Arab News

1.25 million face starvation in war-torn South Sudan

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JUBA: In war-torn South Sudan, 1.25 million people are facing starvation, double the number from the same time last year, according to a report by the UN and the government released on Monday.

This country could once again plunge into famine in 2018, warn humanitari­ans and the government.

“The widespread and extreme food consumptio­n gaps ... should make us all extremely concerned about the worst case scenario of famine in many locations across South Sudan in 2018,” said Katie Rickard, country coordinato­r for REACH, a humanitari­an research initiative that provided data for the report.

Humanitari­ans blame the worsening situation on South Sudan’s continuing conflict, which is nearing its fifth year and has killed more than 50,000 people.

In February, the world’s youngest nation declared famine in two counties in Unity State, the world’s first formal famine declaratio­n since Somalia in 2011.

In South Sudan’s two counties, 100,000 people were on the brink of starvation but thanks to early detection and a rapid response catastroph­e was avoided, said the World Food Program.

However, the latest food and security analysis update by the UN and South Sudan’s National Bureau of Statistics is grim.

As of September, 6 million people — 56 percent of the population — were experienci­ng severe hunger with 25,000 South Sudanese in humanitari­an catastroph­e in Ayod and Greater Baggari counties.

South Sudan’s widening war has made food production impossible and delivery of aid dangerous and difficult. Both Ayod and Baggari are rebel-held areas and locals say the situation in the two counties is dire.

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