ATLANTA (July 3, 2008) - More than 14 million people in the Horn of Africa require urgent food aid and other humanitarian assistance over the coming months while, in Afghanistan, more than 6.5 million people are facing food insecurity.
In all of these countries, it is the people who already have great difficulty accessing food who are the most affected — people in areas experiencing conflict, internally displaced persons, the rural landless and the urban poor.
In Ethiopia, a joint assessment by the government and humanitarian partners shows that 4.6 million people are in need of emergency food assistance. This is an increase from 2.2 million in the period from January to March 2008. An additional 5.7 million drought-affected people will require extended support, according to the World Food Program (WFP). The Federal Ministry of Health estimates that there are 75,000 severely malnourished children in the drought-affected areas. Diseases such as acute watery diarrhea, meningitis and measles worsen the situation. At the same time, the inflation of food prices has reached 29.6 percent, according to Kenyan officials.
In Uganda, the northeastern Karamoja region is experiencing a prolonged dry spell and crop diseases in addition to conflict and under-development. A third consecutive year of widespread crop failure could afflict the region, which is fast approaching a worst-case food security scenario. WFP is distributing emergency rations to 707,000 people in Karamoja, representing 64 percent of the region's population.
In Afghanistan, CARE field staff report that people are selling off assets and livestock to buy food, something which will damage their future possibilities to quickly and fully recover and to generate income. Young men have reportedly left their homes to engage in the poppy harvest in the south and families have started migrating to neighboring countries. Stories of people attempting to sell their children in desperation have also reached the capital, Kabul.
Rising food prices limit the impact that humanitarian agencies like CARE have when providing food assistance. The increased price means that CARE will be able to purchase less food for the budgeted money, thus reaching fewer people in need or scaling down on rations.
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