UN Launches Phone-Based Food Vouchers For Refugees
New York, Oct 27 2009 2:10PM
Food vouchers can now be
sent to Iraqi refugee families living in Syria via text
message, thanks to a new pilot project by the United Nations
World Food Programme (see website: http://www.wfp.org/news/news-release/wfp-launches-mobile-phone-based-food-voucher-pilot-iraqi-refugees-syria).
The
scheme will allow refugees living in the Syrian capital,
Damascus, to receive codes for virtual food vouchers on
their mobile telephones which they can use to purchase rice,
wheat, lentils, cheese, eggs and other items that cannot be
distributed in conventional aid baskets.
“This pilot
project will allow WFP to meet the needs of refugees living
in a city where food is available but they are unable to
afford it,” said Daly Belgasmi, the agency’s Regional
Director for the Middle East, Central Asia and Eastern
Europe.
Each of the 1,000 Iraqi families will receive
one voucher per person, worth $22, every two months. After
each transaction, they will receive updated balances by text
message.
“People will no longer need to queue at
food distribution points or travel long distances to
distribution centres,” according to WFP Syria Country
Director Muhannad Hadi. “They will also be able to have a
more diversified diet, based on their own personal choices
and preferences.”
Although phone messages and smart
cards have been used in the past to transfer cash to those
in need, this is believed to be the first time food vouchers
have been distributed utilizing cell phone
technology.
Syria’s Ministry of Economy and Trade
will provide food items through its stores in the Jaramana
and Sayeda Zeinab neighbourhoods in Damascus, where most
Iraqi refugees live.
The mobile phone service provider
MTN donated SIM cards for the project, which is set to run
for four months but could be extended depending on the
success of the pilot programme.
There are currently
over 1.2 million uprooted Iraqis in Syria, according to
Government figures, of whom 130,000 regularly receive food
aid and other assistance from WFP and the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees ("http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home").
ENDS