|
Back to Index
New
food security tool first for the region
IRIN News
April 23, 2008
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=77891
Zimbabwe will
be the first country in Southern Africa to adopt a new food security
analysis tool, developed in Somalia in 2004.
The Integrated Food Security
Phase Classification Framework (IPC) categorizes the severity of
a situation using a five-phase scale ranging from "generally
food secure" to "famine/humanitarian catastrophe",
based on comprehensive data on the impact of a crisis on food security
and nutrition. The Food Security Analysis Unit of the UN Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Somalia developed the tool.
FAO's Luca Alinovi told
IRIN that during the training process in Zimbabwe, an IPC prototype
analysis using real data from four Zimbabwean districts was produced.
"We hope to have a map with the analysis ready by August, and
the tool is expected to be adopted by the country sometime later
this year, pending government validation of the first results."
The tool allows different
agencies and stakeholders to use a common set of definitions and
standards - a 'common currency' - for classifying the severity of
diverse crisis scenarios and their impact on human lives and livelihoods,
making it easier for aid agencies to compare disasters in other
parts of the world and plan and prioritise their response accordingly.
A new report by leading
aid analysts at the Boston-based, Tufts University in the US described
the IPC as "the best means the food security community now
has to address the issue of impartial allocation of resources".
The authors, Daniel Maxwell,
Patrick Webb, Jennifer Coates and James Wirth, highlighted the need
for the humanitarian community to respond to crises impartially,
but said a well-balanced assessment "requires the capacity
to make comparisons across very different contexts so as to be able
to allocate resources according to real comparisons of need,"
which made the IPC very effective.
One-third of Zimbabwe's
population, or about four million people, are receiving food aid
in a country struggling with succesive years of food insecurity
brought on by drought, a declining economy, and a mismanaged land
reform programme.
FAO's Kisan Gunjal, who
will lead the FAO/WFP joint Crop and Food supply assessment mission
in Zimbabwe later this month, said: "The IPC could prove to
be extremely useful to Zim VAC [Vulnerability Assessment Committee]
to help identify the critical areas, the likely estimates of vulnerable
populations and the time-frame when food is expected to run out,
and the degree of vulnerability, which will help government agencies
take action in time."
Work on the IPC, which
is being rolled out in East and Central Africa, has begun in Burundi,
Democratic Republic of Congo, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, and North
and South Sudan.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|