The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Worst humanitari­an crisis hits as Trump slashes aid

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NAIROBI. — The world’s largest humanitari­an crisis in 70 years has been declared in three African countries on the brink of famine, just as President Donald Trump’s proposed foreign aid cuts threaten to pull the United States from its historic role as the world’s top emergency donor.

If the deep cuts are approved by Congress and the US does not contribute to Africa’s current crisis, experts warn that the continent’s growing drought and famine could have far-ranging effects, including a new wave of migrants heading to Europe and possibly more support for Islamic extremist groups.

The conflict-fuelled hunger crises in Nigeria, Somalia and South Sudan have culminated in a trio of potential famines hitting almost simultaneo­usly.

Nearly 16 million people in the three countries are at risk of dying within months.

Famine already has been declared in two counties of South Sudan and one million people there are on the brink of dying from a lack of food, UN officials have said.

Somalia has declared a state of emergency over drought and 2,9 million of its people face a food crisis that could become a famine, according to the UN.

And in north-eastern Nigeria, severe malnutriti­on is widespread in areas affected by violence from Boko Haram extremists.

“We are facing the largest humanitari­an crisis since the creation of the United Nations,” Stephen O’Brien, the UN humanitari­an chief told the UN Security Council after a visit this month to Somalia and South Sudan.

At least $4,4 billion is needed by the end of March to avert a hunger “catastroph­e” in Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said in late February.

But according to UN data, only 10 percent of the necessary funds have been received so far. Trump’s proposed budget would “absolutely” cut programmes that help some of the most vulnerable people on Earth, Mick Mulvaney, the president’s budget director, told reporters last week.

“The budget would “spend less money on people overseas and more money on people back home,” he said.

The United States traditiona­lly has been the largest donor to the UN and gives more foreign aid to Africa than any other continent. In 2016, it gave more than $2 billion to the UN’s World Food Programme, or almost a quarter of its total budget.

That is expected to be reduced under Trump’s proposed budget, according to former and current US government officials.

“I’ve never seen this kind of threat to what otherwise has been a bipartisan consensus that food aid and humanitari­an assistance programmes are morally essential and critical to our security,” Steven Feldstein, a former deputy assistant secretary of state in the Obama administra­tion, told The Associated Press.

Any cuts at this time are extremely significan­t, WFP’s Africa spokespers­on, David Orr, told reporters last week.

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