24 May 2017 Despite “appalling conditions” in South Sudan, it is not too late to save more people from dying, the head of the United Nations agriculture agency said today, joining the World Food Programme (WFP[1]) chief in a call to all parties enmeshed in the country’s conflict to end the violence and work together to ensure access to food and other life-saving support.
José Graziano da Silva, head of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and WFP’s David Beasley made the call during a visit to the former Unity state, one of the areas in South Sudan worst hit by the current hunger crisis.
“We can still avoid a worsening of the disaster, but the fighting has to stop now,” Mr. Graziano da Silva said. “There can be no progress without peace. People must be given immediate access to food, and farmers need to be allowed to work on their fields and tend to their livestock," he added.
Around 5.5 million people in South Sudan, or almost half the population, face severe hunger ahead of the lean season, which peaks in July. Of these, more than 90,000 face starvation with famine declared in parts of former Unity state while another one million teeter on the brink. The UN stresses that this unprecedented situation reflects the impact of ongoing strife, obstacles to delivering humanitarian assistance and declining agricultural production.
Both UN officials stressed that an immediate, massive response is critical, combining emergency food assistance and support for agriculture, livestock and fisheries.
‘The fighting must end’ so investment in children can begin, WFP’s Beasley
In the former Unity state, they visited people coping with the hunger crisis with the support of both agencies and met with people facing famine on Kok Island, a refuge in the Nile River where many people have sought shelter from fighting.The two agency heads saw aid workers from international and local partner organizations distributing WFP food and nutrition treatments, as well as seeds and FAO fishing kits.
“Food, treatment for malnourished kids, kits that help people fish and grow vegetables – these are the difference between life and death for people we met in Unity state," Mr. Beasley said. "But we can't keep scaling up forever. The fighting has to end to make the kind of investments that give the children of South Sudan any hope for the future they deserve."
‘Saving livelihoods saves lives,’ says FAO’s Graziano da Silva
The two UN agency heads visited an FAO project aiming to provide women farmers and pastoralists with a place to process milk. With rising malnutrition levels across the country, the project is an innovative way to increase the availability of safe, quality milk and milk products – a major dietary staple and a source of protein vitamins and minerals, essential components for a healthy diet.Mr. Graziano da Silva highlighted that saving livelihoods also saves lives, saying “South Sudan has great potential – it has land, water and courageous people. If it also has peace, then together we can work to end hunger.”
Both agency heads underscored the need for further international support to confront a $182 million funding gap over the next six months.
Mr. Beasley assured that while WFP would continue to stand by the South Sudanese, its leaders “must show good faith by facilitating humanitarian efforts, including getting rid of unnecessary fees and procedures that delay and hinder aid."
[2]Newer articles:
- South Sudan refugees scrounge for scraps as rations slashed in Uganda camps - 26/05/2017 08:23
- Attempt to broker South Sudan political agreement fails - 26/05/2017 08:05
- How South Sudan Is Trying to Mitigate Its Diplomatic Isolation - 25/05/2017 11:23
- Last Japanese peacekeepers pull out of South Sudan - 25/05/2017 10:35
- UN envoy: South Sudan seeing military action as rains arrive - 24/05/2017 17:34
Older news items
- South Sudan wildlife surviving civil war, but poaching and trafficking threats increase - 24/05/2017 14:48
- U.S., Britain, UN wary of South Sudan ceasefire announcement - 24/05/2017 13:13
- Kenya's Equity closes bank branches in war-torn South Sudan - 24/05/2017 05:35
- South Sudan State Partially Closes Border in Ebola Scare - 23/05/2017 16:55
- South Sudan rebels reject President Kiir's dialogue offer as conflict rages on - 23/05/2017 09:28
Latest news items (all categories):
- The Voice of Responsibility: How Young South Sudanese are Saying No to Violence Through Music, Drama, and Digital Content - 03/06/2026 16:56
- Peace fails if it is not defended. The UN’s peacekeepers cannot do this alone - 03/06/2026 16:39
- 'Brink of famine': Why South Sudan’s children are paying the price of war - 03/06/2026 16:34
- Volleyball Cranes defeat South Sudan to maintain perfect start - 03/06/2026 16:30
- 'I've seen love': South Sudan bishop applauds Canadians during first visit - 03/06/2026 16:26
Random articles (all categories):
- Kiir’s lost passport recovered in Kenyan village - 04/04/2023 06:28
- South Sudan reports over 300 cases of gender-based violence in 2021 - 24/01/2022 02:26
- US envoy backs call for press freedom in South Sudan - 26/05/2013 01:15
- South Sudan's fight against COVID-19 and efforts to safeguard the community from vaccine-preventable diseases - 01/07/2024 13:25
- South Sudan: Bodies in wells, houses burned - NBC40.net - 13/05/2014 17:41
Popular articles:
- Who is the darkest person in the world, according to Guinness World Record? - 25/10/2022 02:34 - Read 145363 times
- School exam results in South Sudan show decline - 01/04/2012 17:58 - Read 27294 times
- Top 10 weakest currency exchange rates in Africa in 2023 - 19/07/2023 00:24 - Read 24531 times
- No oil in troubled waters - 25/03/2014 15:02 - Read 23909 times
- NDSU student from South Sudan receives scholarship - In-Forum - 29/09/2012 01:44 - Read 21751 times