Perilous Times
UN report: 22 nations face major on going food crises
By ALESSANDRA RIZZO
The Associated Press
Wednesday, October 6, 2010; 9:24 AM
ROME -- U.N. food agencies said Wednesday that 166 million people in 22
countries suffer chronic hunger or difficulty finding enough to eat as
a result of what they called protracted food crises.
Wars, natural disasters and poor government institutions have
contributed to a continuous state of undernourishment in some 22
nations, including Afghanistan, Haiti, Iraq, Somalia and Sudan, the
Food and Agriculture Operation and the World Food Program said in a new
report.
A country that reports a food crisis for at least eight years and
receives more than 10 percent of its foreign assistance as humanitarian
relief is considered to be in a protracted food crisis, the two
agencies said - offering the first definition of the term in hopes of
improving aid response to these nations.
"Protracted crises can become a self-perpetuating vicious cycle," said
a report by the two agencies. "Recovery may become progressively more
difficult over time."
Among the 22 nations, the proportion of people who are undernourished
is almost three times as high as in other developing countries.
U.N. officials say that 1,800 calories per day is considered the
minimum energy intake on average. Anyone regularly without that intake
would be considered undernourished, or "chronically hungry."
Countries in protracted crisis require targeted assistance, with the
focus not only on emergency relief but also on longer-term tools, such
as providing school meals or implementing food-for-work programs, the
report said. Stimulating markets is also an effective long-term
measure, the report said, for example through the purchase of food aid
from local suppliers.
Currently, most of the assistance to these countries is in the form of
emergency humanitarian aid: In Somalia, for example, it is as high as
64 percent. But globally, only about 10 percent of assistance to
vulnerable nations goes into immediate humanitarian aid, while the rest
is aimed at improving productive capacity.
"There is an urgent need for assistance in protracted crises to protect
livelihoods as well as lives, because this will help put the country on
a constructive path to recovery," wrote the two agency directors,
Jacques Diouf of the FAO and Josette Sheeran of the WFP.
The other nations in protracted crises are: Angola, Burundi, Central
African Republic, Chad, Congo, North Korea, Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Liberia, Sierra
Leone, Tajikistan, Uganda and Zimbabwe.
The FAO said last month that the number of hungry people worldwide had
dropped below the 1 billion mark to an estimated 925 million people.