Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, Yemen Risk Mass Starvation - UN Refugee Agency
The risk of mass
starvation in four countries - Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen - is
rapidly rising due to drought and conflict, the UN
refugee agency has warned.
About 20 million
people live in hard-hit areas where harvests have failed and malnutrition rates
are increasing, particularly among young children, the UNHCR said on Tuesday.
In South Sudan alone -
where the UN
declared famine in some areas
in February - "a further one million people are now on the brink of
famine", Adrian Edwards, UNHCR spokesperson, said.
"We are raising
our alarm level further by today warning that the risk of mass deaths from
starvation among populations in the Horn of Africa, Yemen and Nigeria is
growing."
Later
on Tuesday, speaking from Geneva, Edwards said that lives will be lost if help
does not arrive.
A
preventable humanitarian catastrophe, possibly worse than that of 2011 when
260,000 people died of famine in the Horn of Africa, half of them children,
"is fast becoming an inevitability", he said.
Violent conflicts and
increasing displacement have deepened food shortages in many places, Edwards
said, warning that the dangerous combination of factors risked making the
current crisis worse than the 2011 drought in the Horn of Africa that killed
more than 260,000 people.
"A repeat must be
avoided at all costs," he said, pointing out that UNHCR's operations in
famine-hit northeast Nigeria, South Sudan, Somalia and Yemen were funded at
between just three and 11 percent.
People are on the run
within their countries and there are also greater numbers of South Sudanese
refugees fleeing to Sudan and Uganda, according to the UNHCR.
"Always the
problem that we have with humanitarian crises in sub-Saharan Africa is that
they tend to get overlooked until things are too late," Edward said.
UNHCR is expanding its
operations but is blocked by a severe funding shortfall, with some of the
country programmes only funded at between three and 11 percent.
Overall the UN has
appealed for $4.4bn for the four countries by the end of April, but has
received less $984m or 21 percent to date, said Jens Laerke of the UN Office
for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
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