UN calls for $US2b for Africa famine

Violence and insecurity in Africa's Sahel region has led to more than 20 million people being threatened by famine, prompting a UN appeal for funds.

The UN has launched a bid to raise $US2.0 billion ($A2.3 billion) from international donors in 2014 to help more than 20 million people threatened by famine in Africa's Sahel region.

"More people than ever are at risk in the Sahel and the scale of their needs is so great that no agency or organisation can tackle it alone," UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Valerie Amossaid on Monday during a meeting in Rome.

Some 20 million people "are currently at risk of food insecurity in the Sahel" and 2.5 million of them "need urgent lifesaving food assistance", the United Nations said in statement.

The bid "seeks to mobilise an initial $US2 billion from international donors in 2014" to tackle food crises in Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Gambia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria and Senegal, the statement said.

It said violence and insecurity "has forced 1.2 million people to flee their homes creating protracted internal displacement and a refugee crisis", and warned that about five million children aged under five years old are expected to suffer from malnutrition this year.

"Our first priority is to ensure that farmers in the Sahel have a successful planting season in the coming weeks, providing them urgently with agricultural inputs," said Jose Graziano da Silva, director general of the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).

"Our responsibility is also to make sure that the next drought will not lead to another major humanitarian crisis... by producing quality seed varieties, rehabilitating degraded agricultural land, conserving rainwater and supporting small-scale irrigation."

The UN said population growth in the region is outstripping a slight increase in food production in 2013, and difficulties accessing food are being compounded by high prices in most markets.


2 min read

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Source: AAP



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