Hunger in Africa surges due to conflict, climate and food prices
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[April 05, 2022]
By Ayenat Mersie
NAIROBI (Reuters) - Conflict, climate
change and rising food and fuel prices are pushing about a quarter of
Africans towards hunger, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
said on Tuesday.
About 346 million people in Africa are facing severe food insecurity,
meaning they have likely experienced hunger, in the worst crisis since
2017. Last year, the figure was about 286 million.
"The acute food insecurity situation in many of the countries where we
are working - and people are already affected by armed conflict - is
tipping into famine-like conditions," said Dominik Stillhart, ICRC's
global operations director.
Two years of conflict in northern Ethiopia's Tigray region has left
millions facing famine-like conditions and created a hunger crisis in
neighbouring regions.
Insurgencies in Burkina Faso, Mali, Niger, and Nigeria have also
deepened food insecurity in West Africa which now faces its worst food
crisis on record.
Many of countries dealing with conflict are also among the most severely
affected by climate change, including South Sudan and Somalia said
Stillhart.
About 90% of Somalia is currently
affected by drought, said Stillhart. If this year's rains do not
materialise, 1.4 million children under five will be acutely
malnourished, the United Nations World Food Programme has said.
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A woman carries an infant as she queues in line for food, at the
Tsehaye primary school, which was turned into a temporary shelter
for people displaced by conflict, in the town of Shire, Tigray
region, Ethiopia, March 15, 2021. REUTERS/Baz Ratner/File Photo
In February alone, drought killed 650,000 livestock, devastating the
scores of Somalis for whom the animals represented income, safety
nets and savings.
Meanwhile, global food and fuel prices are sky-rocketing, in part
because of the war in Ukraine, Stillhart said.
Prices for wheat, of which Russia and Ukraine are both leading
producers, have retreated from all-time highs hit last month but
remain 70% higher than April 2021. Corn and oil prices have also
surged.
"Our call today really is that the attention on the plight of the
people of the people in Ukraine - which is of course terrible -
should not prevent the world from looking at other crises," said
Stillhart.
(Reporting by Ayenat Mersie; Editing by Aaron Ross and Chizu
Nomiyama)
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