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Governments must not turn their back on the Sahel, Oxfam and others warn

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In reaction to the postponement of the Sahel donor conference, which was due to take place on 18 June, Oxfam together with Action Against Hunger, CARE International, Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), and Save the Children, warned of a "hunger pandemic" in the Sahel on top of multiple crises, particularly as a result of COVID-19, conflict and the onset of the lean season. 24 million people (included children) are already in need of urgent humanitarian assistance.

"Faced with the urgency of the situation in the Sahel and at a time when the hunger gap between July and August will further worsen the situation for millions of people, the postponement of the donor conference is a further blow that could be fatal for millions of people in the Sahel. Hunger does not wait. The international community cannot abandon the Sahel at a time when people need help the most. We are at a breaking point," the aid agencies said.

As violence and massacres continue, forcing more people to flee their homes, their needs are huge and pressing. At the same time funding is scarce and slow, with only 26 percent or less of the humanitarian response plans in the Sahel are funded for the first half of 2020, and in 2019.

COVID-19 has exacerbated the humanitarian and food crises. 5.5 million people are expected to be food insecure in the Central Sahel during the lean season, 2.5 times higher than the average rate in the last five years. While countries' measures to slow the spread of the virus have prevented a COVID-19 worst-case scenario, they have made people more vulnerable, especially those already worst off.

In Kaya, Burkina Faso, in April 2020, internally displaced people (IDPs) in Kaya protested in front of the town hall, calling for help. The situation is dramatically worse for women who are depriving themselves of food to save their children, whose health could rapidly deteriorate from lack of food.

"Coronavirus came and changed everything in my life," said 15-year-old Ali, who lives in Niger's Maradi region. "I used to be able to eat at least three times a day, now I can barely eat twice a day. My father doesn't go out much anymore to look for money like he used to,” he said.

"The COVID-19 pandemic has added further pressure to an already untenable situation. The lean season has always been a difficult time for people in the Sahel. But with the current situation, and the added dangers of this season, when the rains will come and increase cases of malaria and cholera, it is a time-bomb. With the current disease and pandemic, access to essential health services and water today is even more essential and largely lacking", said the organizations.

"This disease scares us. We are told that we need hygiene, but we don't have water, we don't have food," said Zara, an IDP in Kaya. "With the rainy season coming, we will soon need shelter and medicines too,” she said.

"Faced with this unprecedented situation, several heads of state have proclaimed the need to show solidarity with Africa. Today, this expression of goodwill does not translate into effective action. Humanitarian donors urgently need to at least double their humanitarian funding for the Sahel over the next two months," said the organizations.

The international community must support Sahel countries’ efforts to deal with the multiple challenges they face. For 2020 according to OCHA, 2.8 billion US Dollars are needed in the Sahel to provide vital aid to 24 million people. An extra $638 million has been requested to respond to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Notes to editors

The Sahel crisis in numbers:

  • The number of victims’ attacks by armed groups has increased fivefold in three years in Burkina Faso, Mali, and Niger. More than 4,000 deaths from this violence were reported in 2019 in these 3 countries, compared to 770 deaths in 2016 (source: UN).
  • For 2020 according to OCHA, 2.8 billion US Dollars are needed in the Sahel to provide vital aid to 24 million people. At the end of March 2020, only 13% of Burkina Faso’s response plan was funded.
  • Half of the 24 million people in need of humanitarian assistance are children (source: OCHA).
  • In the Sahel, there are more than 2.5 million internally displaced persons, refugees, or repatriated refugees (source: UNHCR). In Burkina Faso alone, there are 921,000 Internally Displaced Persons, 400,000 more than at the beginning of this year (source: CONASUR). In Mali, 99,055 new displacements have been recorded since the beginning of the year (source: RRM / Rapid Response Mechanism).
  • An estimated 5.5 million people are expected to be food insecure in the Central Sahel (Niger, Mali, Burkina Faso) during the lean season, 2.5 times the average for the last five years. The increase is most pronounced in Burkina Faso (+213%) and in Mali (+142%) (source: Analyses of the Harmonized Framework / Cadre Harmonisé, March 2020). The analyses show that the concentration of food insecurity is mainly in the Liptako Gourma area. These figures do not take into account the presumed impact of the covid19.

Contact information

Oxfam has spokespeople in the Sahel. For interviews please contact:

Claire Le Privé I Regional media and communication advisor | Oxfam in West Africa I based in Dakar, Senegal (GMT)

(+221) 78 140 47 93 Claire.LePrive@oxfam.org

For updates, please follow @Oxfam

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