Skip to main content
Home International Committee of the Red Cross
Find help Donate
Back
  • Happening now
    Happening now

    Discover what’s new

    Stay updated with the latest news and ongoing initiatives of the ICRC.

    Latest operations

    Featured

    • A community kitchen in Myanmar
      Myanmar: One month on, earthquake survivors face continuing challenges
    • Red Cross Field Hospital aerial shot
      The Red Cross Field Hospital one year on: A lifeline and a stark reminder in Ga…
    • Red Cross staff at a water distribution
      Every attack on a humanitarian is an attack on the community they served. A sta…
  • Who we are
    Who we are

    We are the International Committee of the Red Cross

    Neutral, impartial, and independent. Discover our values and mission.

    Discover who we are
    • About us
      Our rich history, our mandate and mission, and our Fundamental Principles are behind the work we do to protect and save lives.
    • How we are run
      Our President and leadership, our finances and our accountability ensure the integrity of our humanitarian operations.
    • International Red Cross & Red Crescent Movement
      The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement is the largest humanitarian network in the world.
  • What we do
    What we do

    Our work to protect people affected by conflict

    The ICRC responds quickly and efficiently to help people affected by armed conflict.

    All our activities

    In focus

    • ICRC working with the Myanmar Red Cross Society to support people displaced by violence in Pin Laung and Hsi Hseng, to provide emergency aid. Photographer: Thang Khan Sian Khai
      Protection: Upholding the rights of people in conflict
    • Reconnecting families: Preventing separation, searching for the missing, reunit…
    • Helping detainees: Protecting and assisting people deprived of their liberty
  • Where we work
    Where we work

    Explore our global reach

    We have offices in over 90 countries around the world, providing assistance and protection to people affected by conflict.

    ICRC around the world

    Key operations

    • Democratic Republic of the Congo
    • Ethiopia
    • Israel and the occupied territories
    • Lebanon
    • Myanmar
    • Sudan
    • Syria
    • Ukraine
    • Yemen
  • Law & Policy
    Law & Policy

    Law & Policy

    Gain insights into the ICRC's role in developing and promoting international humanitarian law and policy.

    Discover more
    • Geneva Conventions and the law
      Even wars have rules. The Geneva Conventions are at the core of international humanitarian law.
    • Topics, debates and disarmament
      Weapons and disarmament, protected persons and other contemporary challenges for international humanitarian law.
    • Teaching IHL, research, Advisory Service and other resources
      We support the teaching, learning and implementation of humanitarian law principles.
  • Support us
    Support us

    Partner with us

    We invite organizations, institutions and philanthropists to join us in our mission to alleviate the suffering of those affected by armed conflict.

    How to partner with us

    Support us

    Find out how you as an individual can contribute to our humanitarian efforts to help people suffering because of armed conflict.

    How to support us
    • Ukraine: the crisis continues
    • Urgent: Israel-Gaza emergency appeal
    • Myanmar_Red Cross earthquake
      Urgent help needed: Myanmar earthquakes
  • Find help
  • Donate
  • Events
  • Contact us
  • Report an incident of misconduct
  • Work with us
  • FAQ
ICRC Websites
Photo gallery
21-09-2016

Critical food shortage for those fleeing conflict in North East Nigeria

  • Lake Chad
  • Chad
  • Nigeria

Share

  • Share on X
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Facebook
Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

A family, displaced from their village in Mafa, arrive at the outskirts of Maiduguri. With little food or water, most of those displaced walk for more than three days to reach Maiduguri.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Newly arrived IDPs sit amid their belongings and try and protect themselves as a dust storm rips through Maiduguri.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Young children receive food from ICRC staff on the outskirts of Maiduguri. Along with over 450 others that day, the children arrived after being forced to flee their homes. According to the UN, there are 15 million civilians directly affected by the violence in North East Nigeria of whom 7 million people in need of assistance, including 2.4 million IDPs – more than 50 per cent of whom are children.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Halima cradles her son Aboubacar in the State Specialist Hospital in Maiduguri. Aboubacar was diagnosed with chronic diarrhea, severe malnutrition, bronchopneumonia, and malaria. Despite receiving emergency treatment, Aboubacar's condition has not been improving.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Aboubacar comforts his 11-year-old daughter Houwa in the State Specialist Hospital in Maiduguri. Houwa is suffering from malnutrition.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Yunus is weighed at the State Specialist Hospital in Maiduguri. Both he and his sister, Houwa, are suffering from malnutrition but their conditions are slowly improving after receiving medical attention.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Ayshe, a young woman displaced from her home in Dikwa, stands in Muna IDP informal camp on the edge of Maiduguri.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Displaced women wait beside stacks of food being distributed by the ICRC in Muna IDP informal camp on the outskirts of Maiduguri.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Fathers with sick children talk to an ICRC staff member in Muna IDP informal camp on the edge of Maiduguri.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

A mother who has just arrived at Maiduguri after fleeing her home feeds her child.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Hospital staff tend to Houwa and Yunus, two children suffering from malnutrition, at the State Specialist Hospital in Maiduguri.

Mackenzie Knowles-Coursin / ICRC

Men fill in the grave of a young child after burying him at the edge of Maiduguri. The one-year-old child and had been sick for one week.

More than 2.4 million people have fled their homes due to the conflict in North East Nigeria.

The humanitarian situation is further deteriorating as many displaced are located in hard-to-reach areas, with limited or no access to humanitarian assistance. Other internally displaced people are hosted by low-income communities, bringing already stretched services and resources under renewed pressure. The situation of the most vulnerable, such as children, women and the elderly is of particular concern.

Most who have abandoned their homes leave everything behind, and lack many of the very basic necessities. In some places, children are dying of malnutrition and other diseases. The situation also remains complex, as some have been displaced for a very long time, while others have had to flee on multiple occasions. Generally, it is the recent arrivals to the camps who are also in the most dire need of humanitarian assistance. 

Related articles

Photo gallery
09-04-2025

Tool on African Traditions and the Preservation of Humanity in Warfare

Des équipes chirurgicales débordées
Photo gallery
17-03-2025

DRC: Goma surgical teams overwhelmed

Celebrating 75 years of the Geneva Conventions
Photo gallery
12-03-2025

The ICRC in Bangladesh: 2024 in images

More photo galleries

Topic-dedicated ICRC websites

Explore our blogs, apps, reviews and other resources dedicated to humanitarian impact, insight, law and policy.

ICRC Websites

Direct access

  • Find help
  • Donate
  • Events
  • Contact us
  • Report an incident of misconduct
  • Work with us
  • FAQ

Newsletter

Fields marked with * are required
To learn how we process your data, visit our Privacy Notice.
  • Accessibility
  • Copyright
  • Privacy policy
  • Tax deduction
  • Privacy Settings
  • Community guidelines

Terms and conditions - ICRC ©2025 - All right reserved