Darfur food rations cut in half
The UN is cutting in half its daily rations in Sudan’s Darfur region because of a severe funding shortfall.
“This is one of the hardest decisions I have ever made,” James Morris, head of the UN’s World Food Programme, said.
From May the ration will be half the minimum amount required each day. The cut comes as the UN said Darfur’s malnutrition rates are rising again.
Nearly 3m people in Darfur depend on food aid after being driven off their land in three years of conflict.
Despite a ceasefire and on-going peace negotiations, large areas of Darfur are now affected by fighting between government forces, militias and rebels.
This is also hampering the delivery of food and other aid operations.
Hunger season
“Haven’t the people of Darfur suffered enough? We are adding insult to injury,” Mr Morris said as he explained that despite appeals to donors, the WFP has received only a third of the money it needs.
DARFUR DAILY FOOD RATIONS
Minimum requirement: 2,100 kilocalories per person
New amount: 1,050 kilocalories per person
Cut by half: Cereals, blended fortified food and oil
Cut by three-quarters: Pulses, sugar and saltMore than 6.1m people across Sudan require food aid – more than any other country in the world.
The bill to feed them all is $746m.
The United States has provided $188m, but little has been received from the European Union and nothing at all from any of Sudan’s partners in the Arab League, other than Libya, the WFP says.
The EU says it has allocated 48m euros ($60m) for the whole of Sudan this year, while the UK will donate £49m ($88m) through various aid agencies.
The ration cut is designed to ensure that some food lasts through the “hunger season” between July and September.
“We have been pushed into this last resort of ration cuts in Sudan so we can provide the needy with at least some food during the lean season,” Mr Morris said.
The BBC’s Jonah Fisher in the capital, Khartoum, says even if more money was to be immediately promised, Darfur’s location, in the centre of Africa, means it could still take up to four months for the rations to arrive.
Earlier this week, Ted Chaiban, head of Unicef’s mission to Sudan, said in the last three months alone, there had been 200,000 people newly displaced in Darfur.
Aid agencies last year managed to bring the malnutrition rate below the emergency threshold of 15% but south Darfur was seeing those figures again, he said. The African Union has set a 30 April deadline for the government and rebel groups to accept their draft peace agreement which addresses power-sharing, wealth-sharing and security.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/…ica/4954096.stmPublished: 2006/04/28 11:07:41 GMT
We get up in the morning, look ourselves in the mirror and call ourselves “developed”, “civilized” and such.
We should be ashamed. I am reminded of a quote from Thomas Jefferson:
“I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just; that his justice cannot sleep forever.”
Please call your elected representative and ask them, tell them, to rise up off their overfed arses and do something now to avoid history’s condemnation for ignoring this incredible and preventable tragedy!
“Do you want to know who you are? Don’t ask. Act! Action will delineate and define you.”
Thomas Jefferson (again)
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“We are wary of hope, because we see little that can support it. Believing in nothing much, especially not in people, is a point of vague pride, and conviction can be seen as embarrassingly naïve. So we increasingly take high principle to be a source of unnecessary discomfort or unearned self-importance, rather than an acknowledgment that we are called to be better than we are.” Jedediah Purdy
Reminder to self: Remember to proof title for typos.
Darfur Diet.
Time for another chat on this issue with my Senators, and lone Rep.
The absolute least we can do for the people of Darfur is to provide them with food! And we should be doint a whole lot more than that.
I hope we can do more, but I agree, the very least we can do is try to keep the people alive until the politicians can be brought to ground and convinced to compromise.
This is a man-made tragedy and just because we cannot do everything does not mean we should do nothing.
This is rape and murder taken to the level of genocide, as well as disease and starvation that at the very least are made worse by the situation and our unwillingness to intervene in any meaningful way. This is what we (the rest of the world) are allowing to continue. And yes, all countries should be doing more.
This time around, we should not wait for the movie, Hotel Darfur.
This time around, no one can claim we did not know.
For more information:
http://www.savedarfur.org/home
History of the Conflict
Open warfare erupted in Darfur in early 2003 when the two loosely allied rebel groups, the Sudan Liberation Movement/Army (SLA) and the Justice and Equality Movement (JEM), attacked military installations. In response, “Janjaweed” militias received government support to clear civilians from areas considered disloyal to the Sudanese government. Read more.
Current situation in Darfur
Nearly three years into the crisis, the western Sudanese region of Darfur is acknowledged to be a humanitarian and human rights tragedy of the first order. The humanitarian, security and political situation continue to deteriorate: atrocities continue, people are still dying in large numbers of malnutrition and disease, and a new famine is feared. According to reports by the World Food Program, the United Nations and the Coalition for International Justice, 3.5 million people are now hungry, 2.5 million have been displaced due to violence, and 400,000 people have died in Darfur thus far. The international community is failing to protect civilians or to influence the Sudanese government to do so.
.
“Life was hard on the plains of Darfur. It was hard enough for Kaltuma Hasala Adan and her family to scrape out a living on the edge of the desert, even before the sky came crashing down. In January 2004, her village was bombed. While Kaltuma was still mourning for her 18-month-old baby, who was killed in the attack, Arab horsemen came to finish the job. After they had killed her 15-year-old son, Issa, they threw his body into the well to contaminate the water. That same day, Kaltuma’s husband disappeared. Four months and many attacks later, she finally left her crops and livestock behind and took her three surviving children to a refugee camp across the border in Chad. Thousands of her fellow Darfurians were already there. Terrorised and terrified.”
● NATO not UN should be protecting Darfur
“But I will not let myself be reduced to silence.”
▼ ▼ ▼ MY DIARY