Behold A Black Horse - UN Announces Worst Food Crisis Since WW2
By Michael Snyder/Economic Collapse Blog March 22, 2017 Share this article:
Earlier this month, I wrote about the severe economic problems that
are plaguing South America, but up to this point I have neglected to
discuss the horrific famines that are breaking out all over Africa.
Right now there is a desperate need for food in South Sudan, Somalia, northeast Nigeria, Eritrea and Kenya.
And
Yemen, even though it is not technically part of Africa, is being
affected by many of the same factors that are crippling nations all over
eastern Africa.
The United Nations says that more than 20 million people could die from starvation and disease if nothing is done.
When
I write about economic collapse, this is the kind of thing that I am
talking about, and we are starting to see alarming conditions spread
across the globe.
Many believe that we could
never possibly face this kind of food crisis in the western world, but
unfortunately wishful thinking will only get you so far.
The
United Nations was formed in 1945, and the UN has just announced that
what we are facing this year is "the largest humanitarian crisis since
the creation of the UN".
The following comes from a CNN article entitled "20
million at risk of starvation in world's largest crisis since 1945, UN
says"...
"We stand at a critical point in
history. Already at the beginning of the year we are facing the largest
humanitarian crisis since the creation of the UN," UN humanitarian chief
Stephen O'Brien said Friday.
"Now,
more than 20 million people across four countries face starvation and
famine. Without collective and coordinated global efforts, people will
simply starve to death. Many more will suffer and die from disease."
It would be hard to overstate the level of human suffering that we are witnessing in many parts of Africa at this moment.
In Somalia, the UN estimates that more than 6 million people are in desperate need of food aid...
As
Somalia inches closer to a calamitous famine, the prospect of utter
devastation and colossal loss of human life is once again becoming an
imminent reality.
The humanitarian situation in Somalia is deteriorating by the day with up to 6.2 million people in need of urgent aid.
People
across Somalia have been forced to walk hundreds of miles in search of
food, water and shelter- with women and children disproportionately
affected.
Over 300,000 children
under the age of five are severely malnourished, with over 200,000 more
children at risk of acute malnutrition.
In
South Sudan, close to half the population is in dire need of assistance,
and things have gotten so bad there that people will literally eat
grass if they can find it...
Across South
Sudan more than one million children are believed to be acutely
malnourished and UNICEF have said that if urgent aid does not reach
them, many of them will die.
"There
is no food, we eat anything we can find," one South Sudanese mother
told ITV. "We will find grass, we will eat it. That's just the way it us
for us now."
Over in Yemen, there are
about seven million people in need of food help, and authorities are
warning that if nothing is done "millions of children" could starve to
death...
"The numbers affected are absolutely extraordinary," said Mark Kaye, Save the Children's Yemen spokesperson.
"We
keep on talking about a country that's on the brink of famine, but for
me these numbers highlight that we're at the point of no return.
If
things are not done now we are going to be looking back on this and
millions of children will have starved to death, and we'll all have been
aware of this for some time. That will shame us as an international
community for years to come.
Eritrea was not specifically included in the recent UN
alert, but it should have been. Much of the country has been hit by a
crippling drought, and approximately half of all children in Eritrea are
stunted...
But we cannot understand why
Eritrea is not included in the appeal. Unicef has confirmed what we know
from our friends and families inside the country.
In
a report in January, the agency said that the El Niño drought has hit
half of all Eritrea's regions. Acute malnutrition is widespread.
As
Unicef put it: "Malnutrition rates already exceeded emergency levels,
with 22,700 children under five projected to suffer from severe acute
malnutrition in 2017 ...
Half of
all children in Eritrea are stunted, and as a result, these children
are even more vulnerable to malnutrition and disease outbreaks."
We have been warned that there would be famines in diverse places in these times.
But
here in the western world we tend to be lulled into a false sense of
security by our comfortable lives, not realizing that the massively
inflated standard of living that we have been enjoying has been fueled
by the largest mountain of debt in the history of the planet.
In Kenya, a national emergency has been declared due to drought and famine.
For
those of you that are parents, what would you do if your children were
crying out for food but you didn't have anything to give them? The
following story from Kenya is beyond heartbreaking...
Emmanuel
Ayapar is three years old and can no longer walk. The flesh on his
legs, which dangle from his mother's hip as she carries him around, is
wasting away.
He seems listless and sad, tongue flicking repeatedly in and out of his mouth.
'We do not have enough food,' said Veronica, his 28-year-old mother. 'We eat only once a day.'
The
little boy is suffering from severe malnutrition and is at risk of
starving to death. He weighs just 15lb - half the typical weight for a
boy of his age.
I don't even know what to say after that.
In
the western world we can be so incredibly self-absorbed that we don't
even realize that children are literally starving to death on the other
side of the planet.
Hopefully those of us that
live in "wealthy" western countries will step up to the plate and aid
those in need, and hopefully this crisis will also help us to understand
that we need to prepare for the day when things get difficult in our
own nations too.
No comments:
Post a Comment