Afghanistan food aid at risk as donors trim support
More Afghans will go hungry next year and may be dependent on food aid for longer as school feeding programmes and projects to develop the country's crumbling agriculture sector have to be trimmed due to waning donor support, the United Nations warned.
The UN's World Food Programme (WFP) raised only about half its annual $400 million Afghanistan budget in 2011, and even less was expected for 2012, Bradley Guerrant, the agency's deputy director for Afghanistan, said this week.
"We are planning for 45 percent (of a once projected $400 million) for next year," Guerrant told Reuters in an interview.
Donor support had been cut on the back of global economic woes, and the WFP needs to prioritise given such a major shortfall.
Funds will be focused on emergency food assistance, support for the most vulnerable families, especially households headed by disabled people and women, and supplementary feeding programmes for malnourished children under five years old and pregnant women.
Other programmes meant to make communities more food secure -- including agriculture schemes and a school feeding programme -- will have to be cut back, Guerrant said.
"We are making some very difficult decisions right now," he said.
Along with the government and other non-governmental groups, the WFP has been working on low-tech but high-return projects to improve irrigation in communities that open up new land for crops and make people less dependent on food assistance.
The agency has also sought to give farmers access to markets by buying their wheat or other products that form part of the WFP's food basket, although success has been mixed due to lack of surplus production or uncompetitive local prices.
Violence across Afghanistan has been at its worst since the hardline Islamist Taliban were toppled by U.S.-backed Afghan forces in late 2001, hampering access to food.
In 2010, the WFP lost some 22,000 tonnes of food aid that was being trucked into Afghanistan during catastrophic floods in Pakistan. A drought in the 2010/11 season has also put more people at risk and in need of food aid.
Comments