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Check Out the Safest Place to Live in Nigeria According to UN

Posted by Thandiubani on Fri 13th May, 2016 - tori.ng

The United Nations in its latest National Human Development Report for Nigeria, 2016 has named the safest region in Nigeria.

Internally displaced woman in Nigeria's Maiduguri. Sheltered at Dolari I IDP Camp (Photo, UNDP Nigeria/Lucky Musonda)
 
The United Nations Development Programme today, announced the most human security secure geopolitical zone in Nigeria.
 
According to its National Human Development Report for Nigeria, 2016, the South-East is the safest place to live in Nigeria. 
 
"Insecurity remains an ever-present threat to peace and development of the country … and, without a doubt, poses great danger and exacerbates an already fragile economic development landscape as the country grapples with the reality of shifting from over-reliance on oil and gas sector to other sectors,” stated Fatma Samoura, UNDP Nigeria Resident Representative at the launch of the 2016 National Human Development Report in Abuja earlier today.
 
The report under the theme “Human Security and Human Development” makes a compelling case that unchecked poverty; persistent hunger; uncontrolled diseases; lack of access to basic services; disregard for human rights; sub-optimal response to natural and man-made disasters; unregulated natural resources exploitation and use – among others, pose serious threats to human development today.
 
The report further highlights the existing gap in human security across the geo-political zones of the country; - the most human security secure geo-political zone is the South-East while the North-West and the North-East geopolitical zones are the least human security secured, with residents of the Federal Capital Territory being the worst in most realms of the Human Security Index. The North-East region of the country has been the most affected by the more than 5 yearlong military insurgency. It also remains among the least developed parts of the country.
 
The report further states "Despite a robust economic growth of about seven percent between 2010 and 2014, a large proportion of Nigerians still live in poverty and are exposed to various vulnerabilities. An estimated 61.3 percent of Nigerians are classified as poor with 48.8 percent of them classified as multi-dimensionally poor"


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