Hunger and Malnutrition Crisis Resurfaces in Niger
In response to massive food shortages and
staggering acute malnutrition rates in Niger, international
humanitarian organisation Action Against Hunger | ACF International
launched an emergency response to provide nutritional support to
children, increase the income of vulnerable families and bolster a
national initiative to dampen the impact of the crisis. These
interventions come on the heel of an announcement by the government of
Niger that the rate of severe food insecurity in the country has
tripled since last year.
Government authorities estimate that
nearly a million children in Niger are moderately malnourished and
another 200,000 have severe acute malnutrition, a life-threatening
condition. Over 58% of Niger’s population is deemed food insecure,
according to recent surveys. Assessments conducted in December showed
that some 7.8 million people will be forced to cope without food
reserves for at least six months before the October harvest; food
stocks for severely insecure households — approximately 20% of the
population — have already been depleted. These severe food shortages
result from a number of factors, including drought-like conditions,
high staple food prices and a sharp drop in the market price of cattle.
“The
food situation in Niger has reached a critical stage,” says Lauren
Taylor, Niger Desk Officer for Action Against Hunger, which has
implemented humanitarian programmes in Niger since 1997. “Families with
no other options are going days without eating or are resorting to
begging and borrowing to cope with massive shortfalls.”
Action
Against Hunger is providing logistical and technical support for the
Nigerien government’s response, which includes cash-for-work programmes
to create 800 new village grain banks and reinforce another 1,000
existing banks, food and seed distributions to vulnerable households
during the planting season, bolstering national grain reserves and
nutritional care for children under five. The national plan covers
approximately 30% of the food insecure population for three months.
With
support from the UK Department for International Development, Action
Against Hunger is also launching an emergency intervention in the
Mayahi region of southern Niger to provide nutritional support to
roughly 18,000 acutely malnourished children under five and cash-based
grants to 1,900 vulnerable people to boost purchasing power at local
food markets.
Despite these programs, the population’s
needs far outstrip available resources. Action Against Hunger is
calling on donors to curb the impact of the crisis through immediate
funding for nutrition, food security, and livelihoods.








