Comment: Haiti cannot build peace on an empty stomach
Story | 7 February 2024
Conflict is the main driver of hunger in most of the world’s food crises, from Sudan to Syria, from Yemen to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, pushing food and nutrition insecurity to historic levels. A sharp escalation of conflict in Palestine has seen hunger levels soar there also. Food insecurity worsens when fighting drives large numbers of people from their homes, land and livelihoods, and when it restricts access to life-saving assistance.
The United Nations Security Council acknowledged the link between conflict and hunger, and condemned the use of starvation as a weapon of war, when it adopted its landmark Resolution 2417 in 2018. This resolution recognizes the need to break the vicious cycle of armed conflict and hunger, and to establish accountability for those who exploit starvation for their own ends.
Zero hunger cannot be achieved without stability, which is why the World Food Programme plays a key role in building pathways to peace. Initial findings from a joint research partnership between WFP and the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute indicated that WFP’s work contributed to improving the prospects for peace by:
As well as investing in research to identify best practices for achieving peace, WFP also supports and partners with peace actors who are mandated and equipped to directly address the structural drivers of conflict and vulnerability.
WFP’s efforts to build pathways to peace were formally recognized in October 2020, when it was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for “its efforts to combat hunger, for its contribution to bettering conditions for peace in conflict-affected areas and for acting as a driving force in efforts to prevent the use of hunger as a weapon of war and conflict”.
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