UN agencies urge global action as drought looms over Africa’s Sahel region
United Nations agencies have urged greater international support to stave off severe food insecurity in Africa’s western Sahel; a region reeling from the effects of conflict and now threatened by drought and rising hunger.
In normal weather conditions, supplies would last beyond June, into September.
“Those are telling signs of a looming disaster that the world cannot continue to ignore.” It is feared the region’s children will be the worst affected, with more than 1.6 million at risk of severe acute malnutrition this year – representing a 50 per cent increase compared with the last major nutrition crisis in the Sahel, in 2012.
Marie-Pierre Poirier, the Regional Director for West and Central Africa at the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) said that it was “tragic that the same mothers are coming back to the clinics year after year with their children for treatment.” It is tragic that the same mothers are coming back to the clinics year after year with their children for treatment of severe acute malnutrition — UNICEF official Marie-Pierre Poirier This year, the numbers have been the worst, she added.
Strengthening resilience is also the top priority for the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
“What will help stabilize the Sahel is support for pastoralists and agro-pastoralists, during this lean season and in the future, to cope with shocks that include climate change and conflicts,” said Coumba Sow, the Sub-Regional Coordinator for Resilience for FAO across the region.
They have also prepared longer-term interventions, including improving access to local food resources as well as strengthening health and social services to allow communities and countries at large, to prevent and deal with similar shocks in the future.
Implementing these programmes however, relies on sufficient funding.
Fully funded, the WFP response (requiring $284 million) will provide food and nutrition to some 3.5 million people.
UNICEF’s response ($264 million) will protect almost 1 million children from severe acute malnutrition and provide them access to water and sanitation facilities and education until the end of the year.