The Herald (South Africa)

Nearly 20-million more people face hunger

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Nearly 20-million more people faced food crises last year amid armed conflict, the Covid-19 pandemic and weather extremes, and the outlook for this year is again grim, according to a report by the Global Network Against Food Crises.

The humanitari­an agency, set up in 2016 by the EU and UN, also warned that acute food insecurity has continued to worsen since 2017, the first year of its annual report into food crises.

“We must do everything we can to end this vicious cycle. There is no place for famine and starvation in the 21st century,” UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres said.

He said conflict and hunger need to be tackled jointly, as they reinforced each other.

Defined as any lack of food that threatens lives, livelihood­s or both, acute food insecurity at crisis levels or worse affected at least 155-million people last year, the highest number in the report’s five-year existence.

It warned the situation is not expected to improve this year, driven first and foremost by conflict, but with containmen­t measures related to the Covid-19 pandemic an exacerbati­ng factor.

Two out of three people affected by food crises were in Africa, though other parts of the world were not spared, with Yemen, Afghanista­n, Syria and Haiti among the 10 worst hit locations.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has revealed the fragility of the global food system and the need for more equitable, sustainabl­e and resilient systems,” the EU, the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on, the UN World Food Programme and USAID said in a statement.

“A radical transforma­tion of our agri-food systems is needed,” it said.

“If current trends are not reversed, food crises will increase in frequency and severity.”

In Burkina Faso, South Sudan and Yemen, 133,000 people were in the most severe or “catastroph­e” phase of food insecurity last year, requiring urgent action to avert widespread death and a total collapse of livelihood­s, the report showed.

At least another 28-million people were in an “emergency” phase of food crisis, meaning they were one step away from starvation and required urgent action to save lives and livelihood­s, and prevent famine.

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