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WFP may suspend emergency food assistance in northeast

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The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP)may suspend all emergency food and nutrition aid for 1.3 million people in northeast Nigeria at the end of July 2025 due to critical funding shortfalls, coming at a time of escalating violence and record levels of hunger.

The WFP stated that its food and nutrition stocks have been completely exhausted, stressing that the organisation’s last supplies were left in warehouses in early July, and life-saving assistance will end after the current round of distributions is completed.

The organisation stated that it has the capacity and expertise to deliver and scale up its humanitarian response, but a critical funding gap is paralysing operations. It added that it urgently requires US$130 million to prevent an imminent pipeline break and sustain food and nutrition operations through the end of 2025.

WFP Country Director for Nigeria, David Stevenson, in a statement, noted that nearly 31 million people in Nigeria are now facing acute hunger, a record number, adding that without immediate funding, millions of vulnerable people will face impossible choices: endure increasingly severe hunger, migrate, or possibly risk exploitation by extremist groups in the region.

The statement reads, “At the same time, WFP’s operations in northeast Nigeria will collapse without immediate, sustained funding. This is no longer just a humanitarian crisis; it’s a growing threat to regional stability, as families pushed beyond their limits are left with nowhere to turn.”

Stevenson noted that children will be among the worst affected if vital aid ends, pointing out that more than 150 WFP-supported nutrition clinics in Borno and Yobe states will close, ending potentially life-saving treatment for more than 300,000 children under two and placing them at increased risk of wasting.

He said, “In conflict-affected northern areas, escalating violence from extremist groups is driving mass displacement. Some 2.3 million people across the Lake Chad Basin have been forced to flee their homes, straining already limited resources and pushing communities to the brink.”

“When emergency assistance ends, many will migrate in search of food and shelter. Others will adopt negative coping mechanisms – including potentially joining insurgent groups to survive. Food assistance can often prevent these outcomes. It allows us to feed families, help rebuild economies and support long-term recovery,” Stevenson added.

The statement noted that in the first half of 2025, WFP has been able to hold hunger at bay across northern Nigeria, reaching 1.3 million people with life-saving food and nutrition assistance, while support for an additional 720,000 people was planned for the second half of the year before funding shortfalls put life-saving programmes in jeopardy.

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