Metro

Acute food insecurity to worsen in Nigeria, 17 other countries — UN

Acute food insecurity is expected to worsen significantly in 18 hunger “hotspots,” including Nigeria, according to a recent United Nations report.

The report highlights an urgent need for assistance to prevent famine in Gaza and Sudan, and to address worsening hunger crises in Haiti, Mali, and South Sudan.

The report emphasises the ongoing effects of El Niño and the impending risk of La Niña, which could trigger extreme climate events that disrupt lives and livelihoods. It states:

“Since the previous edition of the Hunger Hotspots report (October 2023), the Central African Republic, Lebanon, Mozambique, Myanmar, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, and Zambia have joined Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Malawi, Somalia, and Zimbabwe in the list of hunger hotspots, where acute food insecurity is likely to deteriorate further during the outlook period.”

Numerous hotspots are grappling with escalating hunger crises due to the compounded effects of conflict, climate extremes, and economic shocks, which are pushing vulnerable households into deeper food crises.

The report also warns that 2023 could be the first year since 2010 to see a decrease in humanitarian funding compared to the previous year, despite it being the second-highest level of funding ever for humanitarian assistance.

FAO Director-General QU Dongyu stated: “The daunting prospects highlighted in this report should serve as a wake-up call to all of us. We need to spearhead the shift from responding to crises after they occur to more proactive anticipatory approaches, prevention, and resilience building to help vulnerable communities cope with upcoming shocks.

“Acting ahead of crises can save lives, reduce food shortages, and protect livelihoods at a much lower cost than a not timely humanitarian response.”

WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain added: “Once a famine is declared, it is too late; many people will have already starved to death. In Somalia in 2011, half of a quarter of a million people who died of hunger perished before famine was officially declared.

“The world failed to heed the warnings at the time, and the repercussions were catastrophic. We must learn the lesson and act now to stop these hotspots from igniting a firestorm of hunger.

“We have proven solutions to stop these crises in their tracks, but we need the resources and the political will to implement them at scale before more lives are lost.”

The report further notes that the ongoing conflict in Palestine is likely to exacerbate the already severe levels of acute hunger, with starvation and death occurring alongside an unprecedented death toll, widespread destruction, and the displacement of nearly the entire population of the Gaza Strip.

ALSO READ THESE TOP STORIES FROM NIGERIAN TRIBUNE 

 

Sandra Nwaokolo

Recent Posts

Why I want INEC to probe Tinubu’s minister— Reps member

"I kept quiet because, at that point, I believed that I won the election and…

31 minutes ago

Scrapping foreign scholarships in order — ASUU

THE Academic Staff Union of Universities (ASUU) has lauded the Federal Government for scrapping foreign…

45 minutes ago

Over 70 per cent of consumers switched brands in 2024 — Expert

  • Says Brands must know their customers to enhance loyalty A marketing communications practitioner,…

1 hour ago

$700m CVFF: Indigenous shipowners scramble for mergers over 15 per cent equity

NIGERIAN shipowners are currently in a state of confusion over possible mergers and collaboration following…

1 hour ago

Despite N700bn revenue boost in 2024, consumers groan under power supply, metering, charges burdens

• 11 Discos received 203,116 complaints in H2, 2020 • Members spent N1.11trn on alternative…

2 hours ago

Telecoms, banks, mobility brands demonstrate resilience, top media performance charts in Q1, 2025 — Report

The nation’s commercial banking, ride-hailing, and telecommunications sectors dominated the list of brands that demonstrated…

2 hours ago

Welcome

Install

This website uses cookies.