Tag: Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO)

  • Hunger in DRC leaves 7.7m people in urgent need of food aid

    Hunger in DRC leaves 7.7m people in urgent need of food aid

    Hunger in the Democratic Republic of Congo has left 7.7 million people in urgent need of food aid and pushing the country closer to famine than it has been in a decade, food security experts said on Monday.

    Much of the rise in hunger, 1.8 million new people were added to the list, stems from escalating violence in the Kasai and Tanganyika regions, which in Kasai alone has forced 1.4 million people to flee their homes in the past year.

    The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC), whose members include UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and the World Food Program, said 1.5 million people are now facing “emergency” hunger
    levels.

    “Emergency” means people are forced to sell possessions and skip or reduce their meals. It is one level below a classification of famine in the IPC’s internationally-recognised five stages of hunger.

    “This is the first time in 10 years that we’re so close to level five (famine),” said Alexis Bonte, FAO’s interim representative in Congo.

    “It’s a humanitarian tsunami, but it’s a silent tsunami, that’s the problem,” he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

    Congo now has 3.8 million people displaced within the country, in addition to a steady flow of refugees from neighboring Burundi, Central African Republic and South Sudan.

    “It has been hidden by other crises,” Bonte said, referring to South Sudan, Somalia, Nigeria and Yemen.

    The crisis has worsened with the advance of fall armyworm, a crop-eating caterpillar that has spread to many parts of the country, including Kasai and Tanganyika, as well as by outbreaks of cholera and measles.

    The country has enough land to feed at least 1 billion people – roughly the population of Africa – and is wealthy in minerals.

    Grinding poverty and years of conflict have left many of its people chronically hungry.

    “I think the donors are really tired of funding the crisis in Congo,” Bonte said, in reference to conflicts that began in the 1990s and have affected millions of people every year since.

    UN has received a quarter of the 812.6 million dollars sought in the humanitarian appeal for Congo this year.

    He said the government needs to stabilise and reduce the conflicts, humanitarian agencies need to be able to give aid, otherwise people are more likely to resume fighting.

    “We cannot hope to make change if we abandon the people.”

    “These people deserve to live in dignity. They have suffered enough,” he said.

    Violence has escalated in Congo since President Joseph Kabila refused to step down after his mandate ended in December.

    Scott Campbell, head of Central and West Africa at the UN human rights office, said the violence had spiraled out of control with the complicity of Kabila’s government.

    Analysts fear growing fighting could spark a repeat of the conflicts seen between 1996 and 2003, mostly in the east of Congo, in which millions died, mainly from hunger and disease.

    Bonte, who has spent seven years in Congo, said the displaced, many of them women, need seeds and farming tools to become self-sufficient, ease pressure on the communities hosting them, and reduce tensions.

    When local NGOs in Chikapa, a town in Kasai region, provided farmland for some 2,000 families who had fled their homes earlier this year, and FAO gave farming equipment, they were able to harvest vegetables to eat and sell within weeks.

    “Normally in a development project, it would take a year to do this.

    “This was just a few weeks, because the ladies were desperate to do something … to escape the trauma they had suffered and … go back to dignity,” Bonte said.

  • FAO urges urgent support to Northeast Nigeria, others

    The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has restated its call for urgent support to Northeast Nigeria, South Sudan, Somalia and Yemen, which have been ravaged by years of violent conflicts.

    The organisation’s Directory-General, José da Silva, emphasised this at the opening of the 165th session of FAO Council in Rome on Monday,

    He said starvation loomed for 20 million people in the four affected areas.

    Da Silva cautioned that famine, which was threatening those countries as a result of drought and ongoing conflict, would leave many dead and rip apart societies.

    He added that”if nothing is done soon, 20 million people will starve to death over the next six months in South Sudan, Somalia, north-eastern Nigera and Yemen.

    “Famine does not just kill people, it contributes to social instability and perpetuates a cycle of poverty and aids dependency that endures for decades.”

    The FAO boss advised farming families and rural communities in the Lake Chad Basin, where people struggled with the impacts of climate change and related droughts.

    According to him, there is need for public investment and opportunities for youth in the Northeast Nigeria.

    “If we do not support these people, they will have no option other than to join local militias or movements of distress migration,” the Director-General said.

    He challenged the FAO Council to approve FAO’s Programme of Work and Budget for the years 2018 and 2019.

    He noted that the budget prioritised areas where FAO could deliver ‘the greatest impact to member Countries to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    “This includes climate change mitigation and adaptation, sustainable agriculture production, water scarcity management, and building the resilience of poor family farmers.

    “Food and agriculture are central to the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and FAO’s work is projected to contribute to the achievement of 15 of the 17 Goals.

    “This full alignment has been possible because of the centrality of food and agriculture to the sustainable development agenda 2030,” Da Silva said.

    “Council will also discuss a new scale of assessed contributions, which are the annual payments made by member countries to FAO, according to him.

    Comprised of 49 elected countries, the FAO Council convenes between sessions to provide advice and oversight related to programmes and the budget.

    As part of the week-long Council, members will be briefed on the extent of the conditions in the countries facing famine and in the case of South Sudan where famine has already been declared in parts of the country.

  • FAO calls for investments in agriculture

    The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has called for critical investments in agriculture and climate change relief to address the crisis in Africa’s strife-torn Lake Chad Basin, where hunger, poverty and a lack of rural development prevail.

    The Director-General of FAO, José da Silva, stated this in Rome following his visit to some of the worst affected areas in Chad and northeastern Nigeria last week.

    Da Silva said the crisis was both humanitarian and ecological, adding agriculture cannot be an “afterthought.”

    The FAO Director-General regretted that hunger, poverty and a lack of rural development prevailed in the crisis-hit region.

    He said, “This is not only a humanitarian crisis, but it is also an ecological one.

    “This conflict cannot be solved only with arms. This is a war against hunger and poverty in the rural areas of the Lake Chad Basin.

    “Peace is a prerequisite to resolve the crisis in the region, but this is not enough.

    “Agriculture, including livestock and fisheries, can no longer be an afterthought.

    “It is what produces food and what sustains the livelihoods of about 90 per cent of the region’s population.”

    NAN

     

  • Agric research: Consultant seeks special intervention fund for universities

    A consultant agriculturist, Mr Simon Adelodun on Tuesday emphasised the need for the nation’s in universities to receive special intervention fund for research projects on agriculture.

    Adelodun made the call in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) in Omu-Aran, Irepodun Local Government Area of Kwara.

    He said that innovation and technology could propel the development of agriculture as a viable economic alternative with sufficient funding.

    Adelodun, who is a consultant with the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), said that intervention was imperative to enable the country adopt globally acceptable standards in agricultural practice and development.

    He said that such government intervention would help in boosting the capacities of tertiary institutions in practical agriculture to transform the nation’s economy.

    The FAO consultant said that most farmers record huge losses in the country because of wastage as a result to improper storage method and facilities.

    “Adequate funding for research in agriculture will in no small measure assist the universities in meeting up with the challenges of repositioning and provide agriculture entrepreneurship skills to their graduates.

    “Different varieties of less rainfall depended crops and plants for different climates and vegetations have been developed in overseas through research.

    “With the arrays of experts in the sector and adequate funding  for research projects, Nigeria can go places as far as agriculture development is concerned,” he said.

    Adelodun stressed the need to encourage the youths, including female undergraduates to embrace `agri-preneurship’.

    The consultant also advocated for the promotion of import substitution for raw materials to boost the agricultural sector.

    Adelodun expressed support for ban of importation of  agricultural raw materials as the measure was aimed at ensuring that those items were produced locally.

    “Such intervention is needed to stimulate local production and engender backward and forward linkages between primary productions in the agricultural industry,” he added.