Madagascar: MSF calls for an immediate increase in aid as food and nutrition crisis continues
Madagascar: MSF calls for an immediate increase in aid as food
and nutrition crisis continues
As people in southern Madagascar face
the worst food and nutrition crisis to hit the region in decades, Doctors
Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) calls once again for an
immediate and massive increase in food aid. Since March, MSF has provided critical
medical care to 6,000 malnourished children across 20 locations in
the Amboasary and Ambovombe districts, which are among the hardest-hit areas of
Madagascar. However, more is needed as the situation is expected to worsen in
October during the annual “lean season,” when people’s stocks from the last
harvests will begin to run out and new crops will not yet be ready for harvest.
This crisis—which began at the end of 2020—is
the result of a unique combination of factors. The effects of climate
change have wreaked havoc on agriculture; sandstorms caused by
deforestation have buried much of the arable land in sand, even destroying
last-resort food sources such as cactus fruit; and the COVID-19 pandemic
has ravaged the island nation’s economy. According to the Famine Early Warning
System Network (FEWS NET), food production is expected to fall up to 70
percent below the last five-year average.
These factors have plunged the region into a
catastrophic humanitarian crisis, leaving thousands of children severely ill
and pushing families into extreme poverty. In response, government agencies and
humanitarian organizations like MSF have increased assistance to treat acute
malnutrition and stepped up emergency food aid for the 1.3 million people
currently living in this critical situation.
But Madagascar’s geography makes it difficult
to get aid to the people who need it. The island’s semi-arid southern regions
have many remote villages and few paved roads. Since the end of March, MSF
mobile clinics have been treating malnourished children in the districts of
Amboasary and Ambovombe and distributing food rations in approximately 20
locations. The teams have been visiting particularly remote and impoverished
villages and responding to alerts sent by local health authorities.
About 300 metric tons of food have already
been distributed, and another 750 are expected to be distributed by October. In
addition to the ongoing water distribution to 30,000 people, new wells and
boreholes are planned. And approximately 100 patients were hospitalized in June
and July in a dedicated facility built and managed by MSF within the Ambovombe
Hospital.
But a greater response is urgently needed.
“We’re seeing malnourished children struggling to regain weight after weeks of
treatment in our mobile clinics,” said Bérengère Guais, MSF head of emergency
programs. “The medical care we provide and the half-rations different
organizations have been distributing are not enough to reverse the trend in a
setting where there is so little access to food. A massive increase in
emergency food assistance is an absolute priority.”
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of
Médecins sans frontières (MSF).
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