Comment O’ The Day—

“The irony is that famine weakens the general health. The young become weak as the old. The hale develop debilitating conditions. The Four Horsemen never ride separately but together. People knew this once.”


 ‘Instead of Coronavirus, the Hunger Will Kill Us.’ A Global Food Crisis Looms. 

NAIROBI, Kenya — In the largest slum in Kenya’s capital, people desperate to eat set off a stampede during a recent giveaway of flour and cooking oil, leaving scores injured and two people dead.
In India, thousands of workers are lining up twice a day for bread and fried vegetables to keep hunger at bay.

And across Colombia, poor households are hanging red clothing and flags from their windows and balconies as a sign that they are hungry.
“We don’t have any money, and now we need to survive,” said Pauline Karushi, who lost her job at a jewelry business in Nairobi, and lives in two rooms with her child and four other relatives. “That means not eating much.”

The coronavirus pandemic has brought hunger to millions of people around the world. National lockdowns and social distancing measures are drying up work and incomes, and are likely to disrupt agricultural production and supply routes — leaving millions to worry how they will get enough to eat.

The coronavirus has sometimes been called an equalizer because it has sickened both rich and poor, but when it comes to food, the commonality ends. It is poor people, including large segments of poorer nations, who are now going hungry and facing the prospect of starving.
“The coronavirus has been anything but a great equalizer,” said Asha Jaffar, a volunteer who brought food to families in the Nairobi slum of Kibera after the fatal stampede. “It’s been the great revealer, pulling the curtain back on the class divide and exposing how deeply unequal this country is.”
Already, 135 million people had been facing acute food shortages, but now with the pandemic, 130 million more could go hungry in 2020, said Arif Husain, chief economist at the World Food Program, a United Nations agency. Altogether, an estimated 265 million people could be pushed to the brink of starvation by year’s end.

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  1. Can’t speak for Nairobi, but here in Colombia that’s definitely happening. The government ordered a nationwide lockdown with very narrowly worded exceptions, causing millions to lose their jobs. And the vast majority have no reserves built up, of cash OR supplies. The church here is doing what it can, but it’s a drop in the bucket. We’re operating on the principle of “help the one in front of you”. Even when funds are available the rationing by the different stores makes it interesting trying to get things together for food baskets. We’re allowed out to shop three days in the week (some other cities only allow one or two days for necessary excursions). The lockdown also affects peoples’ mental health, which in turn impacts their physical health. Looking at Taiwan’s response and results makes me wonder what’s wrong with the rest of the world’s leadership. They didn’t find it necessary to hamstring their economy in order to get a grip on the virus threat.

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