UN food chief says Ukraine war's food crisis is worst since WWII - GulfToday

UN food chief says Ukraine war's food crisis is worst since WWII

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UN World Food Programme Executive Director David Beasley speaks in Columbia, South Carolina. AP

The UN food chief warned on Tuesday the war in Ukraine has created "a catastrophe on top of a catastrophe” and will have a global impact "beyond anything we’ve seen since World War II" because many of the Ukrainian farmers who produce a significant amount of the world’s wheat are now fighting Russians.

David Beasley, executive director of the UN World Food Programme, told the UN Security Council that already high food prices are skyrocketing.

His agency was feeding 125 million people around the world before Russia’s invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, and Beasley said it has had to start cutting their rations because of rising food, fuel and shipping costs. He pointed to war-torn Yemen where 8 million people just had their food allotment cut 50%, "and now we’re looking at going to zero rations.”


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The war in Ukraine is turning "the breadbasket of the world to breadlines” for millions of its people, while devastating countries like Egypt that normally gets 85% of its grain from Ukraine and Lebanon that got 81% in 2020, Beasley said.

Ukraine and Russia produce 30% of the world's wheat supply, 20% of its corn and 75%-80% of the sunflower seed oil. The World Food Program buys 50% of its grain from Ukraine, he said.

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Borya evacuated from the town of Baryshivka due to heavy fighting, waits inside a tent in Brovary. AP

The war is going to increase the agency's monthly expenses by $71 million because of rising food, fuel and shipping costs, he said. That will total $850 million for a year and mean that there will be "4 million less people we’ll be able to reach.”

Beasley said the World Food Program is reaching about a million people inside Ukraine with food now, and will reach 2.5 million over the next four weeks, 4 million by the end of May and hopefully 6 million by the end of June. The price tag is about $500 million for the first three months and "we are short by about $300 million so we’re going to need to step up,” he said.

Beasley warned that focusing on Ukraine should not lead the international community to neglect of Africa, especially the Sahel, and the Middle East, because "otherwise, you’ll have massive migration” coming to all parts of Europe.

"If we end the conflict, address the needs, we can avoid famine, destabilisation of nations and mass migration,” he said. "But if we don’t, the world will pay a mighty price and the last thing we want to do as the World Food Program is taking food from hungry children to give to starving children.”

US Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman said that "President (Vladimir) Putin’s war of choice” is responsible for damaging global food security.

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Julia, 34, cries next to her daughter Veronika, 6, in Brovary, on the outskirts of Kyiv, Ukraine, on Tuesday. AP

"Russia has bombed at least three civilian ships carrying goods from Black Sea ports to the rest of the world, including one chartered by an agribusiness company,” she said. "The Russian navy is blocking access to Ukraine’s ports, essentially cutting off exports of grain.”

"They are reportedly preventing approximately 94 ships carrying food for the world market from reaching the Mediterranean,” Sherman said, adding that many shipping companies are hesitating to send vessels into the Black Sea, even to Russian ports.

As Russia "chokes off Ukrainian exports,” food prices are skyrocketing, with wheat prices rising between 20% and 50% so far this year, she said.

"We are particularly concerned about countries like Lebanon, Pakistan, Libya, Tunisia, Yemen and Morocco which rely heavily on Ukrainian imports to feed their population,” Sherman said.

Russia’s UN ambassador, Vassily Nebenzia, retorted that the Russian military is "posing no threat to the freedom of civilian navigation.” He said that Russia has set up an 80 nautical-mile-long humanitarian corridor to allow foreign vessels to leave Ukrainian ports and that it is organising humanitarian corridors every day within Ukraine to Russia and the West.

"The real reasons why the global food market is facing serious turbulence are by no means in the actions of Russia, (but) rather in the unbridled sanctions hysteria that the West has unleashed against Russia without considering the population of the so-called Global South nor of its own citizens,” Nebenzia said.

Associated Press

 

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