Africa faces unprecedented food crisis, UN says

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Africa Faces Unprecedented Food Crisis, Un Says
Despite its wealth of natural resources, Africa is far from meeting its commitment to end hunger and all forms of malnutrition by 2025. Photo: PA Images
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Chinedu Asadu, AP Reporter

At least three quarters of Africans cannot afford a healthy diet, and a fifth are undernourished due to an “unprecedented food crisis”, United Nations agencies said in a report released with the African Union Commission.

The continent’s 1.4 billion people are confronting high levels of hunger and malnutrition as the hit on world grain supplies from Russia’s war in Ukraine compounds the ills of African conflicts, climate change and the after-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic, the report said.

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It warned that “millions are expected to be at risk of worsening hunger in the near future”.

With a young population set to double by 2050, Africa is the only rapidly growing region where people are getting poorer, and some are beginning to celebrate coups by soldiers who promise a better life.

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Despite its wealth of natural resources, Africa is far from meeting its commitment to end hunger and all forms of malnutrition by 2025.

Armed violence in West and Central Africa has uprooted millions from their communities, while in East Africa climate change and extreme weather pose severe threats to farmers.

Many families increasingly find it difficult to eat as incomes fail to keep pace with skyrocketing prices for food.

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“The majority of Africa’s population — about 78 per cent or more than one billion people — remain unable to afford a healthy diet, compared with 42 per cent at the global level, and the number is rising,” said the report from the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), the UN Economic Commission for Africa, the World Food Programme and the African Union Commission.

In 2022, as many as 342 million Africans were “severely food-insecure”,the report said. That represented 38 per cent of the 735 million hungry people around the world, it said.

Among those affected the most by the food crisis in Africa are children under five, 30 per cent of whom are stunted because of malnutrition, the report said.

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“The deterioration of the food security situation and the lack of progress towards the WHO global nutrition targets make it imperative for countries to step up their efforts if they are to achieve a world without hunger and malnutrition by 2030,” Abebe Haile-Gabriel, FAO regional representative for Africa, said alongside officials from the other agencies.

The agencies noted the continent is still reeling from the impacts of Covid-19. They said 57 million more Africans have become undernourished since the start of the pandemic, bringing the total of the undernourished to nearly 282 million last year.

“After a long period of improvement between 2000 and 2010, hunger has worsened substantially and most of this deterioration occurred between 2019 and 2022” during the pandemic, the report said.

In Nigeria, which is Africa’s largest economy and a top oil producer, nearly 93% of the country’s more than 210 million people are unable to afford a healthy diet, the report said.

Such situations are leading many to question why Africa’s governments are failing to use the continent’s wealth to make life better for citizens.

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