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World hunger rose in 2017 for a third consecutive year due to conflict and climate change

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  • 16 Nov 2018
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Hunger stalks Asia's booming cities, says U.N. agencies

Hundreds of millions of children and adults in Asia's rapidly expanding cities are undernourished, and will remain so without "inclusive, sustainable and nutrition-sensitive" urban planning, United Nations officials said. The Asia-Pacific region has the world's highest rate of urbanisation, while also being home to more than half the world's 821 million undernourished people, four U.N. agencies said in a report released in Bangkok. "Progress in reducing undernourishment has slowed tremendously," said the regional heads of Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF), the World Food Programme (WFP) and the World Health Organization (WHO). "As migration from rural to urban areas continues apace, particularly involving poorer families, urban malnutrition is a challenge facing many countries," they said in a statement. World hunger rose in 2017 for a third consecutive year due to conflict and climate change, jeopardising a global goal to end the scourge by 2030, the United Nations said in an earlier report. At the same time, more than one in eight adults is now obese, with the Asia-Pacific region recording the fastest growing prevalence of childhood obesity, fuelled by easier access to processed foods rich in salt, fat and sugar. Rapid urbanisation is a key factor in both, the rising levels of malnutrition and obesity, in Asia and the Pacific. China and India, the world's most populous countries, are expected to account for more than a fourth of the projected growth in the global urban population by 2050, adding about 690 million to their cities.

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Thomson Reuters Foundation