500,000 more children uprooted by Boko Haram: UNICEF

A picture taken on September 16, 2015 shows children standing in the Assaga refugee camp, set up by the UN three months ago for Nigerian refugees who fled to southeast Niger to escape the Islamist group Boko Haram. AFP Photo

Some 500,000 children have been forced to flee Boko Haram militants in the last five months after an upsurge in attacks in Nigeria, Cameroon, Chad and Niger, the UN children's agency said on Sept.18.

The additional numbers of children made homeless has taken the total number of youngsters in the Lake Chad region who have been forced to flee to 1.4 million, UNICEF said in a statement.
 
Nigeria was worst affected, with nearly 1.2 million children -- more than half of them under five -- uprooted by the Islamist insurgency, which is concentrated in the country's remote northeast.
 
Some 265,000 other children have been affected in neighbouring Cameroon, Chad and Niger, which Boko Haram has increasingly targeted after they joined Nigeria's military in a regional counter-offensive.
 
"Each of these children running for their lives is a childhood cut short," said UNICEF's regional director for West and Central Africa, Manuel Fontaine.
 
"It's truly alarming to see that children and women continue to be killed, abducted and used to carry bombs."  
Boko Haram has been fighting to establish a hardline Islamic state in northeast Nigeria since 2009.    

At least 15,000 people have been killed since then, some 1,100 of them in a wave of suicide bombings, deadly raids and bomb attacks since Muhammadu Buhari became Nigerian president on May 29.
 
Buhari has said he is confident "conventional" attacks will be stopped by November, although suicide and homemade bomb attacks could continue.
         
Earlier this month, the International Organization for Migration revised upwards its estimate of those internally displaced by the conflict from 1.5 million to more than 2.1 million because of the recent...

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