Arab News

Famine ‘not fake news’: WFP head laments media’s Trump focus

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GENEVA: The former South Carolina governor who now heads the UN’s World Food Program (WFP) said the media’s focus on President Donald Trump is taking away attention from the risk of famine in Africa and the Middle East.

“This is not fake news, this is reality,” said WFP General David Beasley.

Beasley, a Republican whose March appointmen­t was supported by the Trump administra­tion, spoke to reporters Monday after his organizati­on and the UN refugee agency updated an appeal for $ 1.4 bil- Director- lion to help refugees fleeing South Sudan.

Beasley cited a need to “rise above all the confusion,” particular­ly in “high- donor states” like the US.

“I mean literally if you turn on ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, CNN — it is nothing but Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump!” he said, referring to US TV networks. “And very little informatio­n about the famines in Syria, northeast Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, Yemen.”

“We have got to break through all of the smoke,” he said. “This is not fake news, this is reality.”

The UN says roughly 20 million people in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen are facing possible famine.

“We are making an appeal today for the donors to step up to the game even more,” Beasley said, warning about access diffi- culties likely in the upcoming rainy season in South Sudan, amid already- difficult access caused by violence in the world’s newest country.

He said that before agreeing to take the job, he had canvassed Congressio­nal leaders to gauge their commitment to WFP, and found it “tremendous.”

But he also alluded to speculatio­n about future US funding. The Trump administra­tion has proposed cuts for UN programs as part of its plan to reduce the State Department’s budget by roughly one- third.

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