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[pronut-hiv] HIV/AIDS, hunger a security threat, WFP warns
- From: "ProNut-HIV" <pronut-hiv@healtnet.org>
- Date: Fri, 08 Jul 2005 08:07:36 -0400
HIV/AIDS, hunger a security threat, WFP warns
JOHANNESBURG, 1 Jul 2005 (IRIN) - World Food Programme (WFP) executive
director James T. Morris has warned that the 'triple threat' of chronic
hunger, the impact of HIV/AIDS and weakened government capacity could
lead to instability in Africa, but singled out Southern Africa as
particularly hard hit and thus deserving of international attention.
"The greatest humanitarian crisis we face today is the gradual
disintegration of the social structures in Southern Africa," Morris told
the UN Security Council in New York on Thursday.
"A lethal mix of AIDS, recurring drought and failing governance is
creating insecurity. Last year alone, one million lives were lost to
AIDS in the region, and we are only now entering the peak impact period
for the pandemic," he stressed.
Morris added that AIDS was undermining the capacity of communities to
produce enough food and in many rural villages the land lay fallow with
nobody to till it, spurring migration to urban centres where increased
unemployment fed social instability.
He estimated that 3.5 million people had been in need of emergency food
aid in Southern Africa earlier this year, but with the return of drought
conditions to some areas the number had risen to 8.3 million: 4 million
in Zimbabwe, 1.6 million in Malawi, 1.2 million in Zambia, 900,000 in
Mozambique, 245,000 in Lesotho, 230,000 in Swaziland, and 60,000 in
Namibia.
WFP has noted that it might be forced to reduce both rations and the
number of people it has been feeding in Zambia, rather than extending
its assistance to over one million people as requested by the
government.
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 pointed out.
In Angola, WFP told IRIN that pockets of deepening vulnerability were
emerging as erratic weather and the resultant poor harvest forced people
to move to urban centres in search of food aid, but the agency's
programmes faced severe funding constraints.
WFP's deputy director in Mozambique, Karin Manente, told IRIN that
their food stocks were beginning to run out, at a time when shortages
had increased the number of people needing aid.
"The situation is very worrying. If new donations are not made, we will
have to scale down our activities rather than increase [them], despite
the situation. Our food stocks will start running out in July at this
rate," Manente commented.
The southern and central parts of Mozambique were most affected by the
dry spell. "Scaling down will be very difficult ... as even before the
current shortage, we had not been able to meet the requirements of
everyone who is in need of food [aid]," Manente said.
She noted that the agency would have to focus on the areas that were
worst affected by the food shortages and had high HIV prevalence rates,
and cut assistance elsewhere. "WFP's ongoing operation ... has only
received 20 percent of [funding] requirements needed."
The Mozambique National Statistics Institute (INE) showed that the
HIV/AIDS pandemic was worsening, with the prevalence rate among people
aged 15-49 years now at 15.6 percent, compared to 8.2 percent seven
years ago.
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