WFP Starts Food Distributions In Battle-Scarred Mogadishu
05/14/07
The United Nations World Food Programme said today that the
first distributions of WFP food assistance had started in Mogadishu to
16,000 residents and people returning to districts most heavily damaged by
the worst fighting in the Somali capital in 16 years.
By the end of this week, WFP expects to have distributed food since 27
April to a total of 114,000 people who fled the city plus vulnerable people
unable to escape the fighting. Urgent WFP food distributions continue to be
expanded given the prevailing security situation in and around the capital.
Yesterday, a Somali non-governmental organisation started distributing WFP
maize, nutritious corn-soya blend and vegetable oil to 7,000 people at
three sites in Mogadishu. Distributions are due to start today at another
five sites to reach 9,000 others in the capital. WFP on Tuesday also plans
to start distributing five tons of food to hospitals in Mogadishu for 1,500
people injured in the fighting.
"These people are exhausted," said WFP Somalia Country Director Peter
Goossens in Nairobi. "Most of them are women and they were either forced to
flee their homes with their children during the recent fighting or they
stayed in the city throughout the worst bombardments. These families
require food and other assistance after their terrible ordeal."
"We started in the heaviest damaged areas in north Mogadishu, where the
fighting was concentrated. But we are also reaching many of those who are
still outside Mogadishu and are too frightened to return, but are
struggling in terrible conditions under trees in the rain," he said.
Distributions of WFP food to 42,000 people displaced southwards from
Mogadishu to the port of Merka were completed on Sunday and 9,000 displaced
in Qoryoley district to the southwest of the capital received WFP food on
Monday. Distributions to 13,500 people in Brava town are due to start on
Wednesday. In late April, WFP food was distributed to 32,000 displaced west
of the capital shortly before heavy fighting ended in Mogadishu on 27
April.
WFP needs an extra US$10 million in donations for its operation due to the
fighting in Mogadishu and displacement of civilians. UNHCR estimates that
395,000 people fled the city - over a third of the capital's population -
since 1 February. But following the end of heavy fighting, some are now
trickling back.
WFP is the world's largest humanitarian agency: each year, we give food to
an average of 90 million poor people to meet their nutritional needs,
including 58 million hungry children, in at least 80 of the world's poorest
countries. WFP -- We Feed People.
WFP Global School Feeding Campaign - For just 19 US cents a day, you can
help WFP give children in poor countries a healthy meal at school - a gift
of hope for a brighter future.
(Author: http://www.wfp.org)
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