Sudan government rejects UN-backed famine declaration

CAIRO:

The Sudanese government strongly rejected on Sunday a report backed by the United Nations which determined that famine had spread to five areas of the war-torn country.

 

The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) review, which UN agencies use, follows repeated warnings from the United Nations, other aid groups and the United States about the hunger situation in the northeast African country.

 

IPC said last week that the war between Sudan’s army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) had created famine conditions for 638,000 people, with a further 8.1 million on the brink of mass starvation.

 

The army-aligned government “categorically rejects the IPC’s description of the situation in Sudan as a famine”, the foreign ministry said in a statement.

 

The statement called the report “essentially speculative” and accused the IPC of procedural and transparency failings.

 

It said the team did not have access to updated field data and had not consulted with the government’s technical team on the final version before publication.

 

The IPC did not immediately respond to AFP’s request for comment. On its website, IPC says its process is “evidence-based” and ensures “a rigorous, neutral analysis.”

 

On August 1, the IPC had already declared a famine at Zamzam camp for displaced people near El-Fasher, a city in Sudan’s western Darfur region besieged by the RSF.

 

At a press conference in the Red Sea city of Port Sudan, the government’s commissioner for humanitarian aid, Salwa Adam Benya, said “the rumours of famine in Sudan are pure fabrication,” Sudan’s state news agency reported.

 

Along with representatives from the agriculture, media and foreign ministries, she said some aid agencies were using “food as a pretext” to push political agendas

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