Race To Provide Food For 600,000 Afghans
UN In Race Against Time To Provide Food For 600,000 Afghans Before Winter Cuts Them Off
New York, Nov 29 2006 11:00AM
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) is racing against the clock to deliver food for some 600,000 impoverished Afghans who will be cut off once winter’s bitter cold arrives and heavy snows set in, while at the same time seeking urgent donations now to prevent a shortfall with the approach of next spring.
“Winter is a brutal time in Afghanistan. Hundreds of villages that are remote today will be impossible to reach within the coming weeks,” WFP country representative Rick Corsino said in Kabul, the capital, today.
“Right now our focus is on positioning food in these areas, as well as moving forward with our drought relief efforts in more readily accessible areas.”
WFP is already helping victims of severe
floods in other areas of the country, especially the west,
northwest and far east.
With winter approaching,
21,000 metric tons of food, including wheat, beans, oil and
salt, need to be positioned and then distributed to 600,000
vulnerable people in over half the provinces of the
strife-torn country. Increased insecurity due to the
continuing conflict exacerbates the difficulties already
posed by bad weather.
WFP has already delivered
16,000 tons, or all of its planned winterization aid to the
provinces of Badakshan, Nuristan, Kunar, Ghor, Wardak, and
Nangarhar, and more than 80 per cent to Bamyan and Badghis
but poor road conditions, worsened by early snows and
heightened insecurity along some key road corridors, have
hampered deliveries to thousands of people at higher
elevations.
“In the higher passes roads are barely
wide enough to allow a single truck to move. So when a
vehicle breaks down, or cannot progress because of snow or
mud, traffic in both directions can be halted for several
hours, or even longer,” Mr. Corsino said. “Thousands of
people are in need of our assistance. We have to reach them
beforῥ winter does “ and that means within the next few
weeks.
The “very timely and generous” donor
response has ensured there is enough food to get the
beneficiaries through the winter, but because of the very
long lead time between confirmation of a contribution and
distribution of food to a hungry person, WFP will face
shortfalls in all commodities by next March, Mr. Corsino
stressed.
Further donations are urgently needed now to avoid such shortfalls, including 6,000 tons of fortified biscuits to enable the school meals programme to commence at the start of the new school year in March.
Ends