Connect with us

News

Nearly 55 million face hunger in West and Central Africa – UN warns

Published

on

Nearly 55 million people will struggle to feed themselves in the coming months in West and Central Africa as soaring prices have fuelled a food crisis, United Nations agencies have warned.

In a joint statement on Friday, the World Food Programme (WFP), the UN children’s agency UNICEF, and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said that the number facing hunger during the June-August lean season had quadrupled over the last five years.

It said economic challenges such as double-digit inflation and stagnating local production had become major drivers of the crisis, beyond recurrent conflicts in the region.

It noted that Nigeria, Ghana, Sierra Leone, and Mali would be among the worst affected.

Advertisement

The UN agencies said the prices of major staple grains had continued to rise across the region from 10 percent to more than 100 percent compared with the five-year average.

The situation was particularly worrying in northern Mali, where some 2,600 people are likely to experience catastrophic hunger, it added.

“The time to act is now. We need all partners to step up … to prevent the situation from getting out of control,” said Margot Vandervelden, WFP’s acting regional director for West Africa.

“We need to invest more in resilience-building and longer-term solutions for the future of West Africa,” she added.

Advertisement

Food shortages have also resulted in “alarmingly high” levels of malnutrition, with children badly affected.

The agencies said eight out of 10 children aged between six and 23 months do not consume the minimum amount of food required for optimal growth and development.

It also said some 16.7 million children under the age of five are acutely malnourished and more than two out of three households are unable to afford healthy diets.

“For children in the region to reach their full potential, we need to ensure that each girl and boy receives good nutrition and care, lives in a healthy and safe environment, and is given the right learning opportunities,” said UNICEF Regional Director Gilles Fagninou.

Advertisement

“To make a lasting difference in children’s lives, we need to consider the situation of the child as a whole and strengthen education, health, water and sanitation, food, and social protection systems,” he added.

The region’s heavy dependence on food imports has tightened the squeeze, particularly for countries battling high inflation such as Ghana, Nigeria, and Sierra Leone.

Policies should be introduced to boost and diversify local food production “to respond to the unprecedented food and nutrition insecurity”, said Robert Guei, the FAO’s Sub-regional Coordinator for West Africa.

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

News

Otti reiterates healthcare priority, to begin reconstruction of 200 PHC20th January 2025

Published

on

By Francesca Hangeior

The Abia State Governor, Mr Alex Otti, has reiterated that health care is at the top of his administration’s agenda.

Otti stated this on Sunday when he received a delegation from Belgium, the Revive Medical Team, who came for a Medical Mission in Abia State for the second time.

He thanked the medical team for keeping its promise of coming again to the state for a free medical mission and said that the reports he received from last year’s mission were positive.

Advertisement

He said, “I want to let you know that healthcare delivery is topmost on our agenda. We have driven the healthcare delivery system in Abia from where it was when we came in 2023 to the present level. We are not there yet, there is still a lot of room for improvement.

“The reports I got after you left were very positive. As at the time I was inviting you, I had not gotten the feedback but interacting with you and seeing how serious you were, I was led to say come back next year.

“Just about a year ago, you were here and I had requested that you return and get the government fully integrated into the medical mission”.

The governor assured the team that adequate arrangements had been made to make them comfortable as they carried out the medical mission.

Advertisement

He seized the opportunity to announce that he would be flagging off the reconstruction of 200 Primary Healthcare Centres (PHC) to be delivered in 100 days. He said that by the time he is through with the reconstruction of the first 200 healthcare centres, he would commence another set of 200 and would continue until all the Primary Healthcare Centres in Abia State are rehabilitated and retrofitted.

“By Monday this week, we will be flagging off the retrofitting and rehabilitation of 200 Primary Healthcare Centers. These primary healthcare centres must be delivered in 100 days.

“We took our time to design a prototype of a Primary Healthcare Center in Abia State. So, when you walk into a primary healthcare centre, you will know it is a primary healthcare centre in Abia State.

“By the time we are done with the first set of 200, we will also flag off another 200 until all the 948 primary healthcare centres are fully rehabilitated”, Otti assured.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Court slams 15 years jail term on Mortuary worker for selling body parts online

Published

on

By Francesca Hangeior

A mortuary worker has been sentenced to 15 years in federal prison for hawking body parts including fetuses to a sicko collector covered in face tattoos and piercings.

37 year-old Candace Chapman Scott sold the human remains from the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Anatomical Gift Program to Jeremy Lee Pauley, a heavily pierced Pennsylvania man she met on a Facebook group that “openly discussed the sale of body parts,” according to Jonathan D. Ross, the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Arkansas.

At her sentencing, Judge Brian S. Miller called her crimes “some of the worst I’ve ever seen” and sentenced Ross, of Little Rock, for transporting stolen human body parts out of the state and conspiracy to commit mail fraud, the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette reported.

Advertisement

Last April, she pleaded guilty to the charges.

Scott’s disgusting deeds, which included selling a skull, brain, arm, ear, several lungs, hearts, breasts, a belly button, and testicles, along with other parts — occurred between October 2021 and July 15, 2022, prosecutors said.

Pauley, 42, a self-described “oddities collector,” paid her $10,625 for 24 body part boxes, part of a twisted underground national network of body snatching from Harvard Medical School and the Arkansas mortuary.
When investigators searched Scott’s home, they found several body parts and she admitted to bagging them at her job.

The heartless morgue worker even told Pauley that the wrong ashes from a cremated body would be returned “to the parents of the deceased fetuses,” prosecutors said.

Advertisement

“Imagine learning that the cremated remains of your child given to you after their death were not actually those of your child, because instead, the FBI recovered the body of that child in another state. That is the shocking truth that happened in this case for the family of “Baby Lux,” Ross, said in a press release.

“Baby Lux was named ‘Lux Siloam,’ which means ‘light sent,’ and now his light has illuminated an evil and dark underworld of criminals who engage in the trafficking of stolen human bodies and body parts,” he added.

At the sentencing, Doneysha Smith, Lux’s mother, told the judge she was heartbroken after hearing of the heinous crimes.
She’s haunted at night by “my son being sent around the mail like an Amazon package,” the Gazette reported.

Miller, meanwhile, sobbed before her sentencing and apologized.

Advertisement

The FBI called it a “truly incomprehensible and detestable crime.”

“This sentencing does not reverse the immeasurable damage that has been caused to the victimized families, however, the FBI and our partners will continuously work to ensure justice is served for all,” said FBI Little Rock Special Agent in Charge Alicia D. Corder.

For his part, Pauley is on bond awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty in Pennsylvania to conspiracy and interstate transportation of stolen property, according to the Gazette.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

News

Trump says ‘invasion of US borders’ will end before Monday is over

Published

on

By Francesca Hangeior

On the eve of his swearing-in ceremony, U.S. President-elect Donald Trump told supporters that he would implement anti-immigration measures from day one of his second term in office.

“By the time the sun sets tomorrow evening, the invasion of our borders will have come to a halt.

“All the illegal border trespassers will, in some form or another, be on their way back home,” the Republican said at a rally in Washington.

Advertisement

As during his election campaign, Trump used broad generalisations and portrayed undocumented migrants living in the U.S. as criminals.

While there has been a rise in crime in some areas of the U.S., experts attribute this to complex socio-political causes.

There is no evidence of a migrants-driven crime wave, nor of migrants committing crimes at higher rates than U.S. nationals.

One of Trump’s key election promises was to carry out mass deportations.

Advertisement

To implement this plan, Trump has nominated several right-wing hardliners to join his government.

According to U.S. media, the first raids are set to begin shortly after his swearing-in on Monday.

These are initially planned in Chicago and may also extend to other cities.

The action is scheduled to last for a week.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Trending

Copyright © 2024 Naija Blitz News