UN Lists Nigeria, 15 Other Countries As Hotspots For ‘Food Insecurity’

Admin II
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The United Nations has listed Nigeria and 15 other countries as global hunger hotspots facing worsening acute food insecurity and putting millions at risk of famine between November 2025 and May 2026.

The joint report on ‘Hunger Hotspots: FAO/WFP Early Warnings on Acute Food Insecurity’ was released by the Food and Agriculture Organisation and the World Food Programme.

The UN specifically described Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), Myanmar, Nigeria, Somalia, and Syria, as “very high concern” zones while Haiti, Mali, Palestine, South Sudan, Sudan, and Yemen, it noted are facing an imminent risk of catastrophic hunger, classified under the highest phase (IPC/CH Phase 5).

The report further said that conflict, economic shocks, and extreme weather events remain the major drivers of hunger, while shrinking humanitarian funding threatens to push several countries toward catastrophic levels of food insecurity.

Four other countries namely; Burkina Faso, Chad, Kenya, and the Rohingya refugee situation in Bangladesh, were also flagged as high-risk areas requiring urgent attention.

The report also highlighted that only $10.5 billion of the $29 billion required for emergency food assistance had been received as of October 2025, thereby forcing deep ration cuts and suspension of key nutrition and school feeding programmes.

The FAO therefore warned that without immediate funding, crucial agricultural support, including seeds, livestock care, and early farming interventions, will not get to communities before the next planting season.

Accordingly, the FAO Director-General, QU Dongyu called for global action to shift from crisis response to prevention, saying; “We must move from reacting to crises to preventing them. Investing in livelihoods, resilience, and social protection before hunger peaks will save lives and resources. “Famine prevention is not just a moral duty, it is a smart investment in long-term peace and stability,” he said.

Also speaking, the WFP Executive Director, Cindy McCain warned that millions would face starvation if the world fails to act.

According to her; “Mothers are skipping meals so their children can eat. Families are exhausting what little they have left as they struggle to survive.

“We urgently need new funding and unimpeded access. A failure to act now will drive further instability, migration, and conflict,” she said.

The two agencies called for renewed global attention, sustained investments in resilience, and unrestricted humanitarian access to conflict-affected areas.

They also emphasised that famine is predictable and preventable, adding however, that only with strong political will, adequate funding, and collective action.

The bi-annual Hunger Hotspots report is developed under the Global Network Against Food Crises, with financial support from the European Union, to guide early warning and coordinated response to food emergencies.

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