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The situation in the Middle East is catastrophic: FAO director-general
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Wednesday, 30 October, 2024, 08 : 00 AM [IST]
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Pescara, Italy
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The situation in the Middle East is catastrophic, QU Dongyu, FAO-director general said in his address to the G7 Development Ministers’ Meeting in Pescara. “If we want to save lives and prevent famine, we urgently need a humanitarian ceasefire and unlimited, safe access to people who are in need and in danger,” he said.
In his remarks at the Session on the Humanitarian Crisis in the Middle East, Dongyu cited the latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) assessment showing that 1.84 million people across the Gaza Strip are experiencing extremely critical levels of acute food insecurity. Acute malnutrition is also at serious levels – ten times higher than before the escalation of hostilities.
Additionally, projections indicate that around 16 percent of the entire population of Gaza could be in IPC 5, between November 2024 and April 2025. People in this phase are experiencing an extreme lack of food and face starvation resulting in destitution, extremely critical levels of acute malnutrition and death.
A functioning local agrifood system is crucial to reduce the concerning levels of hunger and malnutrition. “When people cannot produce food and cannot consistently access food, they will suffer increasingly extreme levels of acute malnutrition, and the risk of death is high,” he added.
Dongyu outlined FAO’s top priorities in Gaza including reactivating local food production; restoring the availability of highly nutritious food, especially in view of the upcoming winter season; preventing the agricultural sector’s total collapse; preserving remaining agricultural livelihoods; and curbing acute hunger and malnutrition, especially among children.
According to the FAO-UNOSAT most recent geospatial analysis in Gaza, nearly 70 percent of croplands have been destroyed; over 70 percent of olive trees and orchards have been burned to the ground; agricultural infrastructure has been decimated, including damage to over half of the wells and over 44 percent of greenhouses; and 95 percent of cattle have died.
The director-general warned about the implications of the escalated armed conflict on the food security across the entire region with long-term consequences. He pointed out that agrifood systems across the West Bank were also under threat. The last round of farmer surveys there indicate that about 63 percent of crop producers and 72 percent of livestock producers reported being unable to access their fields or pasture.
“As the conflict spills over borders, so does its impact. FAO is already observing these effects as the conflict hits some of Lebanon’s most productive agricultural areas,” he said, pointing to the shortage of labour in agriculture due to the forced displacement of farmers which is likely to impact the vital olive and grape harvest and prevent sowing for the 2025 winter crops.
FAO is currently working to protect 30 000 sheep and goats — representing about 40 percent of the total estimated to be alive. By nourishing these animals, enough milk can be provided for all of Gaza’s children. FAO has already distributed fodder to over 4 400 livestock holders and veterinary kits to about 2 400 herder families, supported by the Food for Gaza initiative of the Italian Government.
The director-general reiterated FAO’s commitment to scale up critical emergency agriculture aid and assistance, together with the partners, as soon as the situation allows. “Peace is a prerequisite for food security, and the right to food is a basic human right,” he concluded and added that FAO continued to count on the support and leadership of the G7 members.
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