, climate change and inflation in the region.

Local residents say food prices have skyrocketed as a result of flood waters washing out access roads and markets and farms.

Borno state Governor Babagana Umara Zulum told journalists the full extent of damage remains unknown.

"The unfortunate flood incident is perhaps the most devastating acute disaster that our state has suffered as far as we can remember,” Zulum said. “Many bridges are damaged and we're yet to assess the integrity of the bridges that form the main link between the two major parts of the city.”

A view of the prison where nearly 300 prisoners escaped after floods in Maiduguri, northern Borno state, Nigeria, Sept. 15, 2024.
A view of the prison where nearly 300 prisoners escaped after floods in Maiduguri, northern Borno state, Nigeria, Sept. 15, 2024.

Zulum added that the flood hit the University of Maiduguri Teaching Hospital, which has the most up-to-date medical diagnostic and therapeutic equipment in West Africa. The status and function of the equipment has yet to be ascertained.

Borno state is the heartland region of the Boko Haram terror group. The group's 15-year insurgency has sparked one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world.

But the U.N. said Nigeria's Humanitarian Response Plan for Nigeria, seeking $927 million dollars, is only about 46% funded.

In 2022, Nigeria's worst flooding in a decade killed more than 600 people and displaced 1.4 million.

On Monday, the Nigerian Correctional Services announced a manhunt for more than 280 escapees from a prison destroyed by the flooding.

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