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Northern Nigeria hunger reaches worst levels in nearly a decade, WFP says

By Thomson Reuters Jul 2, 2026 | 8:57 AM

LAGOS, July 2 (Reuters) – More than 17 million people across nine conflict-hit states in northern Nigeria face severe hunger, the U.N. food agency said ​on Thursday, warning that violence and funding ‌cuts are driving food insecurity to its worst level in nearly a decade.

The latest food security analysis showed the number of people facing crisis, emergency or catastrophic hunger had risen by ‌almost ​two million from previous projections, the ⁠World Food Programme (WFP) said ⁠in a statement.

The findings underline the deepening humanitarian cost of insecurity in Africa’s most populous country, where Islamist insurgents in the northeast and armed gangs ​in parts of the north have displaced communities, kept farmers from their fields and restricted aid access.

The ⁠crisis is worsening during the ⁠lean season, when households typically exhaust food ​stocks before the next harvest.

Borno state, the epicentre of ​a long-running Islamist insurgency, has more than 3 million ‌people who are acutely food insecure, including more than 750,000 facing severe hunger conditions, WFP said.

“When people lose access to food, the risks of displacement, exploitation ⁠and instability increase,” said WFP regional director for West and Central Africa Kinday Samba, adding that violence was spreading across ⁠a wider area ‌and forcing people from farmland.

WFP said ⁠it can only support fewer than half ​of ‌the 1.3 million people it was able ​to assist ⁠last year in three northeast states, where 6.2 million are food insecure.

The agency said it needs $89 million over the next six months to maintain food, nutrition and logistics support across northern Nigeria.

(Reporting by MacDonald Dzirutwe, Editing ​by William Maclean)