Two UN food agencies warned on Wednesday that millions more people around the globe could face famine, with funding shortfalls worsening already dire conditions.
The joint report from the Food and Agriculture Organisation and the World Food Programme said conflict and violence were driving acute food insecurity in the majority of the countries identified at risk.
The Rome-based agencies listed Haiti, Mali, Palestine, South Sudan, Sudan, and Yemen as the worst, “where populations face an imminent risk of catastrophic hunger.”
Also classified as a “very high concern” were Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Myanmar, Nigeria, Somalia, and Syria, with Burkina Faso, Chad, Kenya, and the situation of the Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh also making the list.
We are on the brink of a completely preventable hunger catastrophe that threatens widespread starvation in multiple countries,” said WFP Executive Director Cindy McCain, warning that a failure to act “will only drive further instability, migration, and conflict.”