Key Points
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The US funded UNICEF to expand UNICEF nutrition support in Nigeria.
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The aid targets children affected by conflict under the UNICEF nutrition support programme.
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The contribution strengthens emergency response through UNICEF nutrition support.
The US has increased its humanitarian efforts in Nigeria’s northwest by sending $5 million to UNICEF to help deal with a rise in severe childhood malnutrition in the area. The US State Department said that the money is meant to help some of the country’s most at-risk children stay safe as food insecurity grows and conflict makes support systems that are already weak even weaker.
The US Mission to Nigeria says that the donation will help UNICEF expand its nutrition programs and provide life-saving care to at least 70,000 children who are severely malnourished. The agency said that the crisis has gotten worse because of ongoing insecurity, people moving away from their homes, and limited access to farmland and health services. These are all things that make it harder for families to get food and for kids to get basic medical care.
The US gives more money to UNICEF for nutrition
The money will be used to buy therapeutic food that is ready to eat, essential medicines, micronutrient supplements, and other emergency supplies that are needed to keep kids alive during times of high hunger.
US officials said the donation was part of Washington’s long-standing role in helping people around the world, and that it shows a commitment to stopping preventable deaths of children and helping frontline relief agencies. The mission stressed that the support is in line with the US’s larger efforts to improve health and nutrition systems in areas affected by crises.
UNICEF needs the extra money at this very important time. The group has said many times that rising prices for goods, limited movement due to insecurity, and the destruction of health facilities make it harder for them to reach kids in remote areas. The number of children who are showing signs of wasting has gone up a lot in the past year because more families have had to leave their homes because of banditry and violence between communities.
Aid goes to children who are at high risk
UNICEF’s ongoing programs in the northwest focus on managing acute malnutrition in the community, where children get therapeutic food and medical care without having to go to the hospital. Aid workers say the method has helped thousands get better, but the need is still greater than the resources available. The new US funding should help close that gap by adding more treatment sites, training local health workers, and making the supply chain more reliable.
Conflict makes the situation in northwest Nigeria worse
People in the area are still being attacked violently and forced to leave their homes, which means that families have to leave their farms and animals, which are their main sources of food and income. Humanitarian groups say that if these problems aren’t fixed with ongoing help, they could make malnutrition levels even worse. The US is still one of the biggest donors to UNICEF and other groups working in Nigeria, and officials say they will keep giving money as long as the crisis lasts.


