23 November 2016 (UN News): Post-disaster assessments by the United Nations food security and emergency food relief agencies in hurricane-hit Haiti have revealed “extensive” damage to crops, livestock and fisheries as well as to infrastructure such as irrigation – with the most affected areas having up to 100 per cent crop damage or destruction.
According to a situation report issued yesterday by the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), local food production and livelihoods have been “almost destroyed” in the south-west departments of Grand'Anse and Sud, where Hurricane Matthew first made landfall in early October.
“With much of the country relying on subsistence production to meet their food needs, restoring agriculture and fishery-based livelihoods is critical to avoid dependency on food aid in the coming months,” said FAO in the report.
The storm also aggravated the effects of El Niño-related events, including a drought that had already reduced food production and access to fresh water over the past year, severely impacting the capacity of Haitians to purchase food to eat or agricultural inputs to resume production.
Based on an emergency food security assessment, conducted by FAO, UN World Food Programme and the country's National Commission on Food Security, some 1.4 million Haitians are estimated to need humanitarian assistance of which 806,000 are in need of urgent food aid.