The UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Nigeria has condemned
Saturday’s attack on a food convoy in Borno which left four people dead.
Mr Edward Kallon said in a statement on Tuesday
that the attack put many lives at risk as it may cause limitations on
the delivery of life-saving supplies to victims of the insurgency.
His
comments come three days after suspected Boko Haram terrorists ambushed
a food convoy of one of its agencies, World Food Programme, which was
taking food to Internally Displaced Persons in Ngala, Borno State.
WFP Communication Associate, Adedeji Ademigbuji on Sunday said four people, including the driver of a WFP-hired truck and a driver’s assistant, were killed in the incident.
Kallon
in the statement strongly condemned the ambush saying violence attack
against aid workers is unacceptable and should be avoided.
“Violence
against convoys carrying humanitarian aid is unacceptable and can
result in concerning limitations in our ability to provide life-saving
relief to those who need it the most.
“We must ensure the safety
of aid workers and aid convoys across the north-east of Nigeria, so
people in need of assistance can access it in a timely manner and in
sufficient quantity. Many lives are at risk,” he said.
The
Nigerian Army on Monday, December 18 also reacted to attack noting that
those killed in the attack were civilians and that no United Nations
staff were killed in the attack.
Kallon said further that the United Nations and its partners operate
in the north-east of Nigeria in order to provide life-saving assistance
to 6.9 million people affected by the brutal conflict.
Humanitarian
operations are carried out following the four basic humanitarian
principles of operational independence, humanity, impartiality and
neutrality and should be respected as such.
Since January 2017,
despite major challenges, humanitarian operations in north-east Nigeria
have managed to assist over 5 million conflict-affected people in the
states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe, including 3 million with food
security interventions, 936,000 with nutritional support, 5 million with
health care assistance, and over 1.3 million with safe drinking water.
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