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Hunger crisis looms in Nigeria amid industry conflict

Hunger

More than 1 million farmers in the state have been displaced because of the intercommunal, neighbor violence between herders and farmers competing for water and land, say officials, both industries need each other to survive, but that hasn’t translated into reality yet. Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. As reported by the AP:

The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops to the marketplace

AGATU, Nigeria (AP) — It’s 2 p.m. and Hannah Mgbede asks her husband if she can take her first break of the day from threshing rice so she can breastfeed their 18-month-old baby girl fastened to her back during the grueling work.

Ibrahim Mohammed, left, a farmer who lost most of his seedlings and farmlands to violent attacks in Nigeria’s north, works on a rice farm along with his family members in Agatu village on the outskirts of Benue State in northcentral Nigeria, Wednesday, Jan 5, 2022. Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops and marketplaces have been razed by attackers. (AP Photo/ Chinedu Asadu)

Her husband Ibrahim Mohammed, 45, used to harvest as many as 10 bags of rice a year from his farm. But that dropped to just three bags after attackers burned his home to the ground a few years ago, as violence between farmers and herders escalated across the northwest and central parts of Nigeria, causing hunger concerns.

With that decreased yield, Mohammed hasn’t made enough money to buy seedlings to grow yams, soybeans, and guinea corn (sorghum).

“Sometimes we manage to eat once (a day),” says Mohammed, who has three children, aged five and younger. “Since the crisis, it is only by the grace of God we are feeding to remain alive.”

Here in Benue state, harvests of rice, yams and soybeans were once so bountiful that it was called the “food basket of Nigeria.” But waves of violence over the last several years have reduced crops in the northcentral state of Africa’s most populous nation.

A truck transports bags of rice through a dilapidated road from a farm in Agatu village on the outskirts of Benue State in northcentral Nigeria, Wednesday, Jan 5, 2022. Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops and marketplaces have been razed by attackers. (AP Photo/ Chinedu Asadu)

More than 1 million farmers in the state have been displaced because of the intercommunal violence between herders and farmers competing for water and land, say officials.

“We are heading to a food crisis,” Benue state Gov. Samuel Ortom told The Associated Press.

Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops and marketplaces have been razed by attackers.

Rice production has dropped so much that its price has jumped more than 60% in Benue state as well as some other parts of the country.

“There is a very real risk of famine because both conflict and COVID-19 has made it harder to reach those most in need,” a spokesperson of the U.N. agency told AP.

Mohammed Abdul, a farmer who said he ‘had to start from the beginning’ after losing all his farm inputs to violent attacks in Nigeria’s north, works on a rice farm in Agatu village on the outskirts of Benue State in northcentral Nigeria, Wednesday, Jan 5, 2022. Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops and marketplaces have been razed by attackers. (AP Photo/ Chinedu Asadu)

Thousands of Nigerians have been killed in the decades-long clashes between agrarian communities and nomadic cattle herders who are fighting over limited access to water and grazing land. The farmers often accuse the herders of encroaching in their fields while the herders, mostly from the Fulani ethnic group, claim the croplands are their traditional grazing routes.

The government has now launched an initiative under the National Livestock Transformation Plan in the hope of resolving the conflict which has been worsened by the proliferation of arms and the government’s failure to prosecute past perpetrators from both groups.

About 3,000 people who have fled the violence in Benue state are now living at a camp in Guma local government area.

Women and children return from their farmlands after the day’s work in Agatu village on the outskirts of Benue State in northcentral Nigeria, Wednesday, Jan 5, 2022. Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops and marketplaces have been razed by attackers. (AP Photo/ Chinedu Asadu)

Mtonga Iliamgee, 43, says every day is a struggle to feed her family of 10. She was seen preparing their only meal of the day at 1 p.m.

“We live for the day, and we don’t know what tomorrow could bring,” she says.

Felix Agune, the deputy head of the camp school, says some children come to class crying that they’ve had no breakfast. Non-government organizations are trying to fill the gap, but it is “nothing compared to the massive hunger spread across Benue state,” said Rex Elanu, a program director for the One-to-One Healthcare Initiative.

Government officials insist they are working to make farmlands safe enough for people to return and work the land. They’re also trying to encourage nomadic herders to take up ranching, so they are less at odds with farmers.

Mtonga Iliamgee, an internally displaced person at the Guma IDPs camp, prepares flour as the first meal for her family inside the camp in Benue State in northcentral Nigeria, Thursday, Jan 6, 2022.Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops and marketplaces have been razed by attackers. (AP Photo/ Chinedu Asadu)

Seeds and fertilizers have also been supplied to farmers in the past to enhance food production, cushion the effect of the pandemic and encourage more youths to go into agriculture, according to a spokesman of the agriculture ministry.

Despite the violence, Nigerian farmers have been able to produce enough crops to keep the country self-sufficient in staples such as rice, cassava, and yams.

“Nigeria survived with the produce generated by the smallholder farmers,” Theodore Ogaziechi of the agriculture ministry said. “The farmers are doing their utmost best to feed the nation.”

Farmers are resilient but also afraid because some who have attempted to go back to their farms have been killed, warned Ortom, the governor of Benue state.

Makeshift tents for housing are lined-up at the camp for internally displaced persons affected in the prolonged conflict between farmers and nomadic herders in Guma, Benue State in northcentral Nigeria, Thursday, Jan 6, 2022. Across northern Nigeria, at least 13 million are now facing hunger amid a lean season, according to the U.N. World Food Program. The violence has also disrupted the sales of food as roads are too unsafe for farmers to transport crops and marketplaces have been razed by attackers. (AP Photo/ Chinedu Asadu)

“If there is security for these farmers, we’ll continue to retain our position as the food basket of the nation,” he said. “But if nothing is done, as it is now, it is a big challenge.”

By CHINEDU ASADU

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