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No famine in Yemen but over half on the brink — UN-backed report
By Reuters - Mar 15,2017 - Last updated at Mar 15,2017
A Yemeni woman carrying a child attends a sit-in on Tuesday outside the United Nations offices in the capital Sanaa, demanding an end to a war that has left millions displaced and at risk of famine (AFP photo)
GENEVA — A UN-backed report on Yemen has found no full-blown famine in the country but said 60 per cent of Yemenis, or 17 million people, are in "crisis" or "emergency" food situations, 20 per cent more than in June.
The World Food Programme said in a statement on Wednesday that the governorates of Taiz and Hodeidah along the Red Sea risked slipping into famine if they did not receive more aid. Both have long traditions as food-producing regions.
"If humanitarian actors do not access all the people in need by the coming months, the situation may deteriorate dramatically," the report said.
Taiz and Hodeidah governorates, home to important Yemeni ports, "have the highest rates of global acute malnutrition in the country, ranging from 17 per cent in Taiz City to 25 per cent in Hodeidah," the WFP said.
"The emergency threshold set by the World Health Organisation is 15 per cent," it added.
The report was written by an expert team using the globally recognised IPC methodology. The IPC, or Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, is a system of analysing food security on a five-point scale, where five is "famine".
The report, drawing on analysis from 69 experts from Yemen's government and regions, the United Nations and non-governmental institutions, said 10.2 million people were at phase three, or "crisis", and 6.8 million at phase four, or "emergency".
The worst affected governorates — those in the emergency phase — were Lahej, Taiz, Abyan, Sa'ada, Hajjah, Hodeidah and Shabwah, it said. Taiz, where heavy fighting looks likely to continue, has seen its biggest spike in livestock and commodity prices since the war escalated in 2015.
Yemen is one of four current famine or near-famine situations, along with South Sudan, northeast Nigeria and Somalia, with more than 20 million people at risk of starvation in the next six months.
Last month the UN said more than $4 billion was needed by the end of March to stave off starvation in the four countries on the brink of starvation.
UN officials say that once a famine is officially declared, it is usually too late because large numbers of people have already died.
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