Director of FAO's Emergency and Rehabilitation Division and Leader of FAO's Strategic Programme on Resilience, Dominique Burgeon |
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has asked
donors to renew their support in 2018 as it needs
$1.06 billion to save lives and livelihoods and address acute hunger in 26
countries.
This is contained in a news release issued and signed by the
National Communication Officer, Mr. David Karls Tsokar and made available to Food Farm News in Abuja.The statement which solicited financial support from donors pointed that the increased conflict and climate-related shocks have stepped up global hunger after experiencing decline in the past decades stating that FAO is asking for $1.06 billion to save lives and livelihoods and address acute hunger in twenty six (26) countries of the world.
The press-release
quoted Director of FAO's Emergency and Rehabilitation Division and Leader of
FAO's Strategic Programme on Resilience, Dominique Burgeon as saying:"The
reality is that while the lives of millions of people were saved thanks to
rapid humanitarian response in 2017, millions more remain on the very edge of
starvation. Maintaining food production and rebuilding agriculture are
fundamental to preventing loss of life from severe hunger and to providing a
pathway towards resilience in the midst of humanitarian crises," adding "this
is why FAO focuses on transforming vulnerability into resilience - so that when
something bad happens families are better able to cope and feed themselves,
people don't have to sell off their assets or flee, and communities can rebuild
more quickly after the crisis passes".
It listed the countries involved as Yemen, the country with the largest overall number of people in acute food insecurity, where the Organization aims to reach 5.7 million people. In the Democratic of the Congo, FAO plans to assist almost 2.8 million people. In South Sudan, 3.9 million people will benefit from emergency livelihoods support. In Syria, where three-quarters of rural families continue to produce their own food, FAO will provide 2.3 million people with the means to do so. And in Somalia, the Organization will assist 2.7 million people facing severe hunger and others.
The release stated further: The latest UN report on global hunger found that after years of steady declines, the ranks of the malnourished are once again on the rise and now totals a troubling 815 million people.
Continued conflict in Iraq, South Sudan, the Syrian Arab Republic and Yemen and other places as well as new outbreaks of violence in the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Myanmar have played a major role in driving hunger up. In the Caribbean, hurricanes Irma and Maria left lives – and livelihoods – in tatters, while in the Horn of Africa ongoing drought has taken a heavy toll. Across all of Africa, the Fall Armyworm pest is threatening the crops of millions of farmers.
Last year, discouraging trends like these saw famine - widespread death resulting from severe hunger – break out in parts of one country, South Sudan, and emerge as a real risk in three others: Yemen, Syria, and northern Nigeria.
Famine was contained in South Sudan and averted in the other three at-risk countries thanks to a massive response by the humanitarian community on multiple fronts – including large- large-scale support to agricultural and pastoral communities that played a key role in tilting the balance away from the worst-case scenario.
Highlights of FAO interventions undertaken as part of this joint effort:
It listed the countries involved as Yemen, the country with the largest overall number of people in acute food insecurity, where the Organization aims to reach 5.7 million people. In the Democratic of the Congo, FAO plans to assist almost 2.8 million people. In South Sudan, 3.9 million people will benefit from emergency livelihoods support. In Syria, where three-quarters of rural families continue to produce their own food, FAO will provide 2.3 million people with the means to do so. And in Somalia, the Organization will assist 2.7 million people facing severe hunger and others.
The release stated further: The latest UN report on global hunger found that after years of steady declines, the ranks of the malnourished are once again on the rise and now totals a troubling 815 million people.
Continued conflict in Iraq, South Sudan, the Syrian Arab Republic and Yemen and other places as well as new outbreaks of violence in the Central African Republic, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Myanmar have played a major role in driving hunger up. In the Caribbean, hurricanes Irma and Maria left lives – and livelihoods – in tatters, while in the Horn of Africa ongoing drought has taken a heavy toll. Across all of Africa, the Fall Armyworm pest is threatening the crops of millions of farmers.
Last year, discouraging trends like these saw famine - widespread death resulting from severe hunger – break out in parts of one country, South Sudan, and emerge as a real risk in three others: Yemen, Syria, and northern Nigeria.
Famine was contained in South Sudan and averted in the other three at-risk countries thanks to a massive response by the humanitarian community on multiple fronts – including large- large-scale support to agricultural and pastoral communities that played a key role in tilting the balance away from the worst-case scenario.
Highlights of FAO interventions undertaken as part of this joint effort:
- Provision of seeds, equipment,
fertilizer, and training that enabled some six million people in Nigeria,
Somali, South Sudan and Yemen to plant and harvest crops.
- 43 million animals in the same
four countries – mainly cattle, goats, and camel – received veterinary
care, feed and water thanks to FAO, allowing millions of pastoralist and
livestock-dependent families to feed themselves and remain
self-sufficient.
- Some 2 million poor,
high-vulnerable families benefitted from FAO cash transfers (adding up to
$42 million in total). These payments helped people avoid selling off
household seeds, animals or other assets to buy food and bought them time
and breathing room to resume their own agricultural production.
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