By Bradley on Monday, 14 October 2024
Category: General News

Tackling Rising Malnutrition in Namibia

BY: BEN SCHERNICK, 2 October 2024 | Rising malnutrition cases and deaths in Namibia, especially among children under the age of five, have been reported in the news for a few years now, with poverty, growing inequalities, and extreme droughts making the situation even worse. By September 2024, over 75% of Namibian’s were projected to be to some degree food insecure (www.nafsan.org/facts-and-figures). Given the gravity of the situation, only multi-sectoral and genuinely collaborative efforts by various stakeholders, together with innovative and sustainable (long-term thinking) approaches can make a real difference.

In 2021, Namibia’s government, under the leadership of the Office of the Prime Minister, revised the comprehensive Food and Nutrition Security Policy - www.nafsan.org/nfns). but effective coordination mechanism for its implementation are yet to be put in place.

On our part, NAFSAN and its member organisations from civil society, academic institutions and temporarily also the private sector, have been working in various ways to improve food and nutrition security at community level, while advocating on national and regional level for better coordination and more investments into sustainable bottom-up initiatives.

Over the past months, we have been engaged in the following:

More information/updates: www.nafsan.org/our-newsletter

*Ben Schernick (director@nafsan.org) is the Director of the Nutrition and Food Security Alliance of Namibia (NAFSAN). This article was submitted for the CIVIC BEAT Newsletter (September Edition) call for submissions.

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