Following a trip to Maiduguri at the center of the Boko Haram insurgency this week, USAID’s Office for
 Foreign Disaster Assistance Director Jeremy Konyndyk announced $37 
million in new funding to support additional humanitarian assistance for
 people affected by the conflict and severe food insecurity in Nigeria 
and throughout the Lake Chad Basin. 
At a press conference Wednesday, August 10, at the Nigerian Emergency Management 
Agency, Konyndyk said the funding for assistance implemented by 
international NGOs and UN agencies brings the total USAID humanitarian 
support for the region to $318 million since last year.  The United 
States is the single largest humanitarian donor to the region. 
 
"The United States is committed to supporting Nigeria to ease this 
humanitarian crisis,” Konyndyk said, and help sustain this vulnerable 
population until they can resume livelihoods upended by conflict.
 Despite gradually improving security conditions, the humanitarian 
situation remains dire. Throughout the region, approximately 5 million 
people need emergency food assistance and 2.5 million people are 
displaced. 
 "These issues are enormous," Muhammad Sani Sidi, 
director general of the Nigeria Emergency Management Agency said, but 
added we are working toward a "full recovery," including job skills 
training for the displaced.
 

 
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