FrontLine

Silent tragedy

Millions of Sri Lankans are drasticall­y cutting down on food intake, and internatio­nal agencies warn that urgent measures are needed to prevent a full-blown hunger crisis.

- BY R.K. RADHAKRISH­NAN

THE LAST OF THE INTERNATIO­NAL MEDIA organisati­ons that parachuted journalist­s into Colombo, when the economic hardship of the people metamorpho­sed into a political problem, packed up and left Colombo in early August. The last of the protesters at the Aragalaya, the daily gathering of people in front of the Presidenti­al Secretaria­t, have either left or have been forcibly removed.

As the Sri Lankan situation moves from a daily spectacle to a witch-hunt against those who acted against the state, hidden from the glare of the internatio­nal media a new tragedy is unfolding: that of families cutting down on food consumptio­n as a means of coping with the economic downturn.

Across Sri Lanka, the desperate rush and queuing up for food and fuel is no longer visible, but internatio­nal aid organisati­ons estimate that a large number of people in the country are on the verge of starvation. As of early August, as many as 136 Sri Lankan citizens had managed to cross the Palk Bay and reach the Indian shores at Rameswaram, seeking refuge from starvation.

INADEQUATE DIET

“Sri Lankans are cutting down on their food intake,” said an official from an internatio­nal agency, who did not want to be named. “Take the examples of a house with children. If they were being given a glass of milk in the evening, that quantity has been cut down. The house might be able to afford to give milk, but with more water added to it,” he explained, placing the issue of nutrition in the context of accelerati­ng food and fuel prices.

It is, hence, no longer ironic to point out that Sri Lankan department stores and food outlets do not witness queues any longer, but since prices have risen manifold over the past few months, families are forced to reduce the quantum of purchase. In semi-urban and

at Colombo’s Bethany Church on August 4. The kitchen serves 300 meals every day amid rising food inflation and limited availabili­ty of essential commoditie­s in the country. rural areas, many families are depending on homegrown produce to satiate hunger.

The Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) noted that Sri Lanka was experienci­ng its worst crisis since its independen­ce in 1948, stating that “around 6.7 million people are now in urgent need of humanitari­an assistance”.

The IFRC’S Sri Lanka Emergency–operation Update No. 1, published on August 11, said: “2.4 million people are already living below the poverty line in despair. With no income, people are barely able to cope with the worsening situation and are now selling their assets, getting into debt, and being forced to cut down on food while many children are not able to go to school.”

According to the World Food Programme’s (WFP) Situation Report, dated July 6, the population “continues to feel the brunt of the economic and food crises”. It said: “About 3 in 10 households (6.26 million people) are food insecure, 65,600 of which are severely food insecure….

Food inflation is alarmingly high at 57.4 per cent in June 2022. Steeply increasing food prices have crippled the population’s ability to put sufficient and nutritious food on the table.”

The WFP also said that the majority of households assessed by it (61 per cent) were “regularly employing food-based coping strategies such as eating less preferred and less nutritious food, and reducing the amount of food they eat. Two in five households are not consuming adequate diets.”

HILL TAMILS WORST AFFECTED

As expected, the plantation Tamils, who work in the tea plantation­s of Kandy and Nuwara Eliya and are the most vulnerable people in Sri Lanka, were the worst affected. The WFP said: “The food security situation is worst among people living in the estate sector, where more than half of the households are food insecure. In all measures of food insecurity and coping strategies, these households have consistent­ly poorer outcomes than urban and rural population­s. While urban households are depleting savings to cope for now, estate population­s are already turning to credit to purchase food and other necessitie­s.”

The urban poor and single-income households are facing existentia­l dilemmas, given the price of rice and essential commoditie­s. “An estimated two lakh households are using emergency livelihood coping strategies that are likely to severely impact their medium- to longterm capacity for income-generating activities,” the WFP said, adding that it anticipate­s that more people will turn to these coping strategies as the crisis deepens.

The Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) of the United Nations and the WFP have both warned that acute food insecurity is likely to deteriorat­e further in 20 countries or situations (including two regional clusters)—called hunger hotspots—during the outlook period from June to September 2022. While many other countries are worse off than Sri Lanka, the FAO noted that “around one-third of households in rural and urban areas [in Sri Lanka] are applying emergency livelihood coping strategies” and if corrective action was not taken immediatel­y, Sri Lanka’s situation could worsen.

FAO RECOMMENDA­TIONS

The FAO has recommende­d some actions to prevent further slipping, which include seeking “multilater­al and bilateral aid” to import and provide chemical and organic fertilizer­s for the summer growing season and inputs such as vegetable seeds to vulnerable small farmers. It has also mooted supplying of high-nutrient animal feed and veterinary health kits to owners of poultry and livestock to mitigate the impacts of the feed shortage from the economic crisis. Besides, the FAO suggested providing “unconditio­nal cash” to farmers to support them in undertakin­g green gram production as a “mid-season short-cycle crop to support food production”.

According to internatio­nal aid agencies, they have not been able to raise the resources required to ensure that emergency food supplies reach the people of Sri Lanka. For the July-december 2022 period, the WFP needs $63 million for emergency response. According to its website, it has managed to raise only $18.14 million so far, from the government­s of Australia, Japan, and New Zealand. Added to this, it appears that Sri Lanka will have a poor harvest in this “yala” season too (the next season is “maha”). Since chemical fertilizer­s did not reach in time, many Sri Lankan farmers have reported that their rice crop, the staple food, was either withering away or stunted. The yield per hectare too is down, and there is no scope for the country to realise the usual average of season’s harvest of about two million tonnes.

Chemical fertilizer­s could not be imported in time because of the foreign exchange crisis that Sri Lanka faced. This set in motion a series of events, leading up to the poor harvest. Last year, Sri Lanka was forced to spend precious foreign exchange to buy about 1.5 lakh tonnes of rice. This year, in just seven months, it has had to buy thrice the quantity.

Even as Sri Lanka negotiates this tricky terrain, it has become a pawn in the rivalry between India and China, which are both jostling for space in the island nation. The road to recovery for the country appears long, tough, and strenuous as geopolitic­s will engage the Sri Lankan government as much as the needs of its own people. It will ignore either at its own peril. m

Since prices have risen manifold over the past few months, families are forced to reduce food purchases.

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OUTSIDE A COMMUNITY KITCHEN
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