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Worsening hunger crises stoke global migration - U.N. study

Subsistence farmer Joice Chimedza harvests maize on her small plot in Norton, a farming town 40km west of Zimbabwe's capital Harare. After the drought, the fall armyworm is threatening crops from Congo to South Africa. Photo: Philimon Bulawayo/ Reuters
Subsistence farmer Joice Chimedza harvests maize on her small plot in Norton, a farming town 40km west of Zimbabwe's capital Harare. After the drought, the fall armyworm is threatening crops from Congo to South Africa. Photo: Philimon Bulawayo/ Reuters

The more people go hungry at home the more likely they are to migrate, according to a United Nations study released on Friday as the world grapples with four potential famines simultaneously for the first time in recent history.

The number of people fleeing a country increases by 1.9 percent for each percentage increase of food insecurity, the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) said in the first report to comprehensively analyse the link between hunger and migration.

Prolonged conflict also pushes more people to abandon their homes, with refugee outflows increasing 0.4 percent for each additional year of war, the analysis said.

"By understanding the dynamics that compel people to move, we can better address what lies at the heart of forced migration and what must be done to end their suffering," said WFP Executive Director David Beasley.

More than 20 million people risk dying from starvation because of drought and conflict in Yemen, Somalia, South Sudan and northeast Nigeria, while more than 100 million face acute malnutrition worldwide, according to the United Nations.

Famine was declared in some areas of South Sudan in February - the first official famine in six years.

The WFP study, which included interviews with migrants from 10 countries, also found that hunger fuelled conflicts with reports of people joining armed groups to feed their families.

In turn, war makes food more scarce.

"We had to eat grass to survive. My kids stayed up all night crying because they were hungry," a woman who fled Syria to Jordan with her family was quoted as saying.

A record 65.3 million people were uprooted worldwide in 2015, according to U.N. data.

Some 1.6 million refugees and migrants reached the European Union in 2014-2016 leading to disputes on how to share the burden among member states. (Reporting by Umberto Bacchi @UmbertoBacchi, Editing by Ros Russell and Belinda Goldsmith; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, property rights, climate change and resilience.

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