FAO emergencies and resilience

Western and Central Africa

©FAO/Country: Niger

Western and Central Africa continue to face protracted insecurity and political instability, with conflicts in Central Sahel and the Lake Chad Basin (Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Mali, the Niger and Nigeria), and persistent armed violence in Central African countries such as in the Central African Republic. The impacts of such challenges are compounded by climate extremes, disease outbreaks and economic crises, including due to the socioeconomic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic. Extreme poverty in the region has increased and the combined effects of these factors have led to a deterioration of food insecurity and malnutrition, especially in conflict-affected areas. This includes the Democratic Republic of the Congo – still the world’s largest food crisis.

News
News
FAO receives USD 4 million from the Regional Humanitarian Fund to save lives and protect the livelihoods of the most vulnerable households in Chad
25/05/2026

Thanks to a critical contribution of USD 4 million from the Regional Humanitarian Fund, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations...

Publications
Publications
FAO’s Global Emergency and Resilience Appeal 2026
12/2025

Acute food insecurity has nearly tripled since 2016, while humanitarian funding is falling back to 2016 levels. Rising needs cannot be met by doing...

Publications
Chad: Emergency and Resilience Plan, 2026–2028 (In French)
12/2025

Chad is facing an unprecedented humanitarian crisis that affects more than one‑third of its population, despite substantial and rapidly increasing investments...

Publications
Impacts of displacement: The socioeconomic effects of displacement in Tangaza and Tureta, Nigeria
11/2025

Over the past decade, Northwest Nigeria has faced persistent conflict, insecurity and violence.

Multimedia