Climate change has pushed a million people in Madagascar to the ‘edge of starvation,’ UN says

 

(CNN)Climate change is the driving force of a developing food crisis in southern Madagascar, the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) has warned.

The African island has been plagued with back-to-back droughts — its worst in four decades — which have pushed 1.14 million people “right to the very edge of starvation,” said WFP executive director David Beasley in a news release Wednesday.
“I met women and children who were holding on for dear life, they’d walked for hours to get to our food distribution points. These were the ones who were healthy enough to make it,” Beasley said.
 

“Families are suffering and people are already dying from severe hunger.

This is not because of war or conflict, this is because of climate change.

This is an area of the world that has contributed nothing to climate change, but now, they’re the ones paying the highest price.

“An estimated 14,000 people are already in catastrophic conditions, according to the WFP, a number that is predicted to double to 28,000 by October.

Thousands in southern Madagascar have left their homes in search of food, while those who remain are resorting to extreme measures such as foraging for wild food to survive, the WFP said.

“This is enough to bring even the most hardened humanitarian to tears.

Families have been living on raw red cactus fruits, wild leaves and locusts for months now.

We can’t turn our backs on the people living here while the drought threatens thousands of innocent lives,” said Beasley.

 

It’s the time to action 

Grant

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