David Stevenson

David Stevenson

official Nigeria

David Stevenson is the head of the World Food Programme (WFP) in Nigeria, who has reported that nearly 31 million people are suffering from acute hunger in the country and warned of a critical budget deficit that threatens to suspend emergency food and nutritional aid for 1.3 million people in the northeastern region.

Global Media Ratings
Dominance
0.00%
Persistence
0 wks
Reach
12,207
Power
414$
Sentiment
8.54
Countries Mentioned
Country Mentions Sentiment Dominance + Persistence x Population = Reach x GDP (millions) = Power
Jamaica 1 7.00 0.10% +0% 2,961,167 3,050 $15,000 15$
United Arab Emirates 1 9.00 0.09% +0% 9,890,400 9,158 $430,000 398$
Totals 2 12,851,567 12,208 $445,000 413$
Interactive World Map

Each country's color is based on "Mentions" from the table above.

Recent Mentions

United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates: David Stevenson is a co-author and professor of pediatrics who aims to build a new classification for prematurity. 9

Al Ittihad: خريطة صحية دقيقة للخُدّج بفضل الذكاء الاصطناعي

Jamaica Jamaica: David Stevenson, WFP’s Nigeria Country Director, warned of catastrophic humanitarian consequences due to funding cuts. 7

The Gleaner – major Jamaican newspaper, est. 1834: UN warns of ‘catastrophic’ hunger crisis in Nigeria as food aid funding runs out | World News

Taiwan Taiwan: UN World Food Programme (WFP) in Nigeria country director David Stevenson reported that nearly 31 million people face acute hunger. 5

Taipei Times – major English newspaper in Taiwan, est. 1999: Over 600 children die from malnutrition in Nigeria

Slovakia Slovakia: David Stevenson, head of the World Food Programme (WFP) for Nigeria, reported that nearly 31 million people across the country are facing acute hunger. 5

SME – major Slovak daily, est. 1993: V Nigérii zomrelo za pol roka vyše 600 podvyživených detí, tvrdia Lekári bez hraníc

Kenya Kenya: David Stevenson, chief of the UN's food agency (WFP) in Nigeria, reported on the critical funding shortfalls affecting emergency aid. 5

The Standard: Over 600 malnourished children die in six months in Nigeria: MSF