NARD sounds alarm as malnutrition wipes out Nigeria’s next generation, and sadly, it is not an exaggeration. When over a third of children under five are stunted, weak, or dying because they cannot eat properly, the future of the country itself is being buried alive.
The numbers are shameful
More than 35% of Nigerian children under five are malnourished. That means millions of children will never grow to their full height, their brains will not fully develop, and many will never see adulthood. This is not just about hunger, it is about an entire generation being denied the right to live and think like their peers across the world.
Leaders keep talking, children keep dying
Every year, government officials stand at podiums and call the crisis “a national emergency.” Vice President Kashim Shettima said it again in July. The Special Assistant to the President on Public Health reminded us that Nigeria loses over $1.5 billion every year to malnutrition. But children do not eat speeches, and promises do not fill their stomachs.
Doctors are carrying the weight
Resident doctors are the ones sounding the alarm, and they are also the ones trying to keep children alive. From handing out therapeutic food to running community-based care, NARD members are on the frontlines. But even their efforts cannot stop the rising death toll. Just a few months ago, Doctors Without Borders reported that 600 children died from malnutrition in northern Nigeria in only six months. If 600 children can die so quietly, how many more go uncounted?
Foreign aid is drying up, and Nigeria is exposed
This crisis is not only about poverty, it is about failure to plan. Reduced foreign aid, inflation that makes food unaffordable, and conflict in farming communities have left families stranded. Nigeria cannot keep depending on outsiders to feed its children. The country must face the truth: no nation develops while its young ones are too weak to stand, too sick to learn, and too malnourished to dream.
A dying future in plain sight
The harsh truth is simple, malnutrition is wiping out Nigeria’s next generation before our eyes. Every malnourished child is a lost potential doctor, teacher, engineer, or leader. This is not just a health problem. It is a political, economic, and moral collapse. And unless leaders move beyond words into real action, the future of Nigeria may already be lost.