- ROME — Global food insecurity and malnutrition continued to worsen in
2024, with 295 million people suffering from acute hunger across 53 countries,
the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and its partners
said in a report.
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- The figure represents an increase of 13.7 million
compared to 2023, marking the sixth-consecutive annual rise in acute food
insecurity in the world's most fragile regions.
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- The findings were published in the 2025 Global Report on
Food Crises by the Global Network Against Food Crises (GNAFC), an international
alliance comprising the FAO, the UN World Food Programme (WFP), and various
governmental and non-governmental organisations.
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- UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres described the
figures as "another unflinching indictment of a world dangerously off
course."
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- In the report's foreword, he warned that "hunger and
malnutrition are spreading faster than our ability to respond, yet globally, a
third of all food produced is lost or wasted."
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- He added that long-standing crises are now being
compounded by a more recent one: A dramatic reduction in lifesaving
humanitarian funding.
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- While acute food insecurity typically stems from a combination
of factors - such as poverty, economic shocks, and extreme weather, the report
emphasised that conflicts remained the primary driver in many of the worst-hit
regions. Some populations faced conditions beyond acute hunger.
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- Famine was confirmed in parts of Sudan in 2024, while
catastrophic levels of food insecurity were recorded in the Gaza Strip, South
Sudan, Haiti, and Mali. In the Gaza Strip, famine was narrowly averted thanks
to stepped-up humanitarian aid, but the report warned that the risk could
return between May and September 2025 if the large-scale military operation and
blockade continue.
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- The report also highlighted the severe impact of forced
displacement. Of the 128 million people forcibly displaced in 2024, nearly 95
million - including internally displaced persons, asylum seekers, and refugees
- were living in countries already grappling with food crises, Xinhua news
agency reported.
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- In addition, economic shocks triggered food insecurity in
15 countries, affecting 59.4 million people, while extreme weather events
pushed 18 countries into crisis, impacting more than 96 million people,
particularly in Southern Asia, Southern Africa, and the Horn of Africa.
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- FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu warned that acute food
insecurity is becoming a persistent reality, especially in rural areas.
"The path forward is clear: Investment in emergency agriculture is
critical - not just as a response, but as the most cost-effective solution to
deliver significant, long-lasting impact," he said.
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