Farmers are unable to grow their crops or tend to their livestock, a key source of income in many conflict-hit areas.
More than 56 million people in 17 countries affected by prolonged conflicts are struggling to feed themselves, trapped in a "vicious" cycle of violence and hunger, two United Nations agencies said on Friday.
Conflict
is a leading cause of hunger because it forces people to flee their
homes and fields, and disrupts markets leading to higher prices for
food.
Farmers are unable to grow their crops or tend to their livestock, a key source of income in many conflict-hit areas.
The
U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and World Food Programme
(WFP) said there were 17 countries where violence has significantly
affected access to food.
They listed them as
Syria, Yemen, Lebanon, Iraq, Burundi, Central African Republic,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Guinea-Bissau, Ivory Coast, Liberia, Mali,
Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Haiti, Colombia and Afghanistan.
Here are some facts about the worst-affected populations and the impact of conflict on food security:
-- A hunger crisis affects 14 million people in Yemen; more than half of the population.
-- Nearly 5 million South Sudanese and 8.7 million Syrians urgently need food, nutrition and other assistance.
-- In Central African Republic and Colombia, millions of people are not sure where their next meal will come from.
-- Nearly 90 percent of Syrian refugees in Lebanon need urgent food, nutrition and other assistance.
--
About a fifth of the population in Burundi and Haiti, and 50 percent of
the population in Central African Republic face a food crisis.
-- About half of all poor people live in countries affected by conflict and violence.
--
Countries recovering from conflict where people do not have enough food
to feed themselves are 40 percent more likely to relapse into conflict
within a decade if hunger is not addressed.
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