In landlocked Malawi, climate change and recurrent droughts are challenging people's futures. The World Food Programme (WFP) is using creative ways to help build resilience.
With conflicts raging and hunger on the rise again, what does the man who warned the world about famine see in the forecast? I paid WFP Chief Economist Arif Husain a visit to find out.
Three years of siege have stripped many in the northeastern city of their livelihoods, forcing people like Ali to roam the ruins searching for scraps to survive
The World Food Programme is running out of money to support families like Oppah's — the single mother, who lives in the capital, Harare, receives US$48 a month to feed her three children