Some
very stupid comments suggest that the crisis is solely one of
infrastructure, an inability to store water – and this would never
happen in an advanced country.
Just
wait.
Karachi's
climate change disaster – Pakistan’s largest city is running out
of water
I
had a "friend" send me an email saying "we have global
warming BUT NOT CLIMATE CHANGE"
Karachi's climate change disaster
Pakistan's largest city is running out of water and both the causes and the results are genuinely terrifying. Unreported World found poor infrastructure combining with climate change for Karachi's 20 million citizens.
Posted by Channel 4 News on Friday, 1 April 2016
Record-breaking levels of harvest-time hunger in South Sudan, says U.N.
By
Katy Migiro
2
April, 2016
NAIROBI,
April 5 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A record 5.8 million people in
South Sudan or half its population do not know where their next meal
will come from as conflict and poor rains have increased cereal
prices by nearly five-fold in a year, the United Nations said on
Tuesday.
Hunger
in South Sudan has worsened significantly over the last year to its
highest harvest time level since systematic data collection began in
2010, the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization and World Food
Programme (WFP) said.
"South
Sudan is facing a deadly blend of conflict, economic hardship and
poor rains," WFP's country director Joyce Luma said in a
statement.
"They
are worsening a hunger gap that we fear will force more people to go
hungry and increase malnutrition."
The
world's youngest nation, which ceded from Sudan in 2011 after a
lengthy war, needs peace to feed its people, she said.
The
proportion of people who are moderately or severely food insecure,
which means they do not have enough to eat or cannot afford the food
that is available, have risen to a high of 49 percent from 38 percent
over the past year, the agencies said.
A
political dispute between President Salva Kiir and his former deputy,
Riek Machar, sparked conflict in 2013, forcing more than two million
people from their homes. Tens of thousands were killed in ethnic
clashes.
The
two leaders signed a preliminary peace deal in August and Kiir
re-appointed Machar as vice president in February.
Despite
this, conflict has continued, paralysing markets.
Violence
broke out this year in the breadbasket regions of Bahr el-Ghazal in
the west and Equatoria in the south, which were previously largely
unaffected by the war.
Numerous
roadblocks have sprung up and truck drivers taking food to market are
often asked to pay "exorbitant ad hoc taxes", the agencies
said.
They
said the 2015 cereal harvest is down 9 percent on 2014, largely due
to poor rains, while higher transport costs and a sharp fall in the
South Sudanese currency have also pushed cereal prices up.
Unlike
many of its drought-prone neighbours, South Sudan is incredibly
fertile and more than 90 percent of its land could be farmed. But
less than 5 percent was cultivated in 2011 and this figure has fallen
with two years of civil war, FAO said.
Drought
crisis continues across Africa
countries.
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