The UN has appealed for more than $2bn to care for 20 million “food insecure” people across Africa’s Sahel belt, an impoverished area that includes Sudan and Central African Republic.
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs says conflicts in these countries and elsewhere meant the situation for many was still desperate.
The belt is a semi-arid area stretching from the Atlantic east to the Red Sea. Donors gave just over 60% of the $1.7bn the UN appealed for for Sahel in 2013.
Countries in the Sahel region – south of the Sahara desert – facing food crises include Mauritania, The Gambia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Senegal and Cameroon, the UN said.
“The situation for countless communities across the region… is still desperate,” the OCHA factsheet says. It outlines five key points about “one of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable regions”.
UN Regional Humanitarian coordinator for the Sahel Robert Piper told the Reuters news agency that the region now faces “make or break time”.
“It’s the year we see if we can translate theory into practice and start bringing aid workers together to work with national governments and reverse these trends that have been deteriorating year after year,” he said.
Food insecurity has been made worse by conflict in the region, OCHA says
However Mr Piper warned that funding may fall short because of a slow global economic recovery and the UN’s $6.5bn appeal for Syria, the largest humanitarian campaign in its history.
He said that five million children under five years old are classified as acutely malnourished in the Sahel belt.
The doubling of food insecurity figures to 20 million in the belt is highlighted by the OCHA. It is measured according to the level of hunger within a population due to conflict or climate.
An estimated 2.5 million people out of those affected need urgent humanitarian assistance just to survive, the OCHA factsheet said.
“In south-east Niger, for example, a convergence of floods, droughts and conflict in neighbouring Nigeria means that people near the town of Diffa cannot grow enough food to get by.”
While the Sahel belt often sees floods, droughts, locust infestations and epidemics, it has also been hit more recently by conflicts in several countries including Nigeria, South Sudan and Central African Republic.
“Across the Sahel, more than 1.2 million people have had to flee violence and insecurity, with most of them crossing into neighbouring countries as refugees where they place further strain on already limited resources,” the factsheet said.
“People are highly vulnerable to disease and epidemics, and because health infrastructure is so limited, many people die of illnesses that they should survive.”