The United Nations has allocated $15 million from the $100 million earmarked to Africa and the Middle East to address food insecurity as the spillover effects of the Ukraine war threaten to push millions even closer to famine.
The contribution from the Central Emergency Response Fund, which was announced on Thursday, would go towards relief projects in six African countries and Yemen.
The countries were Nigeria, Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Sudan, and South Sudan.
The CERF was established in 2005 to deliver urgently needed humanitarian assistance whenever and wherever crises arose.
The fund pools contributions from a range of donors, with more than 130 UN Member States, observers, and others, including private individuals, providing more than eight billion dollars through the years.
Over the past six months, CERF had allocated more than 170 million dollars to address rising food insecurity in several countries, including those that would receive the new funding.
“Food insecurity in these seven countries is mainly being driven by armed conflict, drought, and economic turmoil, and the Ukraine conflict is making a dire situation even worse.
“The war began on February 24 and disrupted food and energy markets, causing food and fuel prices to soar,’’ the UN Emergency Relief Coordinator, Martin Griffiths, said.
The money would enable UN agencies and their partners to provide critical support, including food, cash, nutritional help, medical services, shelter, and clean water.
Projects would also be tailored to help women and girls, who faced additional risks due to the crisis.
“Hundreds of thousands of children are going to sleep hungry every night while their parents are worried sick about how to feed them.
“A war halfway around the world makes their prospects even worse. This allocation will save lives,” Griffiths said.
The CERF funding would support humanitarian operations, with 30 million dollars for the Horn of Africa, divided between Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya.
Another 20 million dollars would go to Yemen while Sudan will also receive the same amount. South Sudan would be allocated 15 million dollars.
Earlier in April, the Food and Agriculture Organisation reported that global food prices were at “a new all-time high”, reaching levels not seen since 1990.
Humanitarians measure food insecurity levels using a five-point scale called the Integrated Phase Classification.
Phase 5 is a situation in which “starvation, death, destitution and extremely critical acute malnutrition levels are evident”.
Famine is declared when hunger and death rates pass certain thresholds.
Some 161,000 people in Yemen are projected to face the catastrophic Phase 5 level by the middle of the year, according to the UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA.
In South Sudan, 55,000 people might already be experiencing it, while another 81,000 in Somalia could face the same if rains failed, prices continued to rise, and aid was not scaled up.
Meanwhile, around 4.5 million people across Sudan, Nigeria, and Kenya were already, or soon would be, facing emergency levels of hunger – IPC Phase 4.
The CERF funding would also boost response in Ethiopia, amid its worst drought in recent history.
NAN
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