UNITED NATIONS—The widespread outbreak of Ebola in West Africa, which has resulted in over 4,500 deaths so far, is also threatening to trigger a food crisis in the three countries already plagued by poverty and hunger.
Dr. Shenggen Fan, director general of the Washington-based International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), told Inter Press Service (IPS) the crisis is expected to be confined mostly to the countries directly affected by the spreading disease: Liberia, Sierra Leone and Guinea.
Asked whether the food shortages will also reach countries outside West Africa, he said Ebola is triggering a food crisis through a series of interrelated factors, including farmer deaths, labor shortages, rising transportation costs and rising food prices.
“Within these countries, where undernourishment has long been a problem, the food crisis may persist for decades,” Fan warned.
And because Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia are all net food-importing countries, the Ebola-triggered food crisis is unlikely to spread to other countries in the region or beyond, Fan added.
Global food prices tend to have transmission effects on regional or national food prices, but for small markets (on a global scale) such as these three countries, the transmission effect of food prices is unlikely to pass beyond their own boundaries—so long as the disease itself is not transmitted, Fan said.
According to the latest figures released by the World Health Organisation (WHO), there are over 9,000 cases of Ebola, including 4,262 cases in Liberia, 3,410 in Sierra Leone and 1,519 in Guinea.
The death toll is highest in Liberia (2,484), followed by Sierra Leone (1,200) and Guinea (862).
UN Spokesman Stéphane Dujarric told reporters on Monday the WHO has declared Nigeria free of Ebola virus transmission, after 42 days without a single case. WHO called it “a spectacular success story that shows that Ebola can be contained.”
“Such a story can help the many other developing countries that are deeply worried by the prospect of an imported Ebola case and are eager to improve their preparedness plans,” he said. Dujarric said the announcement comes only a few days after Senegal was also declared Ebola-free.
He said the trust fund set up by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon to battle the deadly disease now has about $8.8 million in deposits and $5.0 million in commitments. In total, $43.5 million have been pledged and the secretary-general continues to urge countries to turn these pledges into action as soon as possible. He expressed regrets over the Ebola-related death of a UN-Women staff member in Sierra Leone. Her spouse is currently receiving treatment. “All measures to protect staff at the duty station in Sierra Leone are being taken as best as possible under the current circumstances,” Dujarric said.
This includes decontamination of the UN clinic, disposal of the isolation facility and contact tracing, he added.
In a statement released on Tuesday, IFPRI painted a grim picture of the situation facing all three countries.
Schools in Sierra Leone have closed, shutting down critical feeding programs for children. And restrictions on the consumption of bush meat, the suspected source of Ebola, have eliminated a traditional source of protein and nutrition from local diets.
“In addition, the costs of staple foods, including rice and cassava are rising precipitously in the affected areas as crops are abandoned and as labor shortages grow,” the statement added.
Food that would be imported from these areas is not making its way to other regions, either.
“So, as we weigh the dangers of this dreaded disease, we must not forget the very real threats it poses to food security,” IFPRI warned.
“The global community must come together to ensure that there are safety nets to protect not only those infected with the disease, but also those whose access to food is severely affected,” IFPRI added.
Asked to identify these safety nets, Fan told IPS these safety nets, which could be in the form of cash or in-kind transfers (context-specificity is important here), should be accompanied with nutrition and health interventions.
For example, a conditional cash-transfer program linked to health can help improve access to nutritious foods, particularly when prices are high, while promoting health service use, he added.
“This is important, because investing in the nutrition and health of vulnerable populations could lower the mortality rate of diseases like Ebola, as nutritional status and infection are intricately linked.”
In the post-Ebola era, Fan said, combined social protection and agricultural support interventions will be crucial to build resilience to future livelihood shocks.
Asked how many people will be affected by this impending food crisis, he said with Ebola claiming lives of thousands of people in Sierra Leone, Guinea and Liberia, the mounting food crisis is impacting thousands more.
Recent efforts by the World Food Programme to provide food assistance to around 1.3 million people in these three countries indicate an idea of the scope of the current crisis.
Thalif Deen / Inter Press Service