Haiti: New Assessment Shows Food Insecurity Halved In The Areas Affected By Hurricane Matthew
Three months after Hurricane Matthew made landfall in Haiti, the number of people facing hunger and food insecurity in Grande-Anse and Sud - the most affected areas - has declined steadily from approximately 1 million to 400,000, a recent assessment shows.
However, in the North West, Artibonite, Nippes and La Gonave, although the impact of the hurricane was smaller, its effects coupled with three years of drought and severe flooding have led to a hike in the levels of food insecurity with one million people affected. In total, more than 1.5 million people are food insecure in those six areas following this series of shocks.
The latest Emergency Food Security Assessment (EFSA), conducted in December 2016 by the National Coordination for Food Security (CNSA), the World Food Programme (WFP), the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and FEWS NET, confirms improvements in people’s capacity to feed themselves and their families but at the same time, the need to continue providing assistance in hurricane-affected areas as people rebuild their livelihoods. The assessment also highlights the need to extend assistance beyond these areas in departments where levels of food insecurity have been found to be high.
In the departments of Sud and Grande-Anse, where food assistance was provided from October 2016 onwards, the levels of food insecurity have decreased, respectively, from 79 % after the hurricane to 41 % two months later, and from 78 % to 54 % during the same period. Since the start of the emergency response, under the leadership of the government, WFP has distributed food assistance in those two departments to more than 900,000 people, and fortified foods to more than 20,000 pregnant and nursing women and children under five years old. Meanwhile, FAO has provided seeds, tools, financial resources to more than 21,000 vulnerable households in the departments of Grande-Anse, Sud, Sud-est, West and North West. The levels of food insecurity are highest in the western part of the department of North West (65%), North Artibonite (54%) and in la Gonave island (54%), which were not prioritized regions for emergency response after a first assessment in mid-October.
“The results of the assessment show the very positive impact of our collective efforts in the aftermath of Hurricane Matthew, but also the pressing need to continue and redirect assistance to new areas with higher levels of food insecurity, as well as initiate recovery interventions”, said Ronald Tran Ba Huy, WFP’s Representative in Haiti.
Nathanaël Hishamunda, FAO’s representative in Haiti, echoed this sentiment: “The conclusions of this new assessment reveal that the different interventions contributed to improving the levels of food and nutrition security of those affected by Hurricane Matthew. We now need to consolidate the gains made by working hand in hand with the government, with the goal of reinforcing our interventions in the most vulnerable communities”.
“The government will continue leading these efforts”, said Chrisner Roche, CNSA’s coordinator, “and results of the assessment will ensure our response prioritizes those who are most vulnerable in the new zones highlighted in the assessment”.
The humanitarian community in Haiti urgently needs US$113 million to support food security and agriculture in 2017.
Source:World Food Programme
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