BFF-29 Hunger rising in C. America amid climate, virus shocks: UN

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HEALTH-VIRUS-CENTRAM-HUNGER-CLIMATE

Hunger rising in C. America amid climate, virus shocks: UN

GENEVA, Feb 23, 2021 (BSS/AFP) – The United Nations warned Tuesday that
hunger levels are soaring across much of Central America as countries battle
economic crises sparked by the Covid-19 pandemic and extreme climate events.

The UN’s World Food Programme said that levels of hunger had risen nearly
four-fold in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua, from 2.2 million
people affected in 2018 to nearly eight million now.

Of that figure, some 1.7 million people are considered to be in the
“emergency” category of food insecurity, meaning they need urgent food
assistance, WFP said, urging more international support.

The UN agency said the region, where years of drought and erratic weather
had already disrupted food production, had been especially hard-hit by the
record 2020 Atlantic hurricane season.

“Hurricanes Eta and Iota, that struck Central America in November 2020,
upended the lives of 6.8 million people who lost their homes and
livelihoods,” WFP pointed out.

The hurricanes came as the pandemic was already taking a devastating toll,
and dealt a severe blow to millions who had previously been relatively
untouched by hunger, including people working in the service economy and the
tourism sector.

The hurricanes destroyed more than 200,000 hectares of vital crops across
the four countries and more than 10,000 hectares of coffee farmland in
Honduras and Nicaragua.

“Considering the level of destruction and setbacks faced by those
affected, we expect this to be a long and slow recovery,” said WFP regional
chief for Latin America and the Caribbean Miguel Barreto.

– ‘Rock bottom’ –

Before those hurricanes hit, Covid-19 was already taking a devastating
toll, as an overwhelming majority of households in Honduras, Guatemala and El
Salvador reported income losses or unemployment.

WFP surveys showed that the number of households in Guatemala reporting
they did not have enough to eat had almost doubled compared to pre-pandemic
figures, while the numbers in Honduras rose by more than 50 percent.

“Urban and rural communities in Central America have hit rock bottom,”
Barreto warned.

“The Covid-19-induced economic crisis had already put food on the market
shelves out of reach for the most vulnerable people when the twin hurricanes
Eta and Iota battered them further,” he said.

“Many now have nowhere to live and are staying in temporary shelters,
surviving on next to nothing.”

With so many homes and farms destroyed, food stocks running out and few
opportunities to find work, nearly 15 percent of people surveyed by WFP in
January said they were laying concrete plans to migrate.

That marks a significant jump from the eight percent who said they were
doing so in a WFP post-drought assessment in 2018.

WFP appealed to international donors to step up support, saying it needed
more than $47 million to help 2.6 million people across the four countries
over the next six months alone.

BSS/AFP/SSS/1809 hrs