Arab News

Mideast conflicts leave millions unsure of next meal: UN

-

CAIRO: The devastatin­g conflicts gripping the Middle East and North Africa have left 30 million people unsure of their next meal, the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on said.

“Food security and nutrition levels in the Near East and North Africa have sharply deteriorat­ed over the last five years,” the agency said in a report released Monday.

“The prevalence of severe food insecurity in the adult population... was close to 9.5 percent in 2014-2015, representi­ng approximat­ely 30 million people,” it said.

“Countries such as Iraq, Sudan, Syria and Yemen have rates that are among the highest in the world, reflecting the devastatin­g impacts of the ongoing conflicts on their food security and nutrition situation.”

FAO Assistant Director General and Regional Representa­tive Abdessalam Ould Ahmed said that conflict was hampering efforts to cope with the severe water shortages affecting agricultur­e in many countries in the region.

“A peaceful and stable environmen­t is an absolute preconditi­on for farmers to respond to the challenges of water scarcity and climate change,” he said.

Yemen, which is the Arab world’s poorest nation and has seriously depleted its undergroun­d water sources, has seen food security deteriorat­e dramatical­ly since its civil war escalated two years ago.

A third of its 22 provinces are on the brink of famine, the UN World Food Programme warned on Friday, adding that 60 percent of its population of 17 million was going hungry.

The FAO said that the six-yearold civil war in Syria was also having a devastatin­g effect on access to food for civilians.

“The Syria crisis in particular has deepened during the period 2015-2016, leaving more than half of the population in need of food assistance,” it said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia