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Funding
shortfall forces WFP to cut back feeding
IRIN News
October 10, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=55889
JOHANNESBURG - The UN's World Food
Programme has warned that it will have to cut back on feeding vulnerable
Southern Africans because it does not have the funds to carry programmes
through the lean season.
The aid agency will be facing a regional
shortfall of US$60 million between December 2006 and March 2007,
and has already scaled down some of its operations in Zimbabwe,
affecting some 450,000 people. It has cut back the urban feeding
programme, reduced school-feeding projects from 17 districts to
14, and suspended mobile feeding in rural areas.
WFP is expected to feed at least four
million people in the region until March next year, when the next
harvest is due.
Underlining the lack of donor response,
WFP's regional director for Southern Africa, Amir Abdulla, commented,
"Needs in other parts of the world, as in Darfur, are very pressing
[and] perhaps more visible ... the tragedy is being played on TV
every night ... the sad truth is that in the Southern African context,
people will die because they did not get food to eat, but they will
be recorded as deaths due to AIDS-related illnesses in clinics."
He said the agency had been scaling
down its operations throughout the year to ensure it had food pipelines
open in the region until the end of 2006, but "further reductions
in operations may have to take place if resources do not improve."
Zimbabwe and Swaziland have been identified
as the most vulnerable countries, in a region which overall has
seen good rainfall this year.
The May 2006 Zimbabwe Vulnerability
assessment, yet to be released, identified 1.4 million people as
critically in need of food assistance. WFP requires at least $17
million just to get Zimbabwe through the lean season between harvests.
Chronic food insecurity has persisted
in Swaziland, which has the world's highest HIV infection rate.
Poverty has been exacerbated by retrenchments in the textile industry,
and the South African mines, where generations of Swazi men have
toiled.
Last year's hotspot, Malawi, despite
having recorded its best harvest in five years, still has at least
833,000 people in need of food aid, as some of its districts had
a poor season.
But a good overall crop has given Malawi
time to explore ways to achieve food security. "Last year's drought,
which left almost five million Malawians in need, was an eye-opener
for the government. They are seriously considering irrigation schemes
and pursuing farming input programmes," said Evance Chapasuka, deputy
director of the Famine Early Warning Systems Network, a US-funded
organisation that monitors food security.
Abdulla pointed out that donors had
to appreciate that food aid helped to protect "people's coping mechanisms".
WFP's development aid temporarily freed the poor of the need to
provide food for their families, giving them time and resources
to invest in lasting assets such as better houses, clinics and schools,
new agricultural skills and technology.
Abdulla stressed that although the
region had emerged from a five-year dry spell, it had to be prepared.
"Weather patterns indicate that there will be another period of
drought."
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