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Boko Haram Violence Has Displaced 1.4 Million Children – UN Reports

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Half a million children have fled attacks from the Islamic militant group Boko Haram over the past five months, UNICEF said in a UN report released Friday.

“It’s truly alarming to see that children and women continue to be killed, abducted and used to carry bombs”

The recent surge brings the total number of displaced children in northern Nigeria to 1.2 million — more than half of them are under the age of 5. A further 265,000 children have fled their homes in Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

DAKAR/GENEVA/NEW YORK, 18 September 2015 – A sharp increase in attacks by the armed group commonly known as Boko Haram has uprooted 500,000 children over the past five months, bringing the total number of children on the run in northeast Nigeria and neighbouring countries to 1.4 million, UNICEF said today.

“Each of these children running for their lives is a childhood cut short,” said Manuel Fontaine, UNICEF Regional Director for West and Central Africa. “It’s truly alarming to see that children and women continue to be killed, abducted and used to carry bombs.” 

In northern Nigeria alone, nearly 1.2 million children – over half of them under 5 years old – have been forced to flee their homes. An additional 265,000 children have been uprooted in Cameroon, Chad and Niger.

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Boko Haram has orchestrated a campaign of bombings, assassinations and abductions in Nigeria over the past few years. The group gained worldwide notoriety in April 2014 when it kidnapped more than 270 schoolgirls from the town of Chibok in northern Nigeria’s Borno state.

“It’s truly alarming to see that children and women continue to be killed, abducted and used to carry bombs,” said Manuel Fontaine, the UNICEF regional director for West and Central Africa, in the report.

Since the beginning of the year, children and woman are increasingly used in bombings, said Anne Boher, the UNICEF Niger chief of communications, in an email to TIME.

“Women and girls are involved in approximately three-quarters of the attacks,” she said. And children are “used, often without knowing, to carry bombs that were strapped to their bodies and detonated remotely in public places.”

Funding shortfalls have hampered work on the ground, says UNICEF. The organization says it has only received 32% of the $50.3 million it requires this year. And in a sign of worsening conditions, victims of the insurgency also face growing food insecurity and a cholera outbreak in displacement camps in Borno state.

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