A mother feeds her child, who is suffering from malnutrition, next to a doctor in Alban Jadeed hospital, as young children struggling with malnutrition fill wards in the Sharg Elnil area, in Khartoum. Photo: TAYEB SIDDIQ/Reuters
At least 14 million children face hunger and a heightened risk of malnutrition or death this year, Unicef warned last month, as major international donors like the United States slash aid budgets.
The United Nations children’s agency urged governments and philanthropic institutions to contribute to its Child Nutrition Fund to head off a wave of starvation.
Unicef executive director Catherine Russell said great progress had been made in eradicating child hunger since the start of the century, but these gains could quickly be lost.
“Good nutrition is the foundation of child survival and development, with impressive returns on investment,” she said, in a Unicef statement.
“Dividends will be measured in stronger families, societies and countries, and a more stable world,” Russell said.
Since US President Donald Trump returned to office two months ago, his billionaire advisor Elon Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) has gutted the USAID agency.
A judge has ordered a halt to the effort, but Secretary of State Marco Rubio has confirmed that USAID is cancelling 83% of the programmes from its budget of US$42bil (RM186 bil).
Other major donor countries, such as Britain, have recently cut or frozen international aid as they seek to control deficits while boosting defense spending.
But Russell warned that 2.4 million children suffering from acute malnutrition will miss out on Unicef’s “ready-to-use therapeutic food” for the rest of the year.
Up to 2,300 centres providing critical care for kids facing starvation could close, and 28,000 Unicef-supported feeding centers are also at risk.
All in all, Russell warned, 14 million children “are expected to face disruptions to nutrition support and services” this year.
“The funding crisis comes at a time of unprecedented need for children who continue to face record levels of displacement, new and protracted conflicts, disease outbreaks, and the deadly consequences of climate change,” Russell said. – AFP