Up to one million people are at risk of going hungry in West African
nations battling the Ebola virus due to border closures, quarantines and
crop losses, UN food agencies have said.
The deadly haemorrhagic fever that has killed 6,800 people has
severely disrupted daily life in the worst-hit nations of Liberia,
Guinea and Sierra Leone. Guinea and Sierra Leone have gone so far as
to
ban Christmas celebrations.
The UN Food and Agriculture Organisation and the World Food Programme
said on Wednesday the disease and the resulting restrictions had
“caused a significant shock to the food and agriculture sectors in the
affected countries”.
“The loss of productivity and household income due to Ebola-related
deaths and illness as well as people staying away from work, for fear of
contagion, is compounding an economic slowdown in the three countries,”
the agencies said in a joint statement.
Restrictions put in place to curb the disease were also “seriously
hindering people’s access to food, threatening their livelihoods,
disrupting food markets and processing chains, and exacerbating
shortages stemming from crop losses”.
Half a million people are currently in severe danger of going hungry,
but this could “top one million by March 2015 unless access to food is
drastically improved and measures are put in place to safeguard crop and
livestock production”.
Labour shortages have interrupted planting and weeding of crops, while fear of contagion is keeping people away from markets.
“The outbreak of Ebola in West Africa has been a wake-up call for the
world,” said WFP Emergency Response Coordinator Denise Brown in
Senegal’s capital, Dakar.
“The virus is having a terrible impact on the three worst-hit
countries and will continue to affect many people’s access to food for
the foreseeable future. While working with partners to make things
better, we must be prepared for them to get worse,” she said.
--Extract from Punch News
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