Around 8 Million People In South Sudan Are Now At Risk Of Severe Hunger

A recent report by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has shared that two-thirds of South Sudan’s population may face severe food shortages during next year’s April-to-July lean season due to floods, drought and conflict.

“The decline in food security and high prevalence of malnutrition is linked to a combination of conflict, poor macroeconomic conditions, extreme climate events, and spiralling costs of food and fuel,” according to a joint statement by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the World Food Programme (WFP).

“At the same time, there has been a decline in funding for humanitarian programmes despite the steady rise in humanitarian needs.”

surge in global food prices triggered by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, a major grains exporter, left humanitarian agencies with funding shortfalls as donors diverted their focus to that conflict.

Map of South Sudan showing South Sudan Acute Food Security Situation in 2019

In June, the WFP said it was forced to suspend some food aid to South Sudan just as it was facing its “hungriest year” since independence. In August, the UN agencies estimated that 7.7 million suffered severe food shortages in the country in the April-July period between two harvests.

More than one million people were affected by torrential rain and flooding at the end of October, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) has said.

The opening of Uganda’s dams to relieve congestion would likely exacerbate flooding downstream in South Sudan, it added.

South Sudan erupted into civil war shortly after declaring independence from Sudan in 2011, and while a peace agreement signed four years ago is largely holding, the transitional government has been slow to unify various military factions.

“Urgent action is required … we need to refocus our attention and redirect resources,” Josephine Lagu, South Sudan’s minister of agriculture and food security, said during the report’s release.

Patsy Nwogu

Reporting on data-driven featured stories and investigations.

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