20 Million Dying of
Starvation in
Sahel Africa -
Children Dying of Malnutrition
The UN and partner humanitarian groups today called on the international community to spend $2 billion to avoid a famine in
Africa's
Sahel region, which includes nine nations along the southern edge of the
Sahara. Although the Sahel is chronically prone to food insecurity, the situation has dramatically worsened as the UN estimates 20 million people are at risk of hunger up from 11 million last year.
"This year is make or break for the Sahel,"
Robert Piper,
United Nations Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel, told Reuters. "
It's the year we see if we can translate theory into practice and start bringing aid workers together to work with national governments and reverse these trends that have been deteriorating year after year."
The figures are grim. The UN estimates that 5 million children under five currently suffer from malnutrition, while 2.5 million people in the region require immediate food assistance to avoid starvation.
A semi-arid region with deep poverty and little infrastructure, the Sahel has faced repeated food crises. However, the situation has been hugely exacerbated by conflict in several countries, including
Mali,
Nigeria,
Sudan and the
Central African Republic. According to the UN these conflicts have led to approximately
1.2 million refugees in the region, putting additional strain on food sources and undercutting local agriculture output.
The UN
Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (
OCHA) further warns that population growth is surpassing the region's ability to feed itself. The Sahel includes some of the fastest growing countries on the planet.
Climate change is another issue, likely leading to worsening extreme weather.
"The climate is increasingly erratic; it puts enormous stresses on farmers and pastoralists," says Piper in a recent video. Precipitation rates have fallen considerably in the region since the
1960s, a trend which may be connected to global warming. In order to address crisis more effectively, the UN and its partners are for the first time moving beyond a one year response plan to three year plans.
While the OCHA has asked for $2 billion, aid agencies worry that the global financial crisis and donor fatigue may lead to less than what is necessary.
Last year the UN asked for $1.7 billion, but only received 63 percent of this figure.
This Fall, the Sahel region has become a center of international attention with the United Nations calling its security situation "alarming" and deploying 12,600 peacekeepers to stabilize the region. This aid is desperately needed.
Hillary Clinton recently called the Sahel a "powder keg" for terrorist activity. In Mali, for example, "Al-Qaeda recently seized control of an enormous territory larger than
France or
Texas -- and worked for much of the year to consolidate a virtual terrorist enclave, attracting new jihadist recruits" according to the
Potomac Institute. Sahel-based terrorists are wreaking havoc beyond their own borders. Of the 25 countries ranked most likely to become failed
States by the UN, 13 are in the Sahel. Yet, despite its instability, the
OECD is reducing development aid to the Sahel. Just the opposite tact needs to be taken -- alleviating the root causes of conflict through targeted aid projects is the only way forward. "abc news" "cbs news" "ap news" "nbc news" "bbc news" "wall street digital" "rt news" "breaking news" "world news" "global news" "latest news" "scientific news" "
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Starvation un hunger children sahel
Africa Development assistance to the Sahel will help stabilize the region.
Currently, the Sahel is impoverished because of poor roads, faulty infrastructure and inefficient crop storage.
The Brookings Institution reports that farmers lose 50 percent of crops just trying to get them to the market. By "building roads and improving agricultural productivity, land use rights and primary education in
Burkina Faso,
Mauritania,
Niger and other Sahel nations," development aid will solve for the root cause of poverty according to the
State Department. In Niger, foreign aid has resulted in
8.3 percent
GDP growth. In Mali, primary school enrollment increased from 55 percent to 80 percent and poverty declined from 56 percent to 44 percent as a direct result of foreign aid according to the
World Bank.
- published: 17 Feb 2014
- views: 14402