Twenty countries contain areas that could
soon experience famine in the coming
months without urgent and scaled-up
assistance, a report has said.
The places prone to imminent and famine are
Yemen, South Sudan and Northern Nigeria,
UN food agencies have said.
According to the joint report by the Food and
Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations
(FAO), and the United Nations World Food
Programme (WFP) “Hunger hotspots FAO-
WFP early warnings on acute food insecurity
March to July 2021 outlook” published on
Tuesday, “acute hunger is set to soar in over
20 countries in the coming months without
urgent and scaled-up assistance.”
According to the report, people in Yemen,
South Sudan and Northern Nigeria remain
most at risk of rising and dangerously high
acute food insecurity.
“In Burkina Faso, food security has slightly
improved since last October, but the situation
is still very concerning.
“Some 2.7 million Burkina Faso are projected
to face high acute food insecurity between
June and August 2021, a sharp increase
from 700,000 in 2019 before violence
escalated in the west Africa nation,” it said.
In Yemen, continued violence and economic
decline as well as severe disruption to the
humanitarian response are likely to persist
over the coming months.
“Over 16 million Yemenis are expected to
face high levels of acute food insecurity by
June 2021, an increase of some 3 million
since the end of last year,” the report said.
According to the report, in conflict-hit
northern Nigeria, projections for the June –
August lean season show that the number of
people in the emergency level of acute food
insecurity is likely to almost double to over
1.2 million, since the same period last year.
“In the next six months, food and nutrition
insecurity is set to rise considerably in
northern Nigeria with some 13 million people
affected unless food and livelihood
assistance is scaled up,” it said.
Already, over 34 million people are grappling
with emergency levels of acute hunger (IPC4)
meaning they are one step away from
starvation across the world.
Other countries identified by the report as
amongst the worst hunger hotspots where
life-threatening hunger is on the rise are
Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Ethiopia, Haiti, The Sudan and Syria
Arab Republic.
In the report, the FAO director-general, QU
Dongyu said “The magnitude of suffering is
alarming.
“It is incumbent upon all of us to act now
and to act fast to save lives, safeguard
livelihoods and prevent the worst situation,”
he warned.
“In many regions, the planting season has
just started or is about to start.
“We must run against the clock and not let
this opportunity to protect, stabilise and even
possibly increase local food production slip
away,” Mr Dongyu urged.
“We are seeing a catastrophe unfold before
our very eyes. Famine driven by conflict and
fuelled by climate shocks and the COVID 19
hunger pandemic is knocking on the door for
millions of families,” the executive director of
WFP, David Beasley said in the report.
Source:- Premium Times