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Comment/ Opinion

World ‘hunger map’ shows how conflict is feeding on human misery

Haya Al Hussein says food is not just a humanitarian issue but a security one, too, and appeals to the moral consciousness of a world with a shared destiny

Displaced Somali women queue for food handouts in a camp outside Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia, on March, 27. Somalia's drought is threatening 3 million lives, the UN says, and aid agencies are calling for more urgent support to prevent the crisis from worsening. Photo: AP

The World Food Programme’s global “hunger map” is a colour-coded guide to malnourishment. The latest version is also a pretty reliable map of the world’s conflict zones.

There is a strong and symbiotic relationship between hunger and conflict. Famines in places as diverse as Ireland, China, Ethiopia and India have all fed into political upheaval. People fight over food. Combatants use it as a weapon of war. Terrorists use it as a recruiting tool. A UN Food and Agriculture Organisation report last year said civil conflicts were a primary cause of food insecurity in 21 of the 39 countries where the population lacked sufficient access to food.
Women comfort their acutely malnourished children at a stabilisation centre in Ganyiel, South Sudan, on March 4. Photo: AFP
Women comfort their acutely malnourished children at a stabilisation centre in Ganyiel, South Sudan, on March 4. Photo: AFP

We do not need a map to know that South Sudan, Somalia, Syria and Libya are suffering the double blow of war and hunger. South Sudan recently became the first country since Somalia in 2011 to meet the official criteria for famine.

Watch: Nutrition expert warns of looming catastrophe in South Sudan

In Somalia, al-Shabab, an al-Qaeda affiliate, has blocked humanitarian aid to some areas and is reportedly using stolen aid to seek support. Both sides in Syria’s six-year-old conflict have used war to starve enemies into submission.

People will kill to feed their children – and extremists use food to recruit killers

Hunger makes people desperate. It strips away human dignity, and without dignity, there can be no peace. In my travels as a UN Messenger of Peace focused on hunger and extreme poverty, I have seen what can happen when the need for food goes unmet. I have seen the mood in food distribution lines change from docile hope to menacing panic. People will kill to feed their children – and extremists use food to recruit killers. Jabhat al-Nusra, an al-Qaeda branch in Syria, has social media videos showing its fighters enjoying a lavish meal. Islamic State also likes to give the impression that its followers are well fed. In Iraq, residents fleeing IS-controlled Falluja last year reported that the extremists offered to share food supplies with families that supplied a fighting-age recruit.

In parts of Nigeria, Boko Haram militants are exploiting growing hunger to gain recruits. “There is no food at all,” Senator Abdul-Aziz Nyako said last year. “We have people in our constituency moving out to join Boko Haram just to eat.”

A soldier patrols the streets of Bama, in northeast Nigeria, last December 8. The once-bustling trade hub was razed by Boko Haram jihadists, in a conflict that has displaced more than 2.6 million people in northeast Nigeria. Photo: AFP
A soldier patrols the streets of Bama, in northeast Nigeria, last December 8. The once-bustling trade hub was razed by Boko Haram jihadists, in a conflict that has displaced more than 2.6 million people in northeast Nigeria. Photo: AFP

The lesson in all this is that food is not just a humanitarian issue, it is also a security issue. Our common humanity should be enough reason for individuals and governments to help. But if that is not good enough, perhaps self-interest will be a motivator.

My father saw the connection between personal and national security. He put it this way: “We need a sense of security in our private and national lives ... We need opportunities for our own development, and faith in the moral conscience of the world and in our own destiny.” He was right.

Princess Haya Al Hussein, the daughter of the late King Hussein of Jordan, has been a UN Messenger of Peace since 2007