Niger is facing a severe food crisis. Poor rains have caused the widespread failure of crops, such as the staple millet. Existing grazing land has also dried up, leading to the death or weakening of millions of livestock. This, together with high food prices have left more than half of Niger’s population short of food.
This year, the ‘hungry’ season, when family food reserves are normally low began in February, usually it lasts from May to July.
To cope families have been forced to reduce the number of meals they eat, or eating the food that is intended for animals. Others are taking their children out of school and sending them out to find work to help support their families. Many people cannot afford to buy food due to high food prices which have risen by 20% per year every year since 2007.
The situation requires urgent assistance from the humanitarian community in order to prevent more than 378,000 children becoming severely malnourished and tens of thousands of children dying.
Families struggleAicha’s crops failed this year so it has been a struggle to provide food for her family. Her youngest child Mamansani is underweight and has been coming to the feeding centre for three weeks.
“Mamansani has been ill for a month now with a fever, diarrhoea and vomiting. The community volunteers came to our village and weighed and measured him. They referred him to the supplementary feeding centre. I wasn’t surprised because he wasn’t well. He only 6.5kg weighed when he was admitted and today he weighs 5.6kg.
“The health of my child is my priority. I think of my child’s health above all. I know people who’ve gone to the feeding centre with their children. The children who’ve gone there have got better.
Save the Children has worked in Niger since 2005, when a major food crisis caused 150,000 children to become severely malnourished. Since November 2009, we have been scaling up our response in some of the worst-affected communities to provide more families with life-saving food and medical treatment in order to reduce the rate of mortality among children under 5.
Every child is born with the right to survive – but not an equal chance. Save the Children has launched our global EVERY ONE campaign to end this injustice. As part of our campaign we are calling on the international community to keep their promises to reduce the deaths of children under five. In September world leaders will be meeting in New York to review progress towards the Millennium Development Goals. Failure to save the lives of these children in Niger would cast a huge shadow over proceedings.
Please join our campaign and together we can stop children dying needlessly.
Children in Niger are hungry. If we don’t act now many thousands of them will die this summer. We have the know-how and capacity to stop this tragedy but we must act now. Save the Children needs your support for our immediate and long term response to the current child hunger crisis in Niger.
Read Voices from the Field, Rachel Palmer, Information and Communications Officer in Niger (9 June 2010)
Read Voices from the Field, Hear from Mariama and her 18 months old daughter Salaha (14 May 2010)
Children traveling up to 1000km to beg on city streets as food crisis deepens in Niger (02 June 2010)
1.2 million children in Niger at risk of malnutrition, Save the Children warns (30 April 2010)
The Story of Saminou (06 June 2010)
Desperate food crisis threatens lives in Niger (04 June 2010)
Watch Peter Sykes talk about the situation for children in Niger (14 May 2010)