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Heavy floods after drought jeopardize food security in Sudan, UN agency warns
Sudan, Local, 8/23/2001

Extensive floods following two consecutive years of serious drought in northern Sudan have displaced tens of thousands of people, destroyed crops and aggravated the area's already precarious food supply situation, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has warned.

Heavy rains pouring in the Blue Nile catchment areas of the Ethiopian highlands have left many villages and settlements submerged, while water levels in the Nile are reportedly higher than 1988, when the river burst its banks and caused massive destruction, the agency said in a special alert issued at its Rome headquarters.

The worst affected areas are northern and eastern parts along the Nile, including areas around the capital city Khartoum. South Darfur State has also suffered from flash floods due to torrential rains, causing the evacuation of large numbers of inhabited islands on the Nile. However, several villages and towns remain isolated by the floods, with access to those populations limited by damage to main roads and bridges, the agency said.

"The humanitarian situation in the affected areas is reported to be critical and there is an urgent need for international assistance to rescue stranded people and provide them with food, drinking water, medicines and other assistance," FAO said, noting that airlift operations were needed to reach isolated populations.

According to the UN agency, preliminary indications also point to significant crop and livestock losses.

"Over the last two years, lower harvests coupled with virtual depletion of stocks have led to a sharp rise in cereal prices, reducing access to food for the poorer segments of the population," the alert warned. "The purchasing power of large numbers of people, particularly pastoralists, has been seriously eroded. With coping mechanisms stretched to the limit, farmers and other vulnerable groups have migrated in search of work and food. The number of people joining WFP's 'Food for Work' programs has increased dramatically."

FAO and the UN World Food Program (WFP) are planning to field a joint mission to the country in October to assess the outcome of this year's harvest and food supply outlook for 2001-02 including an estimation of the country's food import requirements and food aid needs of the affected population.

Previous Stories:
  Floods in Sudan   (8/16/2001)
  Floods in Sudan   (8/8/2001)
  Khartoum: postponing trial of spying networking   (7/28/2001)

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