Haiti conflict pushes 17% of children close to famine, charity says


  • World
  • Friday, 04 Oct 2024

FILE PHOTO: Rita Losandieu, 53, stands in front of her house with her two granddaughters Solius, 4, and Alisha, 6, in the Monoville area of the Juvenat neighbourhood in Port-au-Prince, Haiti, May 7, 2024. REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo/File Photo

(Reuters) - One in six children in Haiti is facing emergency food insecurity, just one step away from famine, according to a report from charity Save the Children published on Thursday.

WHY IT'S IMPORTANT

Haiti is immersed in a social and political crisis, with particularly severe violence among armed groups in and around the capital Port-au-Prince.

The ongoing conflict has left 700,000 people internally displaced while some five million, nearly half of the population, struggle to feed themselves due to the crisis, according to the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC).

BY THE NUMBERS

Citing data from the IPC, Save the Children said that more than 760,000 children in Haiti face emergency food insecurity, with acute malnutrition and a heightened risk of hunger-related death.

The organization said that's a 21% hike in the number of children at risk since March, due to the increasing armed violence in the country.

In addition to violence, Haiti is also dealing with soaring inflation that has pushed households to allocate 70% of their spending to food costs, the report added.

KEY QUOTES

"Haiti is currently grappling with record high hunger levels, with gang violence, spiraling lawlessness and climate disasters sparking severe food shortages," Save the Children said.

It also pointed out that "armed violence and a lack of available services and supplies are preventing Save the Children and other aid agencies from reaching many children and adults in need."

(Reporting by Aida Pelaez-Fernandez)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!
   

Next In World

U.S. dollar ticks up
Will Asheville's once-booming riverfront art district ever recover from Helene?
2 cargo ships collide in Istanbul's Bosphorus Strait
Roundup: Panda pair doing well at Hong Kong home
Ghana reports first mpox case but variant not yet clear
Egypt's GDP growth slows to 2.4 pct in FY 2023/24
Mexico's first woman president announces reforms to battle gender discrimination
7 killed, dozens injured as bus plunges into ravine in SW Pakistan
Namibia opens new hospital to tackle maternity, child health issues
Roundup: China-Europe Railway brings development opportunities to German city

Others Also Read