UN provides $3 m to help rural communities in Nepal cope with hike in food
prices
The United Nations Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) has allocated US
$3 million (Rs 247 million) to assist rural communities in Nepal suffering
from serious food insecurity caused by rapidly increasing food prices, the
destruction of food stocks and crops by the recent floods, and the effects
of long-term conflict, according to a release issued by the UN body
Wednesday.
Life-saving projects developed by the UN and humanitarian partners aim to
meet critical
food needs of vulnerable households especially those most at risk,
including women,
children, ethnic minorities and indigenous populations in the Mid-Western,
Far-Western
and Terai districts of the country, stated the release.
"Nearly one and a half a million (1.5 million) people in these remote
regions need urgent assistance to meet their basic food needs," noted UN
Resident and Humanitarian
Coordinator for Nepal, Robert Piper in the release. "Levels of acute
malnutrition are extremely high, especially among poor, landless and
marginalized populations."
CERF funding, the release said, will ensure that vulnerable families
continue to receive the critical food assistance being provided by the
United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and partners as well as creating
quick-impact opportunities to help restore family livelihoods through
community construction and infrastructure projects
In 2008, Nepal received a total of US $ 12.6 million (Rs 1 billion) from
the CERF in
four different allocations to provide humanitarian assistance in response
to the Koshi
floods, flooding and landslides in the mid and far-western regions, the
food crisis, and
other urgent humanitarian needs. nepalnews.com Dec 04 08