03/09/2017 “The magnitude of the humanitarian crisis is really difficult to overstate, particularly the food insufficiency challenges and the specter of famine. Enabling access for the humanitarian actors – both the UN humanitarian actors and the implementing partners, the NGOs – in each of the four countries we visited will be absolutely essential to turning back famine and for improving food security, especially for these vulnerable populations, such as mothers and their young children.” – Ambassador Michele Sison By United States Mission to the United Nations | 9 March, 2017 | Topics: Exclude, Highlights | Tags: Archive 2017-2021 Suggested for You Remarks by Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield at a UN Security Council Briefing on the Situation in the Middle East FACT SHEET: United States Announces $49 Billion in Commitments to Global Water Security and Sanitation
“The magnitude of the humanitarian crisis is really difficult to overstate, particularly the food insufficiency challenges and the specter of famine. Enabling access for the humanitarian actors – both the UN humanitarian actors and the implementing partners, the NGOs – in each of the four countries we visited will be absolutely essential to turning back famine and for improving food security, especially for these vulnerable populations, such as mothers and their young children.” – Ambassador Michele Sison