CAR: World Food Programme To Slash Food Aid

Officials say a shortfall in funding means only 400,000 people, instead of 700,000, will be catered for.

 

Some 300,000 people in the Central Africa Republic, CAR, will as from the end of January 2017 stop receiving food aid from the World Food Programme, WFP, officials announced on January 4, 2017. Agency reports say only 400,000 out of the usual 700,000 vulnerable people in the land-locked nation will henceforth receive food aid, with food ratios to be slashed by half.

WFP officials attributed the situation to shortfall in funding. As a result, food aid distributions have become irregular, with support to school canteens in the capital, Bangui, suspended. Meanwhile, Humanitarian Coordinator, Fabrizio Hochschild, has disbursed One million US Dollars (about 629.9 million FCFA) from the CAR Emergency Humanitarian Fund to WFP to attend to most pressing needs. This is while waiting for donors to respond to a recent appeal. However, the emergency assistance will cover only 10 per cent of current needs as WFP actually requires 21.5 million US Dollars (about 13.5 billion FCFA) to tackle the crisis.

The humanitarian situation in CAR was aggravated in the last quarter of 2016 after fighting between rival armed groups displaced 70,000 additional people. The number continues to rise as a result of intermittent armed skirmishes in several prefectures. Consequently, aid agencies say they find it difficult to cope with the needs of vulnerable peo...

Reactions

Commentaires

    List is empty.

Laissez un Commentaire

De la meme catégorie