Aid
agencies say farmers have been unable to plant or harvest their crops due to
fighting
Some
four million people in South Sudan are likely to face critical food shortages
next month, British aid agencies have warned.
But the
Disasters Emergency Committee says the cost of mounting an appeal to pay for
aid might outweigh donations.
South
Sudan's president has already warned of "one of worst famines ever".
More
than a million people have fled their homes since fighting erupted between
different factions of South Sudan's ruling party last December.
Thousands
have now died in the conflict that started as a political dispute between South
Sudan President Salva Kiir and Riek Machar, his sacked deputy, but escalated
into ethnic violence.
'Slip into famine'
The
Disasters Emergency Committee (DEC) - which brings together 13 UK charities to
deal with international crises - says it currently has less than half of the
money it needs to "prevent the growing food crisis in South Sudan from
turning into a catastrophe".
"If
the conflict in South Sudan continues, and more aid cannot be delivered, then
by August it is likely that some localised areas of South Sudan will slip into
famine," the DEC says in its report, citing international food crisis
experts.
The
committee says the same experts helped predict the seriousness of the East
Africa food crisis in 2011, which led to the first famine of the 21st Century
in Somalia.
It
predicts that responsive emergency work would cost £113m ($194m), but to date
they have only received £56m.
"We
are very concerned... that despite some excellent news coverage of the
situation, public awareness of the crisis in the UK remains very low, making a
successful appeal extremely difficult," said DEC head Saleh Saeed.
Journalists
call dramatic news stories "sexy". And predicting a famine - however
certain the aid agencies are about it - will always be less sexy than the real
thing.
The financing
of humanitarian work depends to a large extent on media coverage - from the
coins put in charity boxes to the much larger sums given by governments.
In this
case the agency experts have even put dates on the coming hunger in South Sudan
- August to November.
It will
be interesting to see how much impact the prediction makes.
It
didn't work in late 2010 when the United Nations and others sounded the alarm
about an impending famine in Somalia and elsewhere in the Horn of Africa.
The
warning bells were more or less ignored and in 2011 the worst hunger crisis
this century has seen so far duly took place.
That was
sexy. We covered that.
Months
of fighting in South Sudan has prevented farmers from planting or harvesting
crops, causing food shortages nationwide.
Last month, South
Sudan, which gained independence from Sudan in 2011, topped the list of fragile
states in this year's index released by The Fund for Peace, a leading US-based
research institute
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