South Sudan faces acute food shortages as harvest falls by 50% – Official6

An international charity warned on Thursday that South Sudanese are facing life-threatening food shortages following last year’s drop in harvests.

Robert Mardini, the Director-General, International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), said this in a statement issued in Juba.

The ICRC said in its latest assessment that communities in nine out of 10 states harvested on average 50 per cent less cereal and vegetables in 2020 compared to 2019.

“Our assessment shows that climate shocks, combined with continuing conflict and armed violence, make the transition for communities from receiving food assistance to independent food production extremely difficult,” Mardini said.

The charity said food production had declined due to the cumulative impact of conflict, armed violence and natural disasters.

As the lean season begins, it said, tens of thousands of families, especially in Jonglei, Upper Nile, Warrap, Unity and Lakes States, were struggling for survival without an adequate harvest from 2020 and following the loss of other food reserves to conflict, armed violence and floods.

According to ICRC, a renewed outbreak of armed violence or the intensification of conflict would increase the chance of immediate, life-threatening food shortages for hundreds of thousands of South Sudanese.

And combined with the impact of COVID-19 and climatic shocks, many South Sudanese in remote and vulnerable communities face challenging months ahead in 2021. (Xinhua/NAN)

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