Tag: Ford Foundation

  • Activists seek stronger social justice movement

    Activists seek stronger social justice movement

    Civil society leaders, activists and development practitioners have called for a united front to strengthen Nigeria’s social justice movement.

    They made the call at an event organised in Abuja by TechHer NG – a civic technology organisation to commemorate 65 years of the Ford Foundation Office for West Africa with the theme: “Justice is not a destination, it’s in our journey.”

    They reflected on Ford’s impact, its partners’
    collective achievements, and the enduring work toward a just and equitable society.

    The stakeholders noted that Nigeria’s civic space was shrinking, creating new pressures on organisations working on justice, rights and accountability.

    Speaking at the event, the Executive Director, TechHer NG, Chioma Agwuegbo said the gathering was a moment of collective reflection for civil society, noting that the climate has grown increasingly hostile for activists and organisations.

    She said that the anniversary provided an opportunity for stakeholders to reconnect and reflect on solidarity amid changing political and funding realities.

    Agwuegbo said: “We wanted to interrogate a few questions, like resilience. How are we surviving as civil societies in Nigeria? How are we fighting things like civic suppression, the shrinking civic space, and the shutting down of dissenting voices? We often don’t have a lot of time to come back and reflect. A lot of us are creating silos.

    “Today, I hope that attendees and participants will make friends. I hope that they will collaborate after today because we have to find a way to spread and utilise effectively the lean resources we have.”

    She said through its Kuram platform – a TIV word meaning ‘keep you safe,’ the organisation has been able to provide a platform for women and girls to report online violence.

    Agwuegbo added: “The whole point of this for us is that as more people come online and use the Internet, TechHer has several programmes that invite women and girls to access, understand and use the Internet safely and meaningfully.

    “We want to ensure that as they are doing this they are safe. When there are incidents of violence perpetrators are caught swiftly and that women and girls are able to exist safely in public sphere.”

    Also speaking at the event, Chichi Aniagolu-Okoye, Ford Foundation’s regional director for West Africa, said civil society “must prepare for longer, more difficult struggles for justice.”

    She added: “This is not a sprint; it’s a marathon. We have to carry people along… Sometimes how you communicate is more important than what you are actually saying.”

    Aniagolu-Okoye noted that burnout has become common in the sector because organisations often focus solely on “big picture” outcomes while overlooking incremental progress.

    “We forget the little wins. Sometimes we don’t even know that we have won,” she said, adding that sustained civic resilience requires intergenerational input and broader participation across society.

    Activist and Co-convener of #BringBackOurGirls movement, Aisha Yesufu noted that movements must remain grounded in lived realities and moral responsibility, noting that injustice often persists because “some people just want to play God on earth here.”

    She added that many injustices in Nigeria are rooted in how religious teachings are interpreted and weaponised.

    She said: “Most of the injustice that we see stems from some people’s interpretation of the religious text.

    “Don’t tell me what your religion is. Let me see it in the way that you treat other human beings, with respect, with dignity, with love.”

    Yesufu warned that faith should not be used to elevate some citizens above others, adding that a society guided by empathy would reduce many of the tensions activists confront daily.

  • PIND, Ford Foundation canvass implementation of PIA-host community development trusts

    PIND, Ford Foundation canvass implementation of PIA-host community development trusts

    The Foundation for Partnership Initiatives in the Niger Delta (PIND) and the Ford Foundation have concluded the Bridges Project with a high-level Stakeholders’ Dialogue Forum that brought together leaders from government, settlors, regulators, representatives of Host Community Development Trusts (HCDTs) and communities to reflect on lessons from four years of implementing the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA) — particularly its HCDT provisions, and to chart the way forward for sustainable host community development in Nigeria’s oil-rich region.

    Launched in 2023, the Bridges Project has served as a transformative platform for dialogue and collaboration among regulators, settlors, and host communities. 

    Through its Multi-Stakeholder Platform (MSP), the project strengthened transparency, built trust, and promoted shared accountability in the implementation of the PIA’s HCDT framework — a central mechanism of the PIA  designed to ensure that host communities benefit directly from extractive activities.

    The two-day close-out forum with the theme: “Four Years of the PIA: Lessons, Gains, and the Path Forward for Host Community Development Trusts (HCDTs),” attracted over 150 participants, including representatives from the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), Niger Delta Development Commission (NDDC), South South Development Commission (SSDC), Nigerian Content Development and Monitoring Board (NCDMB), state governments, development partners, settlors, civil society, and community leaders.

    READ ALSO: NIIA, Korean Embassy seek deeper economic cooperation between Nigeria, Korea

    Sam Ogbemi Daibo, Executive Director of PIND Foundation, noted that the forum marks a pivotal step in consolidating lessons from the Bridges Project for future implementation. 

    “The Bridges Project has shown that the success of the PIA — and particularly the HCDT model, depends not just on compliance, but on collaboration, trust, and shared accountability. The lessons learned from this process provide a roadmap for the years ahead — guiding how we strengthen partnerships, deepen community engagement, and sustain the gains of host community development,” he said.

    The forum featured the presentation of the Bridges Project Status Report, highlighting significant progress in improving awareness of PIA provisions, strengthening stakeholder collaboration, and building new models for participatory governance.

    Delivering the keynote address on behalf of the Commission Chief Executive of the Nigerian Upstream Petroleum Regulatory Commission (NUPRC), the Commission’s Manager, Host Community Development Administration, Mrs. Omolade Awah, commended PIND and the Ford Foundation for fostering dialogue and evidence-based engagement that strengthen transparency and accountability under the Petroleum Industry Act (PIA). She noted that the Host Community Development Trust (HCDT) framework — a core pillar of the PIA — is already yielding visible results across the Niger Delta, from infrastructure and human capital projects to renewed community trust and stability. Mrs. Awah reaffirmed the Commission’s commitment to ensuring that the HCDT structure continues to serve as a credible mechanism for sustainable development, peacebuilding, and shared prosperity in host communities.

    Dr. Linus Nkan, Commissioner, Ministry of Budget and Economic Planning, Akwa Ibom State, emphasized that “the success of the HCDT implementation depends on shared accountability, trust, and continuous learning, and it should also be extended to government houses of all the Niger Delta states.

    As the Bridges Project closes, PIND and the Ford Foundation reaffirmed their commitment to sustaining the gains of the Multi-Stakeholder Platform (MSP), supporting capacity building for HCDTs, and advancing a future where peace and prosperity in the Niger Delta are community-owned and sustained.

  • Ford Foundation restates commitment to building strong partnerships

    Ford Foundation restates commitment to building strong partnerships

    The Ford Foundation has restated its commitment towards building strong partnerships across the West African subregion and beyond.

    The multilateral agency made this pledge during its strategic engagement with partners across Abuja and Lagos, when it received in audience Kimberly Bayer, Deputy Vice President for International Programs, and Victoria Dunning, Director of the BUILD initiative, for a high-level visit.

    The visit spotlighted the foundation’s Building Institutions and Networks (BUILD) initiative–a flagship grantmaking approach designed to help social justice organisations grow stronger and more resilient over time. By providing grantees with five years of general operating support and targeted organisational strengthening support, BUILD equips partners with the strategic clarity, internal capacity, and long-term stability they need to achieve impact and drive systemic change over the course of years and decades.

    Speaking at the meeting with the Ford team, Dr. Judith-Ann Walker, Executive Director of dRPC said, “The BUILD grant didn’t just fund programs; it helped us build an institution. It has transformed the way our organisation thinks about sustainability, risk planning, and organisational strategy, and has given us the flexibility to formalise structures, plan long-term, and grow internal resilience.”

    Dr. Walker added that one of dRPC’s biggest challenges has been ensuring that evidence-based research informs actual government policy rather than remaining on paper. “Through strategic partnerships and persistent engagement—capacities we’ve strengthened with support from the BUILD grant—we’re working to bridge that gap, so that data drives decisions and advocacy leads to real change,” she said. She emphasised that this approach is grounded in the organisation’s broader philosophy: “We’ve learned that true impact happens when we invest in relationships—with grassroots actors, local institutions, and cultural leaders who shape real-world outcomes.”

    Reinforcing how much the BUILD initiative has driven expansion and structural growth, Rev. Fr. George Ehusani, Executive Director of the Lux-Terra Leadership Foundation noted that “The BUILD grant has allowed us to grow in ways we never imagined—from restructuring our organisation internally to expanding our outreach across Nigeria.

    Read Also: Top four visas that give Nigerians access to more countries

    We’re not just changing minds—we’re transforming systems. “Our vision is to establish ‘Centers of Excellence’ that are not only places of training but sanctuaries of safety, dignity, and transformation for generations to come. The BUILD initiative has taught us that our structural strength is as important as our spiritual mission. A sustainable institution with integrity will outlive its founders and serve society for decades.”

    At a meeting with the Ford team in Lagos, Nigeria, Victoria Ibezim-Ohaeri, Director of Research and Policy at Spaces for Change (S4C), highlighted the transformative impact of the Ford Foundation’s BUILD grant on the organisation. “The BUILD grant has fundamentally shifted our operations—from reactive project-based work to a more strategic, focused, and scalable model,” she said.

    Ibezim-Ohaeri credited the grant with enabling S4C to strengthen its governance architecture, expand regionally, and invest in long-term research and policy advocacy, noting “We’ve built a governance system that ensures accountability and sustainability—something that project funding rarely supports.”

    The BUILD Grantee Convening in Abuja on May 6 was a central highlight of the visit, bringing together over 20 long-standing and new BUILD grantees from across West Africa for a day of collaborative learning, peer exchange, reflection, and strategic dialogue. Sessions explored ingenuity in leadership, governance practices and financial resilience. The event underscored the diverse and creative approaches local partners are using to amplify their impact in an increasingly complex development landscape.

    Speaking at the forum, Kimberly Bayer, Deputy Vice President for International Programs at the Ford Foundation, reaffirmed the organization’s deep commitment to long-term, trust-based philanthropy.

    BUILD, she noted, is Ford’s flagship investment in institutional strengthening, financing some of the foundation’s largest and most significant commitments globally since 2016. “BUILD is our version of trust-based philanthropy,” Bayer shared, highlighting the core values of mutual trust, equity, and shared learning that underpin the program and calling for this model to influence not just Ford’s future funding, but the broader philanthropic sector.

    Bayer stressed that resilient civil society organisations are critical frontline actors, capable of navigating challenges and reimagining a more just future.

    “We believe that to confront inequality, we must invest in strong institutions—organizations that have the time, resources, and certainty to focus on their internal health so they can do transformative work externally. In today’s uncertain world, resilience is not a luxury—it’s essential.”

    Welcoming the newest BUILD partners to what she described as a global community of nearly 550 grantees across 47 countries, Victoria Dunning, Director of the BUILD Program at the Ford Foundation, said “BUILD is an opportunity to invest deeply—not only in your mission and programs, but in your institutional resilience, so you can navigate shifts in funding, leadership, strategy, and the broader world around you. Our partners are not only sustaining their institutions; they are reimagining what responsive, inclusive civil society looks like.”

    She added that the results of Ford’s evaluation of the BUILD initiative are clear: “Multiyear, unrestricted funding—when combined with dedicated support for institutional development—leads to stronger, more resilient organisations of all sectors, structures, stages, and sizes. It also deepens their connection to the communities they serve.”

    Delivering the closing remarks at the BUILD Grantee Convening, Dr. ChiChi Aniagolu-Okoye, Regional Director of Ford Foundation’s West Africa Office said “The Ford Foundation has been on the Building Institutions and Networks journey for about a decade now, since Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation, announced the FordForward strategy in 2015 that made building durable institutions and networks one of the foundation’s highest priorities. And in that time, BUILD has grown into not just a valuable approach to grantmaking at Ford but stands as a strong model for how donors can support long-term resilience, equity, and impact.”

    Reflecting on the role of philanthropy in building lasting change, she emphasised that too often, donors focus on funding programs while overlooking the institutions that implement these programs.

    “At the Ford Foundation, we’ve seen that real, lasting impact depends on the strength and stability of the organisations we support,” she noted.

    Through the BUILD initiative, the foundation has invested in long-term, flexible support that allows partners to strengthen internal systems, adapt to change, and lead from a place of stability. “It’s time for more donors to recognize that building strong institutions is a fundamental requirement for driving justice, equity, and transformational change,” she added.

    The message to the broader philanthropic community is clear: resilient institutions are not just more effective—they are essential to achieving sustainable impact.

  • First scientists fair in Southeast coming

    There are plans to bring together for the first time inventors and innovators to showcase their products in the Southeast. A non-governmental organisation based in Enugu, the South Saharan Social Development Organisation is behind that plan.

    The NGO said that over 25 original inventions and innovations from people either from the Southeast or resident there, shortlisted from over 100 applications and entries would showcase their indigenous technological inventions.

    The Programme Manager of the Organisation, Mr Onyinye Nwachukwu said in a statement in Enugu that the fair would promote scientific and technological innovations and inventions in the region.

    According to Nwachukwu, the event is part of the organisation’s response to recession and to promote enterprise and entrepreneurship especially among youths.

    “The programme also aims to halt the disregard for innovation in the country which has been the trend since independence despite the abundance of scientists and technologists.

    “Thus, it will encourage innovation and further boost entrepreneurship in Nigeria in general,’’ he said.

    Nwachukwu said that the programme, which is tagged: “Showcasing the Can-Do Igbo Spirit: Innovations and Inventions from the Southeast’’, is under the organisation’s Ola Ndi Igbo (Jewels of the East) programme.

    He noted that the programme would attract over 1,000 visitors from within and outside of Nigeria including people from the private sector, investors, government officials, the diplomatic community and the general public.

    “This event is having the support of Life Lager Beer, the Ford Foundation, MTN, Ellington Company, Fidelity Bank, Radio Nigeria, NOTAP and many others.

    “It will take place on Dec. 18 from 10a.m. to 4p.m. at the Oakland Centre, Enugu and is open to the public free of charge,’’ he said.

    In addition to N1 million grand prize and other consolation prizes, the shortlisted inventors would receive training on patenting, financial management, how to run a business, marketing and branding of the technological innovative product.

     

  • Ford Foundation, others back Nigeria at Venice

    Nigeria’s march towards history at the world’s most prestigious and storied contemporary visual art exhibition – Venice Biennale – is gathering momentum as more corporate bodies, private foundations and well-meaning individuals are backing the initiative. Ford Foundation, GCA Energy and Amaya Capital are among the growing list of sponsors, with many more organisations indicating interest.
    Ike Chioke, a member of the Project Steering Committee for Nigeria in Venice 2017, made the disclosure during a stakeholder forum on Nigeria’s journey to Venice Biennale held in Lagos.  The event, which was hosted by Arthouse Contemporary Limited, was attended by Edo State Governor Godwin Obaseki, who is also “The Commissioner” for the Nigerian Pavilion in Venice.
    Chioke said: “As awareness of Nigeria’s debut participation at the biennale is increasing, so is the level of interest and support from corporates, NGOs and individuals. We are grateful to Ford Foundation, GCA Energy, Amaya Capital and several other corporate bodies and well-meaning individuals for their generous contributions towards the successful execution of the Nigerian pavilion.”
    Venice Art Biennale is a platform where nations showcase their art stars and seek to exert some level of socio-cultural influence. The increase in the number of participating countries from 59 (in 1999) to 89 (in 2015), when the last edition, was held bellies the importance of the international art fiesta.
    About 30 countries, including the United States, United Kingdom, Japan and Germany, have permanent pavilions in Venice, and some African countries, such as Kenya, South Africa, Angola, Zimbabwe, Mauritius and Seychelles have been represented at one time or the other.
    The Nigerian Pavilion will host the works of some of Nigeria’s most prominent contemporary artists, including painter Victor Ehikhamenor, sculptor PejuAlatise and choreographer Qudus Onikeku. The exhibition, curated by AdenreleSonariwo and Emmanuel Iduma, will be centered on the theme ‘How About NOW?’ and it opens to the public on May 13, 2017.

  • How Boko Haram entice youths with money – NGO

    How Boko Haram entice youths with money – NGO

    A recent study bysome non-governmental Organisatons, Mercy Corps and Ford Foundation has revealed the recruitment strategies of Boko Haram in the North-Eastern part of the country.

    The research, which was tagged ‘Motivations and Empty Promises: Voices of Former Boko Haram Combatants and Nigerian youth”, explored in detail how Boko Haram use financial services for recruitment and support of locals.

    The research The Nation gathered also revealed that the financial support offered to them presented an alternative set of services for community members, highlighting government and private sector deficiencies.

    The financial support also provided an immediate pathway for the vulnerable ones to expand their businesses, an affiliation that has provided Boko Haram with leverage to persuade potential recruits and community members to help with its operations

    Speaking on the importance of the research in the fight against Boko Haram, Director of Conflict Management at Mercy Corps, Rebecca Wolfe, claimed that conflict is one of the leading causes of poverty in the country and the aim of the presentation is to understand how Boko Haram recruits young people so that conflict can be reduced in the North-East.

    She said: “They recruit members in a number of ways. Not only unemployed young people, but employed, educated and uneducated, religious and non-religious people also join. The lack of services has created feelings of injustice, dissatisfaction and grievances predominantly in the North-East. Boko Haram has used this to effectively gain community acceptance. We have also found that business relationships and financial incentives are used to lure people into the group. Also, the deep-seated frustration with government paved way for Boko Haram to garner recruits.”

    Meanwhile, Dabesaki Mac-Ikemenjima, Program Officer of Ford Foundation noted that what the research found was the cause of the recruitment of individuals.

    He said: “It is partly because they lack economic resources, because they are excluded from political discussions, and also because their education system is weak. They are not trained to think that they can create opportunities for radicalisation and indoctrination by religious groups.”

    On whether some of the recommendations made would help in solving the issue of Boko Haram insurgency in Nigeria, he gave recommendations, that focus on economic livelihood for young people, if integrated with economic and social support, would be useful in addressing the challenge of youth involvement in the insurgency.

    A researcher and civil society practitioner in Maiduguri, Mustafa Ballama, explained that the research tried to explore the business and financial aspect of the insurgency.

    He also noted that according to the findings, in 2009 people joined because it was a new sect and they were curious to learn, and they wanted to look more religious.

    He said: “Then the violence came, and as a result of the findings, we know that the others joined because of either money or other issues around power or even politics – it’s an advantage. To a certain extent, finances or business were used as incentives to lure these youths to the sect.”

     

  • AFRIFF, Ford Foundation sponsor 15 students to US film school

    AFRIFF, Ford Foundation sponsor 15 students to US film school

    In the second edition of its scholarship scheme, the Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF), in collaboration with Ford Foundation,  is providing capacity development for another season 15 film students to the popular Montana State University, United States, for a summer course.

    The beneficiaries who travelled to the US on Sunday were selected from the AFRIFF Talent Development Workshops sponsored by Access Bank and Africa Magic at the 2015 edition of the festival which held in Lagos. The initiative provides beginners and intermediate courses for young people in their choice areas of filmmaking.

    The scholarship scheme which is meant  to advance the aspirations of these burgeoning talents,  is an intensive hands-on training camp on various aspects of filmmaking with emphasis on documentary filmmaking.

    Although 20 students qualified for the scholarship, 15 have been granted visas by the American embassy so far. They include 13 Nigerians, one Ghanaian and one Rwandan.

    They are: Morakinyo Fapohunda (Lagos), Leke  Oyeyinka (Ogun), Kalu Nnamdi Anaga (Enugu), Damian Ashinjo (Benue), Richard Odilu (Delta), Tunray Femi (Delta), Kelechi  Nduka (Anambra), Dan Ikpoyi (Delta), Adebusola Adeboyejo (Ondo), Kenechukwu  Nwatu from   Enugu; Alero Okorodus (Lagos), Joy  Igbe (Benue), Susan Akalazu (Imo), Osei Owusu Banahene (Ghana) and Vanessa Uwase (Rwanda).

    Also in the partnership is Arik Air, Montana State University and Africa Magic.

    Last year, the scheme had a total of 35 participants; 15 young film students, selected by AFRIFF for the Ford Foundation scholarship, and 20 upcoming filmmakers, who attended first-hand training at Relativity School, Los Angeles.

    Mr.  Paul Nwulu, Programmes Officer for Ford Foundation, said they already had proposals for 10 of the 15 guys who made the training last year. According to Nwulu, the choice of Montana State University was strategy owing to the quality of training they offer.

    For Founder/CEO of AFRIFF, Ms Chioma Ude, the scholarship is one in a series of other talent development initiatives of the six-year-old festival. According to her, the skill acquisition and youth development initiative was designed to use filmmaking as an authentic vehicle for youth empowerment.

    AFRIFF’s vision, according to Ude, is to raise awareness about African cinema, its vast potential and the tremendous socio-economic impact of creative professionals in Africa. She noted that the first four years of the festival were strategically intended to build the AFRIFF brand and gain the brand notoriety that will allow partnership of global brands like Ford Foundation and Relativity Media.

    AFRIFF has since its first edition in 2010, provided free training and talent development opportunities for young people and aspiring filmmakers. The festival has provided cutting edge education in Sound for Film, Cinematography and Screen Writing for over 500 students, in partnership with Sound & Motion Technical College and City Varsity, Cape Town, South Africa. AFRIFF has also worked directly with students of the National Film Institute, Jos; PEFTI Film Institute, Lagos; the Creative Arts Department at The University of Port-Harcourt; Department of Media & Theatre Arts at The University of Calabar and The Theatre Arts Department of The University of Uyo. The Desicon Group was the 2014 sponsor of the AFRIFF Talent Development Workshops.

     

  • AFRIFF, Ford Foundation sponsor 15 students to US film school

    AFRIFF, Ford Foundation sponsor 15 students to US film school

    In the second edition of its scholarship scheme, the Africa International Film Festival (AFRIFF), in collaboration with Ford Foundation,  is providing capacity development for another season 15 film students to the popular Montana State University, United States, for a summer course.

    The beneficiaries who travelled to the US yesterday were selected from the AFRIFF Talent Development Workshops sponsored by Access Bank and Africa Magic at the 2015 edition of the festival which held in Lagos. The initiative provides beginners and intermediate courses for young people in their choice areas of filmmaking.

    The scholarship scheme which is meant  to advance the aspirations of these burgeoning talents,  is an intensive hands-on training camp on various aspects of filmmaking with emphasis on documentary filmmaking.

    Although 20 students qualified for the scholarship, 15 have been granted visas by the American embassy so far. They include 13 Nigerians, one Ghanaian and one Rwandan.

    They are: Morakinyo Fapohunda (Lagos), Leke  Oyeyinka (Ogun), Kalu Nnamdi Anaga (Enugu), Damian Ashinjo (Benue), Richard Odilu (Delta), Tunray Femi (Delta), Kelechi  Nduka (Anambra), Dan Ikpoyi (Delta), Adebusola Adeboyejo (Ondo), Kenechukwu  Nwatu from   Enugu; Alero Okorodus (Lagos), Joy  Igbe (Benue), Susan Akalazu (Imo), Osei Owusu Banahene (Ghana) and Vanessa Uwase (Rwanda).

    Also in the partnership is Arik Air, Montana State University and Africa Magic.

    Last year, the scheme had a total of 35 participants; 15 young film students, selected by AFRIFF for the Ford Foundation scholarship, and 20 upcoming filmmakers, who attended first-hand training at Relativity School, Los Angeles.

    Mr.  Paul Nwulu, Programmes Officer for Ford Foundation, said they already had proposals for 10 of the 15 guys who made the training last year. According to Nwulu, the choice of Montana State University was strategy owing to the quality of training they offer.

    For Founder/CEO of AFRIFF, Ms Chioma Ude, the scholarship is one in a series of other talent development initiatives of the six-year-old festival. According to her, the skill acquisition and youth development initiative was designed to use filmmaking as an authentic vehicle for youth empowerment.

    AFRIFF’s vision, according to Ude, is to raise awareness about African cinema, its vast potential and the tremendous socio-economic impact of creative professionals in Africa. She noted that the first four years of the festival were strategically intended to build the AFRIFF brand and gain the brand notoriety that will allow partnership of global brands like Ford Foundation and Relativity Media.

    AFRIFF has since its first edition in 2010, provided free training and talent development opportunities for young people and aspiring filmmakers. The festival has provided cutting edge education in Sound for Film, Cinematography and Screen Writing for over 500 students, in partnership with Sound & Motion Technical College and City Varsity, Cape Town, South Africa. AFRIFF has also worked directly with students of the National Film Institute, Jos; PEFTI Film Institute, Lagos; the Creative Arts Department at The University of Port-Harcourt; Department of Media & Theatre Arts at The University of Calabar and The Theatre Arts Department of The University of Uyo. The Desicon Group was the 2014 sponsor of the AFRIFF Talent Development Workshops.

  • BOKO HARAM : Nigerian refugees in dire conditions in Cameroun

    BOKO HARAM : Nigerian refugees in dire conditions in Cameroun

    Ateba 1Simon Ateba who visited Cameroun reports on the lot of Nigerian refugees in the country.

    As heavy rain fell on August 28, many refugees stood under a temporary shelter barely covering their heads and upper bodies at the Minawao camp in Cameroun’s far north region.

    Their legs were wet and stained as drops of water hit the ground and lifted mud onto them. They wrapped their arms around their chests to shield themselves from the pestering cold.

    The new sets of refugees had arrived from North East Nigeria where a Boko Haram insurgency had wreaked havoc since 2009, and their belongings were still scattered on the muddy ground as they waited desperately to be admitted into the unfenced camp located in the bush, seven kilometres from the nearest tarred road.

    It was a familiar scene to gendarmes protecting the camp and humanitarian aid workers catering for the ever growing number of Nigerians rendered helpless by the insurgency.

    That insurgency has killed more than 23,000 people since it began six years ago and displaced 2.3 million others in Nigeria, Cameroun, Chad and Niger since May 2013. In the past five months alone, 500,000 children have been uprooted, bringing the total number of minors on the run in Nigeria and neighbouring countries to over 1.4 million. Many of these children are out of school.

    Collapsed business and lives

    Worse, trade is almost nonexistent, farmers are unable to tend their fields, and business activity in the region has virtually collapsed.

    As the violence persists, fathers, mothers, children of all ages and families of all economic backgrounds flee from towns and villages under attacks and attempt to cross the Nigeria-Cameroun border.

    Those who are successful arrive there tired, sick, hungry, thirsty and desperately looking for help.

    ateba 3

    The displaced persons first spend weeks or months in Camerounian villages or towns along the border and then trek for several more weeks or even months to reach the Minawao camp where 96 percent of the population comes from Borno State, two percent from Adamawa State and another two per cent from elsewhere.

    There at the Minawao camp, stranded in the bush of Cameroun’s far north region, and surrounded by a hostile environment with a weather that easily switches from too hot to too cold, about 45,000 refugees live in makeshift shelters, 70 kilometres from the border with Nigeria in the district of Mokolo, the department of Mayo-Tsanaga.

     

    The refugees, most of them women and children (53 percent of the population in the camp consists of women, while 61 percent are children under the age of 18 years of age) arrive with no money, food, water or even clothes other than the ones on their backs. On arrival, it takes them many days to be screened before they are admitted into the camp and several more days to receive their first ration of food, water or medication as many arrive there sick.

    They wait for many more days to receive utensils, blankets and any other basic thing from the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), which has run the camp since 2013. Until that happens, they fend for themselves or hope that those who have been in the camp for a longer period will share from their little leftovers, if there is any.

    Living at the edges

    The location of the unfenced camp makes many refugees fear possible attacks from wild animals or even from potential invaders as the camp has only one police post with about ten gendarmes protecting tens of thousands of people.

    Because instability has persisted in North east Nigeria for six years and many areas had fallen into the hands of Boko Haram for a long time, the health system has nearly collapsed and many of the refugees had been living without proper medical care for years. They arrive sick and in need of medical checkups. As newcomers flock in, the pressure on the health services at the Minawao is increasing.

    In August, about 2,671 women had serious medical complications while 1,007 persons who were living with various disabilities had no wheelchairs and walking aids, hearing and vision aids, artificial limbs and surgical appliances as well as communication aids.

    There were also no elastic stockings, appliances for colostomies, some types of trusses or wound dressings, urinary catheters, pressure relieving cushions and mattresses or continence pads for people with disabilities.

    The main hospital in Mokolo district where the camp is located did not have equipment to cope with patients with special needs nor were there qualified medical personnel to efficiently monitor the 269 refugees who have been suffering from mental illnesses.

    There were also in the camp more than a thousand elders with various health challenges. With the rainy season, overpopulation and scarce water, there were fears of a cholera outbreak.

    As at August, the camp had two health centres with not many beds and one maternity unit. It had only 2,555 toilets for all the refugees. This had some health implications, especially because each refugee has right to only 17 litres of water every day to drink, cook, wash and bath.

    The Minawao camp was established in 2013 to house up to 20, 000 people escaping Boko Haram violence in North east Nigeria, but with no end to the conflict in sight, there were, as at August 18 this year, 44, 889 Nigerian refugees crowded in the camp and sharing 11,954 shelters.

    A minimum of four persons were sharing each shelter, but about 5,000 refugees still lived in classrooms and community shelters, and many displaced persons remained stuck in border towns and villages with no international help.

    ateba 2

    Between January and August, more than 22,000 new refugees had already been registered, and by the end of the year, it is projected that the number of refugees in the camp may shoot beyond 50,000 people.

    And as more people troop into the Minawao camp and the surrounding bushes and classrooms, the needs of these new arrivals are growing fast but the availability of basic services such as the provision of water, sanitation, education and food is shrinking and the living conditions of refugees are worsening.

    Médecins Sans Frontières, for instance, is struggling to bring in new staff to give more consultations, vaccinations and treatments.

    Education is also provided in dire circumstances. The camp has two primary schools with 24 classrooms for over 6,000 (out of 11,000) children between the ages of six and 13. There are also about 2,000 students in secondary school between the ages of 14 and 17.

    Camerounian curriculum, not Nigerian, is taught as there is scarcity of good teachers who could provide education in English. Teaching equipment and learning materials such as exercise books were also missing and the number of classrooms is not enough.

    The 79 unaccompanied children who lived in the camp as at August 28, away from missing or dead parents were also a concern to humanitarian workers.

    For now, the capacity of the Minawao camp has reached its limits and new needs have been created.

    The fresh needs include the construction of shelters at a new camp to decongest Minawao and accommodate newcomers, the deployment of more security operatives from the current single security post, the supply of more water as well as the implementation of new measures to prevent cholera outbreak among others.

    These challengers are worsened by the dilapidated road between Zamai, the nearest town, and the camp. Many trucks had broken down along the way with provisions in them and many humanitarian aid workers had been stranded and forced to turn back as they were trying to reach the camp. The road is often over flooded during rainy seasons and our correspondent had to be carried by two men to cross some parts of that road.

    The increased needs, however, require enormous resources. But money is what is lacking the most, UNHCR says.

    In its “2015 Refugee Response Plan” interagency report, made available on  August 9, and which covered the period between  July 20 and 26, 2015, the UNHCR and partnering agencies disclosed that out of 62.7 million dollars needed to tackle the refugee crisis in Cameroun, only 29 percent of the cash has been made available.

    “What is really worrisome is that despite the growing number of refugees and their needs, donors do not seem to understand the urgency,” an official said.

    This reporter’s investigation was cut short when he was arrested on August 28 and kept in a cell for three nights and day on suspicions that he was a spy for Boko Haram.

     

    *Investigation carried out with funding from The International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR Nigeria) and Ford Foundation