A Kenyan soldier from the Rapid
Deployment Unit, an emergency response unit who were deployed due to
reoccurring clashes and killings between Turkana and Dhaasanac
communities, looks at a cow which is dying from hunger, a few hundred
meters from the official boundary of the Kenya-Ethiopia border in
northwestern Kenya October 13, 2013. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola
Global food crises worsened significantly in
2016 and conditions look set to deteriorate further this year in some
areas with an increasing risk of famine, a report said on Friday.“There is a high risk of famine in some areas of north-eastern Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen because of armed conflict, drought and macro-economic collapse,” the Food Security Information Network (FSIN) said.
FSIN, which is co-sponsored by the United Nations food agency, the World Food Programme and the International Food Policy Research Institute, said the demand for humanitarian assistance was escalating.
The network uses a five phase scale with the third level classified as crisis, fourth as emergency and fifth as famine/catastrophe.
“In 2017, widespread food insecurity is likely to persist in Iraq, Syria (including among refugees in neighboring countries), Malawi and Zimbabwe,” the report said.