"What is already a crisis can become a catastrophe," UNICEF executive director Anthony Lake said yesterday.
His statement said the 400,000 children at risk of starvation represent just a fraction of the suffering among some 2.6 million refugees in the seven-year insurgency that has killed more than 20,000 people.
"If they do not receive the treatment they need, one in five of these children will die," Lake said.
He spoke just days after Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari accused the U.N. And private international aid agencies of exaggerating the crisis to seek donations. Buhari declared that Boko Haram was "technically defeated" a year ago and appears fixed on maintaining that fiction.
While soldiers from a multinational force of Nigeria and neighboring countries have pushed the extremists out of towns and many villages they occupied, attacks on military outposts and suicide bombings of soft targets continue.
Nigeria's Senate is investigating allegations that government agencies are diverting food aid that could help prevent those deaths.
Buhari was elected in March 2015 on a platform that pledged to finish off Boko Haram and halt endemic corruption.
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