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WFP: An additional 1 million people may be affected by the Somalia Hunger Crisis

WFP: An additional 1 million people may be affected by the Somalia Hunger Crisis

The World Food Programme warned on Tuesday that a projected drought in the next crop cycle could cause a further one million people to face crisis-level hunger in the coming months.

Jean-Martin Bauer said that the number could increase even more due to funding cuts.

According to a study, in 2022 the Horn of Africa experienced the driest weather conditions for more than 40 years after successive rainy seasons failed. This led to the deaths of up 43,000 people.

A recent report estimates that approximately 3.4 million Somalians are suffering from acute food insecurity. This number will rise to 4.4 million within the next few months, according to Bauer. He was referring to the phase three and higher of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification System.

Phase three represents a crisis level of hunger, phase four an emergency, and phase five a catastrophe.

He predicted that rains below average between April and the end of June 2025 could cause drought conditions following two seasons in which there was no rain.

WFP released a statement saying that hunger tends to affect children the most. Current projections indicate that 1.7 million under-fives will face acute malnutrition by December 2025. WFP said that 466,000 of those children face severe acute malnutrition.

Bauer said that the WFP had already cut back on its assistance programs and now only helps 820,000 people compared to 2.2 million during the peak period of 2022.

In response to journalist's questions, he said that any funding cuts by the United States in part of an unprecedented aid cutback under President Donald Trump had not been taken into account.

He said that the situation in Somalia could worsen for two reasons: the weather forecast and the funding cuts, as well as the conflict and relatively high food prices. (Reporting and editing by Sharon Singleton, Cecile Mantovani and Emma Farge)

(source: Reuters)