Toronto Star

Half of Zimbabwe facing severe hunger, UN warns

Southern African country on brink of man-made starvation, expert says

- FARAI MUTSAKA

HARARE, ZIMBABWE— About half of Zimbabwe’s population faces severe hunger amid a devastatin­g drought and economic collapse, the United Nations said

Tuesday, noting a “vicious cycle of skyrocketi­ng malnutriti­on that’s hitting women and children hardest.” The World Food Programme said it plans to more than double the number of people it helps to more than four million. More than seven million people overall are in need.

A UN expert on the right to food last week said Zimbabwe is on the brink of man-made starvation and the number of people needing help is “shocking” for a country not in conflict.

With poor rains expected before the harvest in April, the scale of hunger will worsen, the World Food Programme’s executive director David Beasley said in a statement.

Zimbabwe’s crushing economic crisis, the worst in a decade, and a drought across southern Africa will complicate aid delivery as prices for basic items soar and food supplies are lower than normal, the UN said.

Inflation is “skyrocketi­ng to over 490 per cent,” according to the UN expert, Hilal Elver. That’s the second highest rate in the world after Venezuela.

Zimbabwe’s crisis includes high unemployme­nt, cash and water shortages and electricit­y outages of up to 19 hours a day.

Elver said she found stunted and underweigh­t children, mothers too hungry to breastfeed their babies and medicine shortages in hospitals during her 10-day visit to the once prosperous country.

She warned the food crisis could spark conflict if not averted.

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