BREAKING NEWS
Breaking

728x90

468x60

IDPs in Yobe allegedly eat wild plants to survivie

Hundreds of returnees in communities liberated from Boko Haram in Yobe state have resorted to eating a wild plant, coffee pod known locally as ‘Tafasa’ for survival.



Daily Trust gathered that the situation has affected returnee communities of Gujba, Goniri, Katarko, Ngirbua Kasaisa, Buni yadi, Gulani and part of Damaturu that largely depend on interventions from government and other donor agencies.

Musa Haruna, an IDP returnee in Buni yadi, revealed that the consumption of the coffee pod is on increase as several households depend on it for survival.

“Although there were interventions from government, donor agencies and international organizations, but the interventions were grossly inadequate” he said

A resident in Katarko, Mohammed Goni, told Daily Trust that the intake of the plant is making people to purge, saying “some people will cook the plant and eat it without any ingredient. This usually causes complication if too much is consumed because the plant is used as medicine to treat ailments like fever and body rashes. People cannot afford the oil and groundnut cake that turn it into delicacy,” he said

He said that the state government was supplying food through State Emergency Management Agency (SEMA) but it is ‘grossly inadequate’.



Source: Daily Trust
Click to signup for FREE news updates, latest information and hottest gists everyday


Advertise on NigerianEye.com to reach thousands of our daily users
« PREV
NEXT »

3 comments

  1. We did that during the Biafran war so it is no big deal 😊

    ReplyDelete
  2. The consequences of apc clueless wicked and incompetent government. Ordinary food aid they cannot organise. Few people just divert the whole materials. Change dole!

    ReplyDelete
  3. By their comments u shall know them. Rubbish

    ReplyDelete

Kindly drop a comment below.
(Comments are moderated. Clean comments will be approved immediately)

Advert Enquires - Reach out to us at NigerianEye@gmail.com