Oman Daily Observer

Prolonged conflicts and drought push ‘unpreceden­ted’ 81 million into food aid

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ROME: Prolonged conflicts and droughts have left an unpreceden­ted 81 million people needing food aid in 2017, a specialist US-based agency said on Wednesday, revising up its earlier estimates.

People in 45 countries are unable to feed themselves, said the Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET), which issues alarms about food shortages to the US government.

Furthermor­e, it said there is still a risk of famine looming over Somalia, Yemen, Nigeria, and South Sudan, despite the internatio­nal community committing about $2.2 billion to address the various crises since January.

“Additional contributi­ons to emergency appeals, particular­ly in these four countries, are urgently needed to prevent large-scale loss of life,” FEWS NET said in a statement.

The United Nations says it has so far received only a quarter of the $23.5 billion needed for humanitari­an assistance programmes worldwide this year. 45 COUNTRIES ARE UNABLE TO FEED THEMSELVES,

“However, famine risk will not fully recede until substantiv­e efforts are made to resolve ongoing conflict and improve access,” FEWS NET added.

The agency said it had increased the number of people it expects to need emergency food aid over the course of 2017.

Its estimate rose to 81 million from the 70 million it predicted in January, due to a series of factors, including below average rainfall in the Horn of Africa. The new estimate was up 20 per cent on last year and 70 per cent on 2015, it said.

Other causes included access to new data, continuing wars and outbreaks of cholera in Somalia, Yemen and South Sudan.

Separately on Wednesday, the head of the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) said the situation in the three countries was “rapidly escalating downwards and out of control”.

“Without treatment for malnutriti­on, more people will fall ill. And a child who survives cholera will be even further malnourish­ed,” IFRC Secretary-General Elhadj As Sy said in a statement. “It is the most vicious of vicious spirals,” he added.

Earlier, a UN-backed report said conflict-ridden South Sudan was no longer classified as being in famine although the situation remained critical.

In Yemen, war has killed more than 10,000 people, displaced more than 3 million others and ruined much of the impoverish­ed country’s infrastruc­ture, pushing nearly half its provinces on the verge of famine, according to the UN.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Belgian soldiers stand guard in central station in Brussels.
— Reuters Belgian soldiers stand guard in central station in Brussels.

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