Channel1 Los Angeles
13 de Agosto de 2018

In 2015, the Boko Haram insurgency sweeping northern Nigeria reached the Diffa region of southern Niger, leading to the displacement of more than 250,000 people. However, even before 2015, Boko Haram had carried out some attacks in the region. In the wake of this crisis, people from across the border in Nigeria, and internally displaced people within Niger, sought refuge in Diffa town. What was, at first, an emergency slowly transitioned into a more permanent situation, and people have since made Diffa town their home.

Lumo doesn’t know how old she is, but she believes she was born during the ‘dark wind’ — a year sometime in the early 1960s famous for a dark wind that engulfed the region. When famine hit back in 2005, she left her native Niger to look for better life opportunities in neighbouring Nigeria. Ten years later, together with her brother Tambaia, she decided to come back to Niger and settle in Diffa town. Lumo and Tambaia are two of almost 15,000 returnees living in the Diffa region right now.

Haoua is the president of the Fulani community within the emergency site where Lumo lives. More than 20 years ago, when her village started facing water problems and animals started dying, Haoua decided to leave for Nigeria, as well. Then, the night her village in Nigeria got attacked by Boko Haram, she dropped everything and walked for five hours in search of safety. Once back in Niger, she found some of her relatives and other community members in Diffa. “There are people I never heard from again. I sometimes wonder if they are still alive,” she recounted. Together with her grandchildren, Haoua now lives in an emergency shelter in Diffa town.

When the crisis hit the Diffa region in 2015, immediate assistance was vital, and one of the obvious responses for humanitarian agencies was to provide emergency shelters for the displaced communities. As the crisis continued, people settled in and made Diffa their home. To cope with the new circumstances IOM, the UN Migration Agency, launched its first pilot site of transitional shelters this year. The new shelters are made out of locally produced bricks and aluminium, and have a life span of more than two years (as opposed to six months for the emergency shelters). The bricks were produced by the internally displaced people living on the site, under the guidance of a local freemason.

The Maina Kaderi site, in the commune of Chetimari in the Diffa region, is comprised of over 400 households — or roughly 3,000 people. Initially built as a site for emergency shelters, the site underwent a complete makeover in early 2018 when 400 transitional shelters were built from scratch. Thanks to the mayor of the Chetimari commune, every household now proudly owns a 200 square meter parcel of land on the Maina Kaideri site. Along with land and shelter, each household received a non-food item kit upon arrival.

Kinadi, her 11-year-old daughter Fanna and her seven-year-old granddaughter Aissa live in one of the new transitional shelters built by IOM. She had to leave her native Nigerien village Geidam Tchoukou in 2014, and look for shelter elsewhere. Following Boko Haram attacks and massive floods in the region, the authorities asked them to move as a preventive measure. However, not everyone in her family was keen on leaving. Her eldest child, Aissa’s mother, decided to stay back, but Kinadi feared for the children’s safety so she took her granddaughter along to Diffa.

During the initial profiling phase upon their arrival on the site, IOM staff determined the type of activity the residents could excel at, and would be interested in, through focus group discussions and surrounding-markets assessments. Following this evaluation process, site residents were allowed to choose from 38 types of activities currently in place on the site, ranging from livestock breeding to peanut oil extraction. These activities aim to meet the daily needs of their households and to turn them autonomous in this situation of prolonged crisis

In 2018, IOM provided over 17,000 people with materials to build shelters and other essential aid items. Their living conditions have improved since, but over 129,000 displaced people are still in need of assistance in the region, while over 170,000 people are at risk of displacement because of floods this rainy season.

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