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[pronut-hiv] ZAMBIA: WFP may be forced to cut rations without further funding
- From: "ProNut-HIV" <pronut-hiv@healthnet.org>
- Date: Tue, 28 Jun 2005 12:14:22 -0400
>From IRIN News
JOHANNESBURG, 28 Jun 2005 (IRIN) - A dire shortage of funds will force
the World Food Programme (WFP) to reduce both rations and the number of
people it is feeding in Zambia, rather than extending assistance to a
total of one million people as requested by the government, the aid
agency said on Tuesday.
Without an immediate injection of money, "rations to thousands of
people would be slashed in July", WFP said in a statement.
"Women, malnourished children, the elderly and people affected by
HIV/AIDS would be among those to suffer. WFP needs US $25 million to
feed 820,000 people this year, but only has contributions to feed half
that number," the aid agency stressed.
Prolonged dry spells meant more than 1.2 million people would be unable
to live off their own harvests, while new assessments showed that Zambia
required more than 118,000 mt of cereals to assist them until the next
harvest.
The government-led Vulnerability Assessment Committee projected an
increased need for food relief between July 2005 and February 2006
because of high dependency on agricultural production, particularly in
rural areas, where poor rainfall has dramatically reduced crop yields.
"The government of Zambia has asked WFP to target its assistance to 1
million people in light of the recent crop failure - right now we simply
don't have the funding to reach these people. WFP should be feeding more
than 800,000 Zambians under our current programmes, but with limited
resources we're only able to reach about 500,000 people," David
Stevenson, WFP Country Director for Zambia, was quoted as saying.
"Even before we realised the extent of this year's poor harvest, the
situation was critical. Without immediate donations from the
international community we will have no food for hungry Zambians in
July, let alone later in the year, when the need is going to
dramatically increase," Stevenson pointed out.
In 2003/04 Zambia produced a robust surplus of cereals, allowing WFP to
buy 150,000 mt of food for other parts of Africa, which injected nearly
US $30 million into the local economy. In a dramatic reversal, poor
rainfall this year led to significant crop failure across the country,
leaving many districts extremely vulnerable. WFP noted that chronic
poverty and the HIV/AIDS epidemic had compounded the problems of these
people.
The aid agency, in conjunction with the government and NGOs, targeted
the most vulnerable for assistance and aimed to ensure that food aid
ultimately helped people become self-reliant.
"Zambians helped under these programmes include orphans and children in
community and basic schools; food-insecure patients receiving
antiretroviral therapy; and the chronically ill though home-based care
programmes. A third of all beneficiaries are involved in food-for-assets
and food-for-training activities," WFP said.
Stevenson added that those receiving WFP food assistance were "fighting
to cope with numerous challenges and many have still not recovered from
the ravages of food shortages in previous years".
The elderly, child-headed households and the chronically ill -
especially people affected by HIV/AIDS - were the most vulnerable. "But
we can't even maintain current levels of assistance to them without the
support of the international community," Stevenson remarked.
WFP may need to reduce rations to 61,000 orphans and vulnerable
children from July.
"This will mean an end to their daily meals of porridge and will more
than likely be followed by an increase in school dropouts. Others, such
as 57,000 impoverished farmers and their families, together with about
104,000 malnourished children and pregnant women, will also lose WFP
rations, as well as 300 people who currently receive antiretroviral
treatment for AIDS and who rely on WFP food rations to ensure that the
drugs are assimilated into their bodies," WFP warned.
"It is tragic that we are being forced to take these drastic steps, but
we really have no alternative - if the food isn't there, we can't
produce it from thin air," Stevenson said. "It is imperative that we
find a way to feed these people before their health and livelihoods
deteriorate."
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