The Sahel food crisis: Do we have to wait for more deaths?

A major food crisis in West Africa's Sahel region is currently threatening the lives of some 10 million people, including hundreds of thousands of children, and aid workers need international support to respond before it is too late.

Niger, the world's poorest country, has 7.1 million people affected; in neighboring Chad, 2 million people need food aid and livelihoods support; thousands of others in parts of Mali, Burkina Faso and a portion of northern Nigeria are struggling to survive. The sight of dead cattle - the equivalent of lost capital- is becoming common. The nutrition situation in Niger has deteriorated with over 114,000 children treated during the first semester in feeding centers for malnutrition. Survival strategies include the poorest going for days without a meal. United Nations agencies- FAO, OCHA, UNICEF and WFP-, and the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC) have all warned of the dire conditions. Donors have contributed millions of dollars, allowing agencies to undertake therapeutic feeding to children, food aid as well as veterinary products and seeds distribution, food-for-work and cash transfer programmes, with the sole aim of saving lives and livelihoods.

However more money is needed to roll-out a more effective response.

In Niger, at least US$229 million is still needed to finance an emergency response plan; the five agencies alone need close to $50 million for Chad. Several more millions would be needed if the situation in Mali, Burkina Faso and northern Nigeria were to further deteriorate.

The money will finance life-saving activities, including logistical cost of transporting food to remote areas of Niger and Chad, distributing food aid and administering interventions to almost 860,000 children under age 5 threatened by severe malnutrition. It will also support more than 9 million people who rely on agriculture and livestock as their main livelihoods and who have lost all access to farming and herding inputs. At this critical time, the humanitarian community is asking Governments, the private sector, and individual citizens to contribute. Every cent counts. Timely donor contributions will allow relief workers to do what they do best: save lives and preserve livelihoods.

The current emergency has again raised the issue of sustainable solutions to the region's repeated bouts with food crises. Like in 2005, 1984, and in the 1970s, this crisis is not just about food, it is also about endemic poverty and it deserves to be placed on the agenda of the most influential institutions.

Amidst the attention on Haiti and other humanitarian crises, the world should remain engage in Sahel where access to food and other basic needs are daily challenges. The combination of generalized poverty and human vulnerability leads to a deterioration of peace and security in an already insecure region and further delays development. The boat-loads of young men and women who are risking their lives to illegally enter Europe, or to join the ranks of trans-national criminal groups or partake in drug trafficking, all take their roots in the quest to first satisfy the most basic needs of food, water, education and health. For years now, it has been possible to avoid major food crises due to improved farming techniques and technologies, therapeutic food, support to the poorest households, and strengthened national capacities. But staving off tragedy, like the one galloping across the Sahel, is dependent on broaden access, predictable humanitarian response and adequate funding. It is the latter that lacks the most.

Ms Maria Helena Semedo

Assistant Director-General/Regional Representative for Africa Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - FAO

Mr. Momodou Lamin Fye

 IFRC Regional Representative for Sahel

Mr. Thomas Yanga

  Regional Director for West Africa
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
World Food Programme (WFP)

Dr Gianfranco Rotigliano

      UNICEF

Regional Director for West and Central Africa

Mr. Herve Ludovic deLys

Head of Regional Office for West and Central Africa Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA)