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Are We Really Hungry In Nigeria? - By Greg Odogwu - Politics - Nairaland 1m61

Are We Really Hungry In Nigeria? - By Greg Odogwu (15759 Views)

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iwaeda: 8:14am On May 08
The United Nations Children’s Fund, on Monday, said Nigeria had beaten the war-torn Sudan to emerge as the capital of malnourished children on the African continent and the second highest in the world. There is no sadder news for a country that has been struggling to maintain a semblance of normalcy. This must serve as an alarm bell for all of us, especially those in leadership positions.

What is Sudan known for? As the conflict in the country rages, destroying livelihoods, infrastructure, trade routes and supply chains, the North-East African country has been confirmed by the international community as fast becoming the world’s largest hunger crisis. As of last year, in Sudan, a total of 24.6 million people (around half the population) were acutely food insecure, while 638,000 (the highest anywhere in the world) faced catastrophic levels of hunger. For Nigeria to overtake Sudan in the malnourished children index means that we might be fast descending the doomsday lane of hunger and famine.

As disclosed on the UNICEF website, “Nigeria has the second highest burden of stunted children in the world, with a national prevalence rate of 32 per cent of children under five. An estimated two million children in Nigeria suffer from severe acute malnutrition, but only two out of every 10 children affected are currently reached with treatment. Seven per cent of women of childbearing age also suffer from acute malnutrition. Just 18 per cent of children aged six to 23 months are fed the minimum acceptable diet.”

But when one takes a moment to reflect on this, there is a more depressing concern that stares one in the face. Sudan is a war-torn zone with all the visual signature of social disharmony and political turmoil, where most parents have to depend on the humanitarian intervention of the World Food Programme to feed their children. In contrast, Nigeria has been a working democracy since 1999. The government offices are working full throttle. We have 50 appointed federal ministers who go to work daily on a mandate to make the lives of the citizens better in all aspects.

Apart from a few bandit-controlled local government areas in the far-flung fringes of the country, all government authorities are working according to plan and the allocation that comes down to them from the Federation as and when due. In the mainstream media, we are served with hopeful news of a vibrant private sector; on social media, people are selling all sorts of luxury paraphernalia, with many others flaunting their wealth and well-being. There are parties and soirees, as well as fashion parades and sporting picnics. In fact, if you only go by what the eyes can see, Nigeria is basking in luxury.

However, a peep into the other side of the country is as damning as it is revealing. There are children as young as four years old, hawking sundry wares on the streets, while their mates are in school. Many families in many rural areas can only afford to eat cassava pudding morning and night, day in day out, and their children have bloated faces to show that they are not getting enough protein. Some children and adults die off like chickens because they cannot afford to buy malaria tablets for N1,500. There are communities, even in the Federal Capital Territory, that share what they call rivers – actually ponds and seasonal lakes – with cattle and other domestic animals.

There are countless Nigerians whose take-home pay from their day jobs is as low as N30,000, and they struggle to survive on this paltry sum. For most of these citizens, meat is a luxury. Ironically, some of them are waiters and hostesses in restaurants, hotels and bars, where fellow citizens spend N30,000 in one sitting just for lunch, while their political representatives gallivant with N150m SUVs.

What about the bandit and Boko Haram-governed territories? These exist as if they are not part of Nigeria. The only governments they know are terrorist mandate territories. They pay their taxes to the criminals and serve as their subjects. They surrender all their farm yields to the bandits that rule over them. The nourishment of their children is not a priority: little ones born to grow up into slavery, who work while there is strength in their born, and are buried like animals when they drop dead from exhaustion. For the girl children among them, life is only about satisfying their slave masters either as wives or as concubines. But nobody talks about nutrition or nourishment, and the government most time denies such enclaves exist.

Perhaps, this is why nobody really cares who is hungry and who is not in Nigeria. We are living in denial that we have outsourced the job of finding the truth to international agencies like the UNICEF and others.

Anyway, once in a while, the government, through the National Bureau of Statistics, tries to tell the truth. Late last year, the NBS, in its ‘Cost of Healthy Diet’ report, said the national average cost of a healthy diet per adult a day stood at N1,346 in September 2024. This was a 7.3 per cent increase compared to the N1,255 recorded in August. The slide was steady. The June CoHD report showed a 45 per cent increase over six months: from N858 in January 2024 to N1,241 in June 2024. During the same period, general and food inflation climbed to 34.2 per cent and 40.87 per cent, respectively.

This means that as the days go by, Nigerians sink further into the bottomless pit of hardship and starvation. Therefore, the UNICEF, in rating Nigeria as having the hungriest children in Africa, is only telling us what we already know. The only difference is that they put it in its proper context – alas, war-torn territories are healthier than us!

Sadly, we live in a bubble, searching for happiness only at an individual level. We make money and steal money and lie to ourselves that all is well with our country. The waiter, salesgirl or artisan is on the lookout for a quick way to swindle his or her employer because everybody knows the salary is not enough. Even the civil servants and the government that pay them know that the N70,000 minimum wage is not enough to feed the workers, but mum is the word.

We are a country in the throes of debilitating bipolar disorder. We complain about hunger, yet we do not raise an eyebrow when the people who steal our food are unmasked. Just recently, the EFCC arrested some NNPC officials over alleged mismanagement of funds earmarked for the rehabilitation of the refineries, totalling $2,956,872,622.36. In fact, according to The PUNCH report, “impeccable top management sources at the Nigerian National Petroleum Company Limited revealed that N80bn was found in the of one of the sacked MDs”. There is also another allegation that N71bn from the student loan scheme, NELFUND, is missing.

Truth be told, we are a very hungry people. But we are just too self-deceptive to tell ourselves the truth. According to the NBS ‘Cost of Healthy Diet’ report, the national average cost of a healthy diet per adult a day stood at N1,346 in September 2024. If you do the math, that is about N4,000 for three square meals per day, which comes to N120,000 just for an individual in one month. So, tell me, how in the world can a N70,000 monthly salary feed a single Nigerian and nourish their children?

https://punchng.com/are-we-really-hungry-in-nigeria/?

35 Likes 4 Shares

helinues: 8:19am On May 08
All those who will say yes would only be saying that on behalf of others as they never experienced hunger before even though they can describe it than those who are really experiencing it

33 Likes 9 Shares

Kemetian: 8:20am On May 08
Sobering.

1 Like 1 Share

Babangidapikin: 8:22am On May 08
When people are hungry before, people go 001 or 100 or 010 but now it's 100000001, the number is widening especially for older people because Government refuse to provide social welfare and people without jobs because no spare cash anymore to give anyone. The Government should ensure a holistic social welfare package for people above 70 and people with disabilities across board. So our elderly will stop fasting every now and then.

29 Likes 3 Shares

Firebox123(m): 8:23am On May 08
grin
helinues:
All those who will say yes would only be saying that on behalf of others as they never experienced hunger before even though they can describe it than those who are really experiencing it
helinues: 8:24am On May 08
Babangidapikin:
People are hungry before people go 001 or 100 or 010 but now it's 100000001

Is that what you are currently practicing abi na still on behalf of the bereaved?

grin

29 Likes 3 Shares

Babangidapikin: 8:26am On May 08
helinues:


Is that what you are currently practicing abi na still on behalf of the bereaved?

grin
Just telling you fact ...

20 Likes 1 Share

Judgementa1: 8:28am On May 08
Nigerians should be sincere to themselves.

Must the government always borrowed to feed the populace.

Most of the things consume are imported goods.

We should start by being productive inorder to sustain the country.

11 Likes 2 Shares

Babangidapikin: 8:32am On May 08
Judgementa1:
Nigerians should be sincere to themselves.

Must the government always borrowed to feed the populace.

Most of the things consume are imported goods.

We should start by being productive inorder to sustain the country.
Nigeria is one yeye place, people go to farm and steal products before you harvest.. the mindset is upside down, Government sef fit open border before your cycle is over, what is the sense in wasting your resources and time when there's no profitablity.

20 Likes 2 Shares

RepoMan007: 8:42am On May 08
The demons lording over Nigeria want to stone their master in Saudi Arabia soon and it is logical they suppress any news that will derail the devil stoning exercise.
Any news of malnourishment can wait until after hajj has been silently subsidized. They even promiised ASUU and syddenly resurrected School Feeding, all to help hajj subsidy scale through unchallenged.
Nigeria i hail.

16 Likes

solutionsnow: 8:49am On May 08
When you have an agbero in power, after he snatched it grabbed it and ran away with the stolen mandate, only to squander it, that's what you get.

25 Likes

Qadaffi2idiamin: 8:54am On May 08
Ah
kingbee90: 11:25am On May 08
Nigerians are hungry but are not hungry enough. Now na still morning. Make Nigerians wait till Tinubu Sangodele's economic policies inflict massive hunger on them.
Even Agbadorians sef na dem go first lead the anti-government protest due to severe hunger.

9 Likes

Racoon(m): 11:59am On May 08
There is hunger in Nigeria. People are really struggling to feed.

8 Likes

iwaeda: 2:16pm On May 08
Racoon:
There is hunger in Nigeria. People are really struggling to feed.
Ebi n pawon oo. grin grin grin grin

8 Likes

iwaeda: 2:17pm On May 08
kingbee90:
Nigerians are hungry but are not hungry enough. Now na still morning. Make Nigerians wait till Tinubu Sangodele's economic policies inflict massive hunger on them.
Even Agbadorians sef na dem go first lead the anti-government protest due to severe hunger.
With the new tax regime. grin grin angry

4 Likes

diverseconcepts: 4:07pm On May 08
UN OVER TO YOU grin grin
armadeo(m): 4:08pm On May 08
See question?
emkz: 4:08pm On May 08
Yes.

Some people are hungry.

Some are hungry for power. Reason they are talking about coalition without telling us what they'd do to move the country forward.

Some are hungry to demarket Nigeria.

Some are hungry to talk about multidimensional poverty.

Some are hungry to compare Nigeria to China, Indonesia and Brazil, as if those countries would tolerate half of what they do in Nigeria.

Some are hungry to manufacture dubious statistics.

Some are hungry to find negativity in every positive stride the country makes.

Some are hungry to make allegations and cry victim when asked for evidence.

The hunger is self-serving.

I find the statistics used to reach the conclusion on hunger rates questionable. If we take a census of money outside the formal sector, we'd find that some of the statistics are estimates without measurable yardsticks on data acquisition. You say some Nigerians are living on less than 1 dollar per day. How is that a measure of poverty?

If Nigeria is as bad as some people paint it, no one would be asking people to protest. They'd do it organically.

31 Likes

Fatbam005: 4:08pm On May 08
Take a stroll to expensive restaurant and see how people dey eat expensive food.. And amazingly those places are full to the brim

7 Likes 2 Shares

fabolouz1(m): 4:09pm On May 08
is this question necessary ? There is no place on earth where people aren't hungry.

1 Like 1 Share

Sonnobax15(m): 4:09pm On May 08
lipsrsealed
AngelicDamsel(f): 4:09pm On May 08
We thank God for life.....



Meanwhile.... grin grin grin

3 Likes

Poppia: 4:09pm On May 08
smiley

2 Likes

Sandralight(f): 4:10pm On May 08
Yes we are hungry, people can even afford to eat protein with their meals, many eat once a day.
Many people are getting depressed because they can afford their basic necessities.
I am seriously tired of everything

11 Likes 1 Share

Christane: 4:11pm On May 08
People are really suffering in dis country..

7 Likes

Mrchippychappy(m): 4:11pm On May 08
O boy see question sha? People are hungry as fk in Nigeria. It's never been this bad, the hardship is on some biblical level things

6 Likes

ogododo: 4:13pm On May 08
Hunger dey no be small.

4 Likes

Danisaint112(m): 4:13pm On May 08
We are not. Second tenor will prove it. Wait na time.

1 Like

Mabuggi88: 4:14pm On May 08
helinues:
All those who will say yes would only be saying that on behalf of others as they never experienced hunger before even though they can describe it than those who are really experiencing it
You must definitely defend, haba. What sought of human stuff are you made of

8 Likes 1 Share

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