Dangerous levels of acute hunger has affected a staggering 281.6 million people in 2023.
This is the fifth year in a row that food insecurity had worsened, heightening growing fears of famine and “widespread death” from Gaza to Sudan and beyond, UN agencies warned on Wednesday.
According to the latest Global Report on Food Crises, more than one in five people in 59 countries faced acute food insecurity in 2023, compared with around just one in 10 in 48 countries in 2016.
“When we talk about acute food insecurity, we are talking about hunger so severe that it poses an immediate threat to people’s livelihoods and lives.
This is hunger that threatens to slide into famine and cause widespread death,” said Dominique Burgeon, director of the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) Liaison Office in Geneva.
The report is a joint initiative involving FAO, the UN World Food Programme (WFP) and the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) found that although the overall percentage of people defined as dangerously food insecure in 2023 was 1.2 per cent lower than in 2022.
According to the report the problem had worsened significantly since the outbreak of COVID-19 crisis.