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Southern Africa - Disaster Response Fact Sheet #9, Fiscal Year (FY) 2017

Countries
Madagascar
+ 8 more
Sources
USAID
Publication date

HIGHLIGHTS

  • Due to improved harvests, FEWS NET projects Minimal levels of food insecurity in Southern Africa through January 2018, with pockets of Stressed or Crisis levels in some countries

  • Relief actors provide targeted assistance to vulnerable populations to facilitate continued recovery

  • USAID/OFDA provides approximately $26 million in new funding to support cyclone- and drought-affected populations in the region

KEY DEVELOPMENTS

  • Following the 2015/2016 El Niño-induced drought, food security conditions in Southern Africa have improved due to favorable crop conditions, decreased food prices, and strong harvest yields that have enabled populations to rely on household food stocks, the UN reports. As a result, households in most areas of the region are experiencing Minimal—IPC 1—levels of food insecurity, expected to persist through January 2018, according to the USAID-funded Famine Early Warnings System Network (FEWS NET).4 However, vulnerable populations in some countries, including Madagascar,
    Mozambique, and Zimbabwe, may experience Stressed—IPC 2—levels of acute food insecurity between June and September and Crisis—IPC 3—levels between October 2017 and January 2018 due to limited livelihood options, slow recovery from the drought, as well as cyclones that struck Madagascar and Mozambique in early 2017, FEWS NET reports.

  • Humanitarian actors continue to provide agriculture, nutrition, and water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) assistance to vulnerable communities, including cyclone-affected populations in Madagascar and Mozambique.

  • To date in FY 2017, the U.S. Government has provided more than $84 million—including nearly $50 million from USAID/FFP and nearly $35 million from USAID/OFDA—in humanitarian assistance to meet the emergency food, nutrition, shelter, and WASH needs of disaster-affected populations across Southern Africa.