News Flash
LAGOS, July 27, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - More than 600 malnourished children have
died in northern Nigeria in six months after failing to receive proper care
as foreign aid dries up, a medical charity has said.
Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said northern Nigeria, which already is
struggling with insurgency and banditry, is "currently facing an alarming
malnutrition crisis."
In the first half of 2025, its teams treated nearly 70,000 children for
malnutrition in Katsina state, nearly 10,000 of whom had to be hospitalised.
During the same period, cases of nutritional oedema -- the most severe and
deadly form of malnutrition among children -- jumped by 208 percent from the
same period in 2024.
"Unfortunately, 652 children have already died in our facilities since the
beginning of 2025 due to a lack of timely access to care," the charity, which
is known by its French initials, said in a statement released Friday.
Huge cuts in foreign aid sparked by US President Donald Trump's decision to
slash spending overseas have combined with spiking living costs and a surge
in jihadist attacks to create a dire situation in northern Nigeria.
Ahmed Aldikhari, MSF's country representative in Nigeria, said the cuts from
the United States -- but also from Britain and European Union -- were
hampering treatment and care for malnourished children.
He said "the true scale of the crisis exceeds all predictions".
An MSF survey of 750 mothers showed more than half of them were "acutely
malnourished, including 13 percent with severe acute malnutrition".
Katsina state nutrition officer Abdulhadi Abdulkadir, acknowledged the
severity of malnutrition in the state, but said the numbers released by the
medical charity might be "too high compared to reality" and had not been
validated by his administration.
- 'Serious cases of malnutrition' -
"Yes, definitely there are deaths as a result of malnutrition," he told AFP,
promising to provide official figures next week.
The MSF figures cover the entire north of the country which includes more
than a dozen states.
Abdulkadir said the northern parts of his state, bordering Niger and
straddling the semi desert Sahel region, have the most severe malnutrition
because food production is limited by the harsh climate.
Food production in the fertile south of the state is being hampered by
criminal gangs called bandits who raid villages, making farming dangerous, he
said.
"This has aggravated the issue of malnutrition," he said.
Criminal gangs have spread throughout the country, targeting rural areas with
kidnappings for ransom.
Katsina state government provided 500 million naira ($330, 000) towards
nutrition programmes last and has doubled the amount this year, said
Abdulkadir, the government official.
Across the country of roughly 230 million people, a record nearly 31 million
face acute hunger, according to David Stevenson, chief of the UN's food
agency in Nigeria.
The World Food Programme warned earlier this week it would be forced to
suspend all emergency food and nutrition aid for 1.3 million people in
northeast Nigeria at the end of July because of critical funding shortfalls.