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Aid agencies have warned that millions of people are likely to face hunger and disease in 2016 due to the strongest El Nino weather on record.
Experts say the weather phenomenon is set to worsen droughts in some areas, while increasing flooding in others.
Some of the worst impacts are likely to be felt in Africa with food shortages expected to peak in February.
Regions including the Caribbean, Central and South America will also be hit in the next six months.
This periodic weather event, which tends to drive up global temperatures and disturb weather patterns, has helped push 2015 into the record books as the world’s warmest year.
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