WFP provides cash assistance for 30,000 people vulnerable to flood in Bangladesh
The UN World Food Programme (WFP), in support of Bangladesh government's emergency response, has dispatched cash assistance to communities at risk of monsoon flooding in northern Bangladesh.
A total of 6,000 vulnerable households (app. 30,000 people) living within the flood zone -- including those headed by people with disabilities, the elderly and women -- received Tk 4,500 per household through the bKash mobile banking system that will help them prepare for the looming disaster.
The funding was provided by the Korea International Cooperation Agency and the Federal Foreign Office of Germany, said WFP in a statement today.
"By offering an infusion of cash prior to the floodwaters actually reaching communities, vulnerable families now have the flexibility to purchase food or other basic relief items and make plans to move themselves and their livestock out of harm's way," said Richard Ragan, WFP country director in Bangladesh.
During the monsoon last year, WFP provided cash assistance through its Forecast-based Financing Programme to 4,500 households. The transfers were made to the most senior women of the household, and arrived three days ahead of the floods, enabling them to prepare, including buying food and transporting family members and livestock to safer places.
Forecast-based financing is an innovative mechanism through which early preparedness and community-level actions are pre-planned based on credible meteorological forecasts.
"It is funded and implemented before the disaster strikes, helping minimise losses and damage caused by climate-related hazards, and reducing the need for humanitarian assistance in their aftermath," WFP statement added.
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