Fresh Donations Signal End To Uganda Ration Cuts
05/14/07
The United Nations World Food Programme welcomed today a 5
million euro donation from the European Commission's Humanitarian Aid
Office
(ECHO) and said it and other contributions would allow rations for
1.28
million displaced people in Uganda to be restored to normal levels.
"This generous cash contribution from ECHO is more than welcome because
in
April we had to cut rations to the 1.28 million displaced people
in
northern Uganda at the worst time of year because of a shortage
of
funding," said WFP Country Director Tesema Negash.
"With this and other recent contributions, WFP will be able in June
to
restore rations to their normal levels," said Negash, who added that
the
cuts in April, which trimmed individual rations by as much as
one-third,
came at a particularly hard time - at the start of the annual 'lean season'
when food from the harvest runs out before the new harvest in August.
The ECHO cash contribution, equivalent to US$6.8 million, will be used
by
WFP to buy food within Uganda for distribution to the displaced.
Buying
food assistance locally benefits local markets and farmers, as well as
the
beneficiaries.
WFP is the single largest food-purchasing organization in Uganda and
bought
a total of 120,000 metric tons of food in the country in 2006 at a cost
of
US$30 million. WFP buys up to 10 percent of its total maize
purchases
directly from small-scale farmers' groups in Uganda.
WFP is also feeding 183,000 refugees in Uganda and 500,000 victims
of
drought in the Karamoja region. The refugees will also have their
rations
restored to normal in June. The drought-affected in Karamoja were
not
included in the ration cuts imposed in April.
WFP has so far received US$70.4 million or 52.4 percent of the
US$134
million it asked donors and the government to provide to help feed
nearly
two million people in Uganda in 2007. It costs about US$11 million a
month
to sustain WFP's relief and recovery operation in the country.
Besides ECHO, the other donors to WFP's relief and recovery
operation
in Uganda in 2007 are: the United States (US$32 million), Britain's
Department for International Development (US$13.7 million), UN Central
Emergency Response Fund Fund (US$7 million -- CERF see:
(Author: www.ochaonline.un.org)
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