Starving in Silence: The Case for an African Commission Resolution on Conflict-Induced Starvation in Africa

An advocacy piece

 

Maram Mahdi

Harry Mwesigwa

Sohna Jawara

 

1  Introduction

Starvation is no longer reducible to drought, market failure or developmental lag in Africa. In conflict settings, hunger has been engineered as a weapon of war. Civilians are deprived of the means of survival not by accident but by design, through siege, the obstruction of relief convoys, the deliberate destruction of crops, and the targeting of marketplaces. The implications are stark, violating the most basic rights to dignity, health and life. In 2025, approximately 147 million people globally experienced acute food insecurity as a result of conflict.

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