
New WFP Report Shows Access to Food Grossly Unequal as Coronavirus Adds to Challenges
A new report exposes the destructive impact of conflict, climate change and economic crises, now compounded by COVID-19, in driving up hunger.

A new report exposes the destructive impact of conflict, climate change and economic crises, now compounded by COVID-19, in driving up hunger.

Hungry Nigerian families are being plunged deeper into poverty during coronavirus. We’re getting creative with our delivery solutions.

Zimbabweans were already struggling with climate- and recession-caused hunger when COVID-19 hit. We’re getting cash to families across the country – and quickly.

This is what happens when you take 240,000 refugees in Tanzania, mix in the latest digital solutions, and then feed the data into cutting-edge visualization tools.

Conflict, violence and coronavirus have left people without access to food and livelihoods in the Cabo Delgado region of Mozambique.

With food prices skyrocketing in Libya during the pandemic, we’re scaling up to get locally produced, ready-to-eat food to the people who need it most.

The flooding is the worst Sudan has seen in nearly a century. We’re scaling up to help thousands of devastated families across the country.

The U.N. World Food Programme is the sole UN agency in Egypt that provides food security to the most vulnerable populations, making this investment all the more crucial.

We need another $172 million over the next six months to keep millions of kids and families from starving in the face of violent conflict and displacement.

Zimbabwean families are eating less, selling their belongings and going into debt to buy food. Without our help, millions will face increasingly ravaging hunger.