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Report Paints Gloomy Picture for Southern Africa Region

African Church Information Service, November 10, 2003

Bhekisipho Nyathi, Harare

The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has said that 6.5 million people in Southern Africa will face severe hunger at the most critical time of next year, unless it receives immediate donations.

In a recent statement, the relief agency said more than two thirds of people in need of food aid were in Zimbabwe, where a series of droughts, and economic collapse blamed on the unstable political environment, have resulted in severe food shortages.

"Generous contributions have helped to stave off immediate cuts in WFP food distributions, but from January, countries across the region are confronted by the three-month lean season," said Mike Sackett, WFP Regional Director for southern Africa.

"Supplies of locally produced food in critical areas will be scarce and people's ability to cope is already limited because of the food shortages of recent years," he continued.

The regional food situation is further complicated by the fact that southern Africa has the highest HIV prevalence in the world.

There has been an alarming increase in the number of households headed by children, the chronically ill or grandparents. Moreover, because HIV/AIDS has devastated agricultural productivity, food shortages and chronic poverty are likely to persist for many years to come.

"If we are ever to turn this situation around, we need to ensure those with HIV/AIDS have access to life-sustaining food so that families survive," Sackett said, noting: "Once the family unit starts to unravel, social and economic problems pitch people - many of them children - into a calamity from which it is extremely difficult, if not impossible, to emerge."

WFP has been carrying out emergency food support in the region since 2001. The peak of the operations was reached last year, when 10.2 million people received WFP food aid.

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