The World Food Programme (WFP) says it will increase its food and nutrition assistance programme in some countries in West and Central Africa in June.
WFP, through the programme, hopes to reach 7.3 million people as the June-August lean season is underway at a time when hunger levels are high and food resources are low.
The programme will aid the response plans of national governments in Nigeria, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Mali, Mauritania and Niger.
WFP, in a statement on Tuesday, stated that with the right amount of funding, WFPโs initiative can reach 12 million people.
However, with diminishing resources available, the international body said that humanitarians working with the programme had reached fewer people than anticipated.
This comes as malnutrition in West and Central Africa is reaching alarming levels, along with a projection that 55 million people will face acute hunger during the lean season.
Chris Nikoi, WFPโs Regional Director for Western Africa, said this crisis calls for โtransformative solutionsโ to assist vulnerable families with food and other needs.
โWe need to continue prioritising emergency response for those most in need,โ Mr Nikoi said.
โBut, we need more investment in sustainable solutions to help strengthen food security, improve agricultural productivity and purchasing power of families at the right time and cushion economic and climate shocks.โ
Many dealing with acute hunger in West and Central Africa have been left without assistance and risk having their situation worsened since funding for the programme has not kept โapaceโ with increasing crises in the region.
WFP said this is worrying since the 2024 seasonal forecast reveals weather that could disrupt farming and prolong the next lean season.
โThe escalation of humanitarian needs far outstrips available resources,โ Mr Nikoi said. โThe only way out of this cycle is to prioritise durable solutions.โ
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WPF efforts
Currently, WFP supports โlong-term transformative hunger solutionsโ and improving government systems that increase communitiesโ shock resilience via social protection and investments in inclusive food systems.
WFP programmes have helped to, among other things, restore degraded lands to food and fodder production, support childrenโs education, improve access to food, boost incomes across the Sahel and provide more frequent and diversified meals to civilians in Nigerian villages.
The programme said initiatives including โstrengthening poor familiesโ purchasing power with timely shock-responsive social protection schemes need to be prioritised and expanded as a humanitarian response alone is financially not sustainable and does not address the root causes of hunger and malnutrition.โ (NAN)
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