UN agency says 13.7 million people face severe hunger due to global aid cuts

Palestinian children wait to receive food cooked by a charity kitchen amid shortages of food supplies. - REUTERS/Filepic
ROME: Almost 14 million people in Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo, Haiti, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan risk severe hunger due to cuts in global humanitarian aid, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) warned on Wednesday.
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- WFP expects 40% less funding in 2025, dropping from US$10B to US$6.4B due to major donor cuts, including from the US.
- Food aid cuts could worsen hunger for 13.7 million people, pushing them toward emergency levels, one step from famine.
- WFP warns of setbacks in regions like the Sahel, where past progress could be lost without urgent international support.
"WFP's funding has never been more challenged. The agency expects to receive 40% less funding for 2025, resulting in a projected budget of $6.4 billion, down from $10 billion in 2024," the Rome-based agency said.
A WFP report, titled "A Lifeline at Risk", warned that cuts to its food assistance could push 13.7 million people from "crisis" to "emergency" levels of hunger, one step away from famine in a five-level international hunger scale.
"The gap between what WFP needs to do and what we can afford to do has never been larger. We are at risk of losing decades of progress in the fight against hunger," WFP executive director Cindy McCain said.
"It's not just the countries engulfed in major emergencies. Even hard-won gains in the Sahel region, where 500,000 people have been lifted out of aid dependence, could experience severe setbacks without help, and we want to prevent that," she added.
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