NaijaAgroNet
reports.
The Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) has highlighted need for
strategic regional cooperation in the wake of conflicts, rapid population
growth and urbanization, and a heavy reliance on food imports which are posing
serious challenges for food security,
A press statement made available to NaijaAgroNet by officials of FAO,
indicates that three countries in the region Near East and North Africa (NENA),
namely the Algeria, Jordan and Kuwait; have met the hunger component of the
first Millennium Development Goal (MDG1) by halving the proportion of their
population experiencing chronic hunger.
NaijaAgroNet gathered that region-wide,
the number of undernourished people remains high at nearly 43.7 million, or 10
per cent of the population, while 24.5 per cent of children under five are
stunted due to chronic under-nutrition, according to an assessment presented at
the start of the organization's regional
conference at the weekend.
Experts also said that micronutrient deficiencies are common in both
affluent and less affluent countries, having a number of serious consequences
for school enrollment, productivity and public health.
FAO further decried that conflicts and civil strife remained the
driving factor for food insecurity in the region in recent years, just as the
hotspots include Iraq, Sudan, Syria, the West Bank and Gaza Strip and Yemen.
In Syria alone, an estimated 6.3 million people are in need of
sustained food and agricultural assistance.
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