Hunger stalks globe as aid groups forced to cut
By Missy Ryan -Analysis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Strained aid groups are already cutting food assistance to hundreds of thousands of people the world over, raising fears they will be powerless to stem rising hunger in the most vulnerable countries.
The reduction in food aid is a consequence of the dramatic surge in global food and fuel prices, a trend that makes food more dear for the world's poor while eating into aid budgets.
Atlanta-based CARE has cut the size of its rations to the 660,000 people it feeds in Somalia, and warns that it needs an extra $25 million worth of food to feed more than 800,000 people through early August.
"Food stocks will run out mid to end of May ... Numbers of displaced people needing food grow daily and the cost of food keeps going up," said Alina Labrada, a CARE spokeswoman.
Mercy Corps, which distributes baskets of sugar, rice and other food to Iraqi refugees in Syria, is agonizing over whether it will reduce ration sizes or cut needy families.
In southern Sudan, World Vision now expects to feed 59,000 fewer people this year than it had originally planned.
"The reductions are not just confined to one region," said Robert Zachritz, a senior World Vision official.
Overall, global food prices jumped 43 percent in the year through March. That hurts the most in the developing world, where people typically spend over half their income on food. Continued...



