Sat 21 December 2024:
More than 40 million people are now struggling to feed themselves across West and Central West Africa with that number set to rise to 52 million by the middle of next year, the United Nations food agency has said.
According to a new report released on Friday, the World Food Programme said 3.4 million people are currently facing “emergency levels of hunger” in the region, representing a 70 percent increase in such cases since the summer.
The report said conflict, displacement, economic instability and severe climate shocks are driving food insecurity.
The ongoing conflict in the Sahel, as well as the Sudanese civil war, have forcibly displaced over 10 million people across the region.
Massive flooding in Nigeria and Chad earlier this year has made the situation acute.
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‘Vicious cycle of hunger’
Although the numbers are staggering, the new report reduces last year’s estimate of the number of people facing food insecurity by 7.7 million.
The WFP attributes the drop to better-than-average rainfall and marginal security improvements, which are unlikely to continue improving.
Still, the WFP report says food insecurity will next year touch nearly one in ten people in West and Central Africa that the World Bank estimates is home to over half a billion people.
Margot van der Velden, WFP’s regional director for Western Africa, said the “vicious cycle of hunger” in the region can be broken with better planning and preparedness.
“We need timely, flexible and predictable funding to reach crisis-affected people with lifesaving assistance, and massive investments in preparedness, anticipatory action and resilience-building to empower communities and reduce humanitarian needs,” said Van der Velden.