Global perspective Human stories

After drought and failed harvests, people of Madagascar reduced to eating mud 

After drought and failed harvests, people of Madagascar reduced to eating mud 

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After years of drought, and with what little the people of Madagascar have managed to grow, destroyed by flashflooding, more than 1.3 million are in crisis - and some are even eating ground-up clay just to survive. 

Movement restrictions relating to COVID-19 have also made it impossible for the poorest of the poor to find work to tide them over the lean season, the World Food Programme, WFP, has warned. 

In an interview with UN News’s Daniel Johnson, WFP’s regional director for southern Africa, Lola Castro, explains how the UN agency is helping by empowering communities to withstand future climate shocks

Audio Credit
Daniel Johnson, UN News - Geneva
Audio
11'14"
Photo Credit
© WFP/Tsiory Andriantsoarana