FAO Warns 2.6m Nigerians May Go Hungry Next Year

United Nations’ Food and Agricultural Organization, FAO country representative, Dominique Kouacou, has said in Abuja Friday that 2.6 million Nigerians may go hungry specifically between June and August next year due mainly to persistent insecurity.
He disclosed this at the presentation of the October to November round of the Cadre Harmonise food security and early warning analysis.
States of Borno, Sokoto and Zamfara including the FCT are expected to be hard hit, Kouacou, who was represented by Dr Abubakar Suleiman, Assistant FAO representative, Programme disclosed.
The News Agency of Nigeria reports that the CH analysis was conducted in 26 states and the FCT to ascertain the food security situation and make projections for the future.
According to him, the current cycle is happening after an unusually lean season, which witnessed several shocks, ranging from persistent insecurity situations like insurgency, and banditry.
He listed other challenges as natural resource-based conflicts, high cost of food and agricultural inputs due to high inflation, and severe dry spells in some states immediately after the onset of rains.
On his part, the Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security, Dr Ernest Umakhihe, said the analysis was conducted and validated by highly skilled professionals of the CH analysis task force over the past two weeks.
The permanent secretary, who was represented by Mrs Fausat Lawal, Director of Special Duties, said the results of the cycle of Cadre Harmonise analysis were coming at a time when government at all levels was leaving no stone unturned in reinvigorating the nation’s economy.
“Notable among them are the lingering negative impact of COVID-19 on the global economy and the Russia-Ukraine war which is currently disrupting the food systems and spiking up input prices and food prices.
“The removal of petroleum subsidy has further heightened this pressure, resulting in food inflation and increases in the consumer price index,” he said.
He said that environmental and human factors such as climate change, displacements due to insecurity and seasonal flooding regime had all remained recurrent concerns.
Umakhihe said that the disruptions had implications on food consumption patterns and the attendant high use of irreversible coping strategies among a sizable population of Nigeria.
He said the ministry remained resolute in leading and supporting the CH process in Nigeria.
The permanent secretary added that before the end of the year 2024, the ministry would work to mainstream all 36 states of the country in the CH analysis.