Drought-Ravaged Niger Faces Lean Season

Prolonged drought in Niger has pushed malnutrition in the country to a crisis point, according to the UN.
Drought-Ravaged Niger Faces Lean Season
UN's top humanitarian official, John Holmes (C), helps to carry a bag of cattle food for farmers as part of an emergency operation to supply aid to the population on April 27, 2010 in Zinder, Niger. The World Food Program is increasing its food rations to the drought-stricken country to reduce the widespread famine. (Sia Kambou/AFP/Getty Images)
8/11/2010
Updated:
10/1/2015
<a><img src="https://www.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2015/09/holmes98702670.jpg" alt="UN's top humanitarian official, John Holmes (C), helps to carry a bag of cattle food for farmers as part of an emergency operation to supply aid to the population on April 27, 2010 in Zinder, Niger. The World Food Program is increasing its food rations to the drought-stricken country to reduce the widespread famine. (Sia Kambou/AFP/Getty Images)" title="UN's top humanitarian official, John Holmes (C), helps to carry a bag of cattle food for farmers as part of an emergency operation to supply aid to the population on April 27, 2010 in Zinder, Niger. The World Food Program is increasing its food rations to the drought-stricken country to reduce the widespread famine. (Sia Kambou/AFP/Getty Images)" width="320" class="size-medium wp-image-1816212"/></a>
UN's top humanitarian official, John Holmes (C), helps to carry a bag of cattle food for farmers as part of an emergency operation to supply aid to the population on April 27, 2010 in Zinder, Niger. The World Food Program is increasing its food rations to the drought-stricken country to reduce the widespread famine. (Sia Kambou/AFP/Getty Images)
Prolonged drought in Niger, the worst in memory, has pushed malnutrition in the country to a crisis point, according to the United Nations.

The landlocked African nation borders the Sahara desert and frequently cycles through periods of drought. It has been unable to recover from last year’s erratic rains that caused widespread crop failure and livestock deaths. There is hope for a good harvest, but until it comes, Nigerians face increasingly severe malnourishment, according to UNICEF.

As many as 8 million people need assistance, and 400,000 children are expected to suffer from severe malnourishment, according to UNICEF.

Health centers across the country are rapidly filling with malnourished infants and their anxious mothers, as many parents are running out of food stocks during the lean period before the harvest, according to UNICEF

Some villages have nearly nothing left to eat and people are reduced to foraging. One Niger woman Raya Sahi in a video interview with UNICEF said she and her seven children are surviving on the fruit and its leaves of one type of drought resistant wild plant.

The United Nations World Food Program (WFP) and the European Commission are upping food aid to the country. On Wednesday, the U.N. announced a WPF program to feed 670,000 children and the EC announced it will give $19 million for food security in the country.

The children will receive monthly rations of corn and soya from the WFP, which will also provide rations of enriched flour, sugar, and oil to some 4 million families.

Children under the age of two are at the highest risk of malnutrition and illness. For those critically in need of nutrition, UNICEF distributes a high-energy nut paste.

The current level of aid is not sufficient to meet the demand for food in the coming months.

“It is crucial that donors continue to come forward as soon as possible if we are to prevent the loss of a whole generation of children to malnutrition and food insecurity,” said WFP Regional Director Thomas Yanga, in the U.N. release.