More than
1,000 people have been killed so far this year in three states in northeastern
Nigeria worst hit by Boko Haram violence, according to the country's main
relief organisation.
The National
Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) figures are the starkest indication yet of
the increase in bloodshed in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe that have caused growing
concern.
NEMA said in a
presentation in Abuja on Tuesday that people living in the states were "caught
up in an intensifying conflict", which has been raging since 2009.
"The human toll:
more than 1,000 people dead and 249,446 displaced between January to March
2014... One in five of the total population are not living in their own
homes," it added.
Violence has
increased in northeastern Nigeria since the new year, including a high-profile
attack on a
boarding school in Yobe, which saw dozens of students slaughtered in their beds.
boarding school in Yobe, which saw dozens of students slaughtered in their beds.
A state of emergency
imposed in the three states in May last year has largely forced the militants
out of urban centres but villagers in remote, rural areas have borne the brunt
of continued attacks blamed on the Islamist extremists.
NEMA said that some
3.2 million people - nearly a third of the overall population in the three states
- were affected by the crisis, most of them women, children and older people.
A total of 244,000
were living with friends or relatives and just over 5,000 were in camps.
"Immediate
assistance" was required for 1.5 million people while there needed to be
an "urgent and significant scale-up" of humanitarian assistance,
especially of food, water and healthcare.
Nigeria's government
has been criticised for its apparent inability to end the Boko Haram
insurgency, with a focus on the military's tactics to deal with guerrilla
fighting by the Islamists.
Military top brass,
however, maintain that a troop surge plus recent restrictions on the
insurgents' ability to seek safe haven outside Nigeria has prompted them to
lash out and attack.
Boko Haram, which
wants to create a separate strict Islamic state in northern Nigeria, was
depleted in both numbers and weaponry, officers say.
NEMA's estimate on
the current death toll is the highest among agencies tracking the conflict.
Human Rights Watch
said on March 14 that 700 people had died since the turn of the year and that
there had been "mass displacement" of residents, without giving exact
figures.
The Council on
Foreign Relations think-tank's "Nigeria Security Tracker", which
documents violent deaths by perpetrator, said that 650 people had been killed
between January 5 and February 23.
The United Nations
has said that nearly 300,000 people had been internally displaced from the
start of emergency rule to January 1 but has not yet provided figures for this
year.
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