Nigeria Now Has More Malnourished Children Than War-Torn Sudan – UNICEF

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Ogheneyoma Grace
Ogheneyoma Grace
Ogheneyoma Grace is a skilled journalist with seven years of experience in news writing.
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World Bank Forecasts Rising Poverty as 600,000 Nigerian Children Suffer Acute Malnutrition

 

Nigeria has overtaken war-torn Sudan to become the country with the highest number of malnourished children in Africa, and the second highest globally, according to the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF).

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This disturbing development was made public during a media briefing on the 2025 Lean Season Multisectoral Response organised by the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).

UNICEF Raises Alarm Over Acute Malnutrition Crisis

Speaking at the event, Nemat Hajeebhoy, UNICEF’s Chief of Nutrition in Nigeria, revealed that approximately 600,000 children in Nigeria are currently suffering from acute malnutrition, a condition that poses life-threatening risks if not urgently addressed.

“Nigeria has the highest number of malnourished children in Africa and ranks second globally,” said Hajeebhoy.

She added that half of the affected children are at immediate risk of developing severe acute malnutrition, leaving them extremely vulnerable to illness and death.


WFP Confirms Nigeria’s Food Insecurity Ranking

Adding to the grim outlook, Serigne Loum, an official with the World Food Programme (WFP), stated that Nigeria also tops the chart for the highest number of food-insecure people in Africa.


UN OCHA Seeks $300 Million to Address Nigeria’s Nutrition Crisis

The UN’s humanitarian arm, OCHA, is seeking $300 million in emergency funding to combat the country’s worsening food and nutrition crisis, particularly in the North-East region.

According to Trond Jensen, Head of OCHA’s Office in Nigeria:

“$160 million is urgently required to respond to issues around food insecurity, nutrition, water, and sanitation. This is the bare minimum.”

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Jensen described a paradoxical situation where, despite the doubling of severe acute malnutrition cases, humanitarian response capacity has reduced by half due to underfunding.


Targeting Two Million Nigerians in Need

The UN agency said its goal is to reach two million people in 2025, prioritizing children, pregnant women, and internally displaced persons in crisis-hit areas like Borno, Yobe, and Adamawa states.

Jensen called on state governments, donor nations, and international NGOs to urgently step in and assist, warning that failure to act could worsen already dire conditions.


Global Poverty Rankings: Nigeria’s Position Worsens

This humanitarian alert comes as the World Bank’s April 2025 Africa’s Pulse Report ranks Nigeria as the country with the highest number of extremely poor people in Sub-Saharan Africa:

  • Nigeria: 19%
  • Democratic Republic of Congo: 14%
  • Ethiopia: 9%
  • Sudan: 6%

The Bank warned that Nigeria’s poverty levels could deteriorate further by 2027 if decisive action is not taken to address economic hardship, conflict, and weak social support systems.


Comparative Global Hunger and Poverty Data

In 2024, the Global Hunger Index ranked Sudan, Burundi, Somalia, and Yemen as the most hunger-stricken nations. However, Nigeria’s worsening humanitarian indicators now place it among the most vulnerable countries globally, despite its oil wealth and population size.


Urgent Action Needed to Avert Catastrophe

The UN’s latest assessments make it clear that Nigeria is at a critical juncture. With millions at risk of starvation, and child malnutrition reaching historic levels, international solidarity, domestic political will, and sustained funding are urgently required to avert a humanitarian catastrophe.

TJ News Nigeria

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