Food
security body IPC warns of famine in South Sudan
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[October 22, 2015]
By Tom Miles
GENEVA (Reuters) - South Sudan faces a
serious risk of famine by the end of this year and 30,000 people are
already classified as being in a food security catastrophe, the
Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said on Thursday.
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Hunger in the world's newest state has grown steadily worse in the
nearly two years since a political crisis led to fighting that
reopened ethnic fault lines between President Salva Kiir's Dinka
people and ethnic Nuer forces loyal to former Vice President Riek
Machar.
The two have signed a series of peace deals but fighting rages on.
The IPC, whose members include the U.N. Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) and the World Food Programme (WFP), said famine
had not been officially declared because it was hard to get data
from conflict zones.
"There is a great concern that famine may exist in the coming months
but it may not be possible to validate it at that time due to lack
of evidence as the result of limited access to the affected areas
and populations," it said.
Humanitarian groups have been forced to pull out of parts of
oil-rich Unity State, one of the worst-hit areas, and they say
displaced families are surviving on just one meal a day. In extreme
cases, people fleeing violence survive by eating water lilies.
This marks the first time since the conflict erupted that the ICP
has identified that some in South Sudan have reached the fifth phase
- catastrophic food insecurity - on its five-point scale.
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"This is the start of the harvest and we should be seeing a
significant improvement in the food security situation across the
country," said WFP Country Director Joyce Luma.
"Unfortunately this is not the case in places like southern Unity
State, where people are on the edge of a catastrophe that can be
prevented," Luma said.
(Additional reporting and writing by Edith Honan in Nairobi; Editing
by Angus MacSwan)
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