Addressing a gathering in Abuja, UNICEF Chief Nutritionist in Nigeria, Arjan de Wagt, said that 300,000 children would die in 2016 alone if they were not treated.
Severe Acute Malnutrition
Reading out a report of her group, the National Coordinator of Civil Society Nutrition in Nigeria (CS-SUNN), Philippa Momah, said more than 1.6 million Nigerian children between six months and five years were suffering from severe acute malnutrition.
“These children are nine times more likely to die than well nourished children.“Without treatment, do you know that about 300,000 of these children will die in 2016 alone?” she questioned.
“On the foregoing, we call on the Federal, State and Local Governments to create nutrition specific budget lines in the Ministries of Health, Education and Agriculture at the Federal States and LGA levels in Nigeria.
“We call on them to develop nutrition plan and action.”
Mr Wagt is, however, hopeful that if drastic commitments were made, most of the malnourished children would survive.
Both UNICEF and a coalition of Civil Society Organisations called on the Federal Government to act by making funds available for the treatment of malnourished children.
UNICEF is a United Nations programme that provides long-term humanitarian and developmental assistance to children and mothers in developing countries.
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