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Food supply precarious and likely to worsen

The food supply outlook for parts of Sudan was “highly precarious” after two successive years of reduced cereal harvests and depletion of stocks, the FAO’s Global Information and Early Warning System on Food and Agriculture (GIEWS) reported on Monday. Despite government efforts to mitigate food shortages, by lifting customs duties on food imports and other measures, the food supply situation was likely to tighten further in the coming months with the start of the ‘lean season’ [before the October/November harvest], it said. The cereal requirement after commercial imports was estimated at 240,000 mt but the latest estimates of emergency food aid - in pipeline and under mobilisation - amounted to only 55,000 mt, leaving an uncovered gap of about 157,000 mt, it warned. Lower harvests and stock levels had lead to a sharp rise in cereal prices and reduced access to food for poorer sections of the population, according to GIEWS. “The purchasing power of large numbers of people, particularly pastoralists, has been seriously eroded,” it said, adding that vulnerable groups have started migrating for work and joining food-for-work schemes in dramatic numbers. With the ‘lean season’ just starting and only a fraction of the food aid requirement pledged so far, “the situation is likely to worsen in the coming months,” it added. The GIEWS cited the latest estimates of people in need of urgent food assistance, because of drought or famine, or both, at some 2.97 million people. [On 12 May, IRIN erroneously attributed the results of a emergency nutritional assessment in North Darfur State, northwestern Sudan, to the international nongovernmental organisation MEDAIR. The assessment was, in fact, undertaken by Save the Children-UK, with MEDAIR seconding a nurse and nutritionalist to one of a number of survey teams.]

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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