Emergency in Mali and Niger
Action Against Hunger Mobilizes and Calls for U.S. and G8 Intervention as a Million People Face Drought, Malnutrition
New York, NY —
The international relief organization Action Against Hunger (ACF) called on the United States, as well as the other Group of 8 countries, to intervene in an emergency in northern Mali and Niger.
Senior External Relations Officer, ACF-USA
Contact James Phelan
Direct: 212-967-7800 x108
Cell: 646-265-7796
June 29, 2005
New York, NY —
The international relief organization Action Against Hunger (ACF) called on the United States, as well as the other Group of 8 countries, to intervene in an emergency in northern Mali and Niger.
As a result of severe drought and a recent plague of locusts, the rates of malnutrition and lack of access to grazing land and clean water have reached dangerously high levels in the two West African countries. According to Amador Goméz, Technical Director of ACF-Spain, "The nutritional state of the population is worrisome. We have confirmed that more than one in three children younger than five years old suffers from acute malnutrition. At this time when the most vulnerable families have limited access to grazing land for their animals, it is imperative that the international community get involved as soon as possible."
But little help has come. Although Mali is on the list of countries being considered for debt relief at the G8 conference in Edinburgh, Scotland, next week, and both Mali and Niger are classified as among the poorest countries in the world by the United Nations, there has been almost no response to the call for emergency assistance. In an unprecedented and worrisome development, the United Nations World Food Program (WFP) issued an appeal to the international community six months ago for $11 million to ease the food shortages, but received no response. A second appeal has brought in only 35 percent of the WFP's original request.
In an area already suffering from chronic poverty and a lack of food, the drought and destruction of grazing land have escalated the situation for the population to what the WFP is calling near-famine levels. Action Against Hunger has already put its emergency intervention programs into place in both northern Mali and Niger, but has emphasized the need for real long-term commitment to revitalizing the area, not just short-term relief. "We're hoping that the international community that reacted so quickly and generously to the tragedy of the tsunami will be able to step up to the plate again," said Cathy Skoula, Executive Director of ACF-USA.
About Action Against Hunger
Action Against Hunger / Action Contre la Faim (ACF), an international relief and development organization committed to saving the lives of malnourished children and families, provides sustainable access to safe water and long-term solutions to hunger. For nearly three decades, ACF has pursued its vision of a world without hunger by combating hunger in emergency situations of conflict, natural disaster, and chronic food insecurity.Press Contact
Action Against Hunger - USA
James L. PhelanSenior External Relations Officer, ACF-USA
Contact James Phelan
Direct: 212-967-7800 x108
Cell: 646-265-7796















