MSF says "a catastrophic humanitarian emergency" is unfolding
at a camp in Bama, where 24,000 people have taken refuge.
Nearly 200 refugees
who fled Boko Haram attacks have died of starvation and dehydration in the
northeastern Nigerian city of Bama in the past month, Doctors without Borders
said on Wednesday.
The refugees
"speak of children dying of hunger and digging new graves every day",
according to a statement from the global medical charity group, also known by
its French acronym MSF.

The doctors referred 16 emaciated children at risk
of dying to their special feeding centre in Maiduguri. One in five of the
15,000 children are suffering severe acute malnutrition, the group found.
"We see the trauma on the faces of our
patients who have witnessed and survived many horrors," said Ghada Hatim,
head of the Doctors without Borders mission in Nigeria.
Her team reached Bama on Tuesday following a
military convoy from Maiduguri, the Borno state capital that is the
headquarters of Nigeria's military campaign.
Though Bama is just 70km southeast of Maiduguri,
ongoing clashes between the rebels and government troops make travel unsafe and
farmers have not planted crops for 18 months, Dr Christopher Mampula of MSF
explained by telephone from Paris.
Boko Haram fighters routinely burn down homes and
destroy wells, leaving few water sources in an area where temperatures often
soar above 40 degrees.
The armed group seized Bama in September 2014 and
Nigerian troops recaptured it in March 2015.
Nigeria's military has greatly curtailed the
seven-year-old armed rebellion that has killed some 20,000 people, but fighters
still attack villages and deploy suicide bombers.
Boko Haram has also staged attacks across Nigeria's
borders in Chad, Niger and Cameroon.
The refugees in Bama are among 1.8 million
Nigerians forced from their homes and living inside the country, with another
155,000 in neighboring countries, according to the UN.
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