
18 March 2013 – The international community must continue
its efforts to help feed people in the Sahel, the head of the United Nations
World Food Programme (WFP) said today,
following a visit to the West African region marred by high levels of food and
nutrition insecurity, as well as the effects of the conflict in Mali.
“The Sahel is facing a double threat: instability, caused by
a conflict that has sent refugees across its borders, and chronic hunger,
caused by cycles of drought and poor harvests. Last year the international
community helped avert a crisis in the Sahel, but our work is not over,” WFP
Executive Director Ertharin Cousin said in a news
release.
She spent five days in Burkina Faso and Mali, which along
with Cameroon, Chad, the Gambia, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria and Senegal,
comprise the Sahel. Last year the international community provided $1.2 billion
in assistance to feed around 10 million people in the region.
While in Burkina Faso, Ms. Cousin visited a refugee camp in
the village of Mentao. She also stopped by programmes supported by WFP, its
donors and partners, aimed at building up communities’ resistance to drought,
including a local nutrition centre, a school feeding programme and a soil
conservation project.
Referring to programmes that help farmers improve their yields
and bring their produce to markets, as well as projects that create community
assets, such as irrigation systems, and strengthen the local economy, Ms.
Cousin said, “It is not a matter of ‘if’ there will be a drought, but ‘when’.
If we continue to follow through with what we started last year, we can truly
build resilience in the Sahel.”
In Mali, Ms. Cousin met yesterday with displaced people in
Mopti, a central Malian town considered the gateway to the country’s north.
From there, WFP is sending food by road and riverboat to Timbuktu further
upstream.
“People are still suffering; the crisis is not over. It is
not safe in many of the communities in the North and people cannot go home. We
need to continue to provide support so children can continue to receive food
assistance,” Ms. Cousin said following the visit to Mopti.
Northern Mali was occupied by radical Islamists after
fighting broke out in January 2012 between Government forces and Tuareg rebels.
Parts of the area still remain out of reach to aid workers, WFP said.
The conflict uprooted hundreds of thousands of people.
According to WFP, Burkina Faso now hosts more than 47,000 Malian refugees. In
Niger, WFP provides food assistance to about 50,000 refugees, and in
Mauritania, around 74,000 refugees receive assistance.
Meanwhile, in New York, the Security Council was briefed
today in a closed-door session on Mali and the wider Sahel region by
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief
Coordinator Valerie Amos.
“We remain concerned about the situation of the IDPs
[internally displaced persons] and refugees who have fled Mali. We are also
concerned about the volatility of the security situation and the need to scale
up our humanitarian efforts,” she told reporters after the session.
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