COVID-19 driving up hunger in vulnerable countries: UN FAO
Jun 10, 2020
Rome/New York, June 10 : Initial and ongoing assessments by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) provide strong indications that the COVID-19 pandemic and its impacts are driving up hunger in countries that were already experiencing high levels of food insecurity prior to the disease's outbreak.
"The COVID-19 pandemic poses a clear and present danger to food security and nutrition, especially to the world's most vulnerable communities," FAO Director General Qu Dongyu said on Tuesday (local time) at the opening of a high-level UN event on humanitarian action.
The Director General told the virtual event that while assessments were taking place at country level as ongoing agricultural seasons unfolded, the impact of COVID-19 was already being seen in some of the world's food crisis hotspots.
Recent data from the FAO-hosted Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) initiative indicates that in Afghanistan, food insecurity -- already alarmingly high -- has now been aggravated by the impact of coronavirus. The latest estimates show that 10.3 million people there are now dealing with crisis levels of acute hunger or worse.
The trend is similar in the Central African Republic where about 2.4 million people are now facing a crisis or worse levels of acute food insecurity -- an 11 per cent increase compared with pre-pandemic times, according to the IPC.
In Somalia, 3.5 million people are projected to face a crisis or worse in the coming months -- three times the number at the start of the year.
"We risk a looming food crisis unless measures are taken fast to protect the most vulnerable, keep the global agricultural supply chains alive, and mitigate the pandemic's impacts across the food system," said Dongyu.
Rural women are among the most vulnerable and the first to lose their incomes, he said.
The humanitarian affairs segment of the UN's Economic and Social Council was aimed at reinforcing humanitarian assistance as the UN marks its 75th anniversary in a context of expanding needs. It brought together UN Member States, UN organisations, humanitarian and development partners, the private sector and affected communities.
Dongyu's message came ahead of the release of a new policy brief by UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres who warned that food systems are failing the world's most vulnerable and the Covid-19 pandemic was making it far worse.