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		U.N. warns one million people could be 
		hungry by March due to Ebola 
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		[December 18, 2014] 
		By Chris Arsenault 
		ROME (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Half a 
		million people in three West African nations rocked by Ebola are going 
		hungry and that number could double by March if food supplies do not 
		improve, two United Nations agencies warned on Wednesday. | 
        
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			 In Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, the countries at the heart of 
			the worst recorded outbreak of Ebola, workers have been staying away 
			from markets and fields for fear of spreading the virus that has 
			killed more than 6,800 people since March. 
 This fear has caused labor shortages on farms for planting and 
			weeding and cut household incomes, compounding an economic slowdown 
			in these three countries.
 
 Border closures and quarantines are disrupting supply chains, 
			hindering market access and exacerbating shortages, raising fears 
			that one million people from a combined population of 20 million 
			could be going hungry by March.
 
 "The outbreak has revealed the vulnerability of current food 
			production systems and value chains in the worst Ebola-affected 
			countries," Bukar Tijani, the Food and Agriculture Organisation's (FAO) 
			representative for Africa said in a statement.
 
			
			 
			The FAO said more food needs to be imported into these countries 
			which are facing a financial crunch because exports have dropped and 
			recommended cash transfers or vouchers for affected people to buy 
			food and help stimulate markets.
 Denise Brown, a relief coordinator for the World Food Programme, 
			said the situation regarding food supplies could get worse before 
			improvements are seen from international efforts.
 
 In Guinea, 230,000 people are estimated to be facing sever food 
			shortages because of the impact of Ebola. By March 2015, the number 
			is expected to rise to more than 470,000.
 
			
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			Nearly 300,000 Liberians are expected to face severe food problems 
			by March, up from 170,000 today.
 The drop in absolute food production across the three states in 2014 
			compared to the previous year has been relatively modest with an 8 
			percent drop in Liberia, 3 percent in Guinea and 5 percent fall in 
			Sierra Leone.
 
 The World Food Programme has provided aid to more than two million 
			people in these three countries and UN agencies have asked for more 
			funding from donors for 2015.
 
 (Reporting By Chris Arsenault, Editing by Belinda Goldsmith)
 
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