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Major
food appeal for Zimbabwe as WFP relief distributions begin
World
Food Programme
October
09, 2008
http://www.wfp.org/english/?ModuleID=137&Key=2955
With more than five million
Zimbabweans facing severe food shortages, WFP today appealed for
US$140 million to provide vital relief rations over the next six
months. Without additional contributions, WFP warned it will run
out of stocks in January - at the very peak of the crisis.
"Millions of Zimbabweans
have already run out of food or are surviving on just one meal a
day - and the crisis is going to get much worse in the coming
months," said Mustapha Darboe, WFP Regional Director for East,
Central and Southern Africa.
"WFP can prevent
this crisis from becoming a disaster but we need more donations
- and we need them now."
Critical
situation
According to the FAO/WFP
Crop and Food Supply Assessment Mission, more than 2 million people
are already in need of assistance. This figure will rise to 5.1
million - or 45 percent of the population - in early
2009. WFP is planning to assist around 4 million of those affected.
The situation is already
critical in many rural areas, particularly in the worst affected
southern districts but also in some districts in the east, centre
and northwest of the country. A large number of farmers harvested
little - if anything - this year and have now exhausted
their meagre stocks. Many hungry families are reportedly living
on one meal a day, exchanging precious livestock for buckets of
maize or eating wild foods such as baobab and amarula.
Delayed by the government's
three-month suspension of most NGO field activities, WFP and its
NGO partners began distributing monthly emergency rations under
the large-scale vulnerable group feeding programme at the start
of October, targeting rural communities worst affected by this year's
very poor harvest.
Life-saving
food assistance
Tens of thousands of
beneficiaries have already received life-saving food assistance
under this programme over the past week and WFP hopes to reach 1.8
million by the end of the month. Operations will be scaled up to
around 3.3 million in the first three months of 2009 before the
main cereal harvest begins in April.
In addition, WFP is targeting
around 800,000 people each month under its separate safety-net programmes
- taking its overall caseload to around 2.5 million in October
and more than 4 million in the first three months of 2009.
Given the nationwide
nature of the food shortages, WFP will expand its relief programme
to 37 districts - five more than in previous years. WFP will
also enhance the nutritional quality of its food basket by adding
corn-soya blend to its basic mix of cereals, pulses and vegetable
oil to help prevent malnutrition rates from rising.
Malnourished
children
In Zimbabwe, 28 percent
of children under five are already chronically malnourished.
To boost its already-substantial
logistics operation, WFP has opened a new transhipment point in
the central town of Gweru and a new warehouse in the South African
border town of Musina, which has the capacity to bag 50,000 tons
of food over the next six months.
But these plans are all
subject to sufficient donations arriving in time. WFP currently
faces a shortfall of over 145,000 metric tons of food, including
110,000 tons of cereals. Without extra donations, WFP will run out
of supplies in January - just as needs are peaking.
Donations
"Our donors have
been extraordinarily generous over the past six years, but the food
crisis is far from over. We are urging them to dig deep once again,"
said Darboe, adding that cash donations will allow WFP to purchase
crucial commodities regionally.
In addition to WFP's
beneficiaries, a group of US-sponsored NGOs known as C-SAFE plans
to provide food to over 1 million Zimbabweans in districts not covered
by WFP. With these two humanitarian pipelines, food assistance should
reach around 5 million people at the peak of the crisis.
While WFP has received
almost US$175 million so far in 2008, another US$140 million is
urgently needed to fund WFP's huge emergency operation until
April 2009.
Donors to WFP's
operations in Zimbabwe in 2008 include: United States (US$105 million);
United Kingdom (US$18 million); Australia (US$14 million); Netherlands
(US$11 million); EC (US$10 million); Canada (US$6 million); Japan
(US$3 million); Norway (US$2 million); Switzerland (US$1.8 million);
Ireland (US$1.5 million); Sweden (US$ 1.2 million); Italy (US$780,000);
Spain (US$470,000); and, Greece (US$72,000).
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