Off the wire
Climate agreement to be real test of new Sustainable Development Goals: Kiribati  • Roundup: Porsche Chairman appointed CEO of VW Group  • Xi raises six-point proposal for developing China-U.S. ties  • German auto industry association chief: Emissions rig not acceptable  • Roundup: Canadian stock market recovers following U.S. Fed Chair's speech  • Cologne and Ingolstadt share the spoils in German Bundesliga  • Serbia reopens border for Croatian trucks, goods  • Conmebol mulls Copa Libertadores prizemoney boost  • China, U.S. have no choice but to seek win-win cooperation: Xi  • Kenya hails progress in achieving Millennium Development Goals  
You are here:   Home

WFP warns of worst food crisis in Malawi, shortage of funds for relief operations

Xinhua, September 26, 2015 Adjust font size:

More than 2.8 million people in Malawi will face hunger in the coming months in the worst food crisis in a decade, where a staggering four out of every 10 children suffer from stunting, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) warned Friday.

"People in some affected districts have already started selling their livestock to make ends meet," WFP said in a press release. "Women are also engaging in more firewood and charcoal selling, which degrades the environment and further aggravates the fragile climate."

More than 2.8 million people in Malawi will face hunger in the coming months following severe floods and drought that ruined this year's harvest, warned the UN agency.

"The floods early this year were the worst in living memory in Malawi, washing away homes and food stocks, and ruining fertile land," it said. "Some crops managed to withstand the floods only to succumb to intense dry spells in the following months, making survival even more difficult for the most vulnerable."

Since the end of last year, WFP has provided relief assistance to avert hunger in households hit by poor rainfall during the 2013/14 growing season and the floods in early 2015. This operation has reached more than one million vulnerable people.

WFP, which is financed entirely by voluntary contributions from governments, companies and private individuals, is less than 25 percent funded for the 81 million U.S. dollars relief operation that lies ahead, it said.

"Additional contributions are urgently needed," said the WFP representative for Malawi, Coco Ushiyama.

WFP also said a swift response is imperative to save children's lives and prevent worsening undernutrition, particularly stunting among children, which limits cognitive development, and has far-reaching effects on health and productivity over a lifetime.

"A recent Cost of Hunger in Africa report for Malawi estimated that stunting, which at 42 percent is among the highest in the region, costs the nation nearly $600 million annually," said the agency.

The WFP announcement came after an appeal to the international humanitarian community made by the President of Malawi, Peter Mutharika, at the launch of the National Food Insecurity Response Plan Monday. Endit