Arab Times

‘Warming driving alarming hunger levels’

Climate change activists defy police ban

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LONDON, Oct 15, (RTRS): Central African Republic topped an annual world hunger index on Tuesday as aid agencies warned that climate change was making it increasing­ly hard to feed the world.

Aid agency Concern Worldwide, which co-compiles the Global Hunger Index, said progress towards a 2030 zero hunger target agreed by world leaders was “under threat or is being reversed”.

Hunger levels in CAR, driven by violence since 2013, are “extremely alarming”, while levels in Chad, Madagascar, Yemen, and Zambia are “alarming”, according to the index released on the eve of World Food Day.

Another 43 of the 117 countries ranked in the index had “serious” hunger levels.

Declining poverty and increased funding for nutrition initiative­s have helped reduce global hunger since 2000, but there was still a long way to go, the report said.

Nine countries of concern had higher scores than in 2010 – CAR, Madagascar, Venezuela, Yemen, Jordan, Malaysia, Mauritania, Lebanon and Oman.

Concern CEO Dominic MacSorley said about 45 countries were unlikely to achieve low levels of hunger by 2030.

“Conflict, inequality, and the effects of climate change have all contribute­d to persistent­ly high levels of hunger and food insecurity around the world,” he said.

Worldwide, the number of undernouri­shed people – those who lack regular access to adequate calories – rose to 822 million last year from 785 million in 2015, with the greatest increase in sub-Saharan countries affected by conflict and drought.

Former Irish president Mary Robinson said the figures showed that the 2030 global developmen­t goals agreed in 2015 and the Paris climate agreement could no longer be seen as voluntary. Implemente­d Both must be fully implemente­d “in order to secure a livable world for our children and grandchild­ren”, she said in a foreword to the report.

“This requires a change of mindset at the global political level.”

LONDON:

Also:

Climate change activists, including one of the founders of Extinction Rebellion, defied a police order to end protests on Tuesday after a week of disruption in London, targeting Britain’s transport ministry and security agency MI5.

Gail Bradbrook, one of the founders of the group that is half way through two weeks of actions around the world, climbed onto the top of the entrance of the transport ministry to protest at a high-speed rail project known as HS2.

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