About 4.35 million people are experiencing high levels of acute food insecurity between August 2023 and February 2024 with 1.4 million people classified in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency) and around 2.95 million people are in IPC Phase 3 (Crisis). No humanitarian food assistance has been confirmed for the projected period of March to June 2024, therefore, it is estimated the number of people in Phase 3 will likely increase to 3.03 million (31 percent of the population) – bringing the total population in need of urgent action to 45 percent.
Of the 32 areas analysed, five are classified in IPC Phase 4 (Emergency), including Grand-Anse department (Grand Anse HT 07 and 08, with the exception of the town of Jérémie), poor districts of Port-au-Prince, Cité Soleil, and the west livelihood zone HT07, comprising the communes to the north of Port-au-Prince and the Palmes area.
Haiti continues to experience heightened gang activity, with increased kidnappings, armed attacks, robberies and sexual violence. This has forced major internal displacement to take place – particularly in the Port-au-Prince metropolitan area and the Artibonite valley (Analysis zone Artibonite HT04). Insecurity also continues to disrupt access to markets and the movement of people and goods including agricultural products. Rainfall deficits and drought also continue to affect Haiti, in addition to the periodical impact of natural disasters that continue to significantly affect people and livelihoods.
Year of publication | |
Geographic coverage | Haiti |
Originally published | 26 Sep 2023 |
Related organisation(s) | IPC - Integrated Food Security Phase Classification |
Knowledge service | Metadata | Global Food and Nutrition Security | Food security and food crises | Early warning systemExtreme weather eventCountries affected by conflictFood price crisis |
Digital Europa Thesaurus (DET) | hungerhumanitarian aidfood aidprice of agricultural produceinflationagricultural productionMonitoring |