30 August 2016 -- The United Nations food relief agency today warned that
it urgently needs $48 million for its school meals assistance programme in West
and Central Africa to avoid having more than 1.3 million children across West
and Central Africa risk missing out its school meals as widening financial
constraints force it to reduce its reach in the region.
"Children from the very countries and regions where needs
are most acute are missing out on this vital assistance. We urge our supporters
not to forget the value the school meals programme brings " a key vehicle to
reduce poverty, hunger and malnutrition " and not let more than a million
children slip deeper or back into in poverty and hunger," the World Food
Programme's Regional Director for West Africa, Abdou Dieng, said in a news
release.
"We urgently need US$48 million to start or continue our
school meals assistance," he added.
In the news release, WFP note that dwindling resources,
shifting donor priorities and changed financing mechanisms in some countries
have conspired to create a funding gap and jeopardize programmes. However, unless
vital funding comes through in the next month, more than half a million
children across Cameroon, Mali, Mauritania and Niger could start the school
year without the meals they have come to rely upon and, by the end of 2016,
assistance will run out for a further 700,000 children in 11 other countries.
School meals have been a lifeline for children
WFP is the top sponsor of such initiatives in West and
Central Africa. While in some countries the government and other agencies lead
or complement the UN agency's programme, in most of the region WFP is the sole
or main provider of school meals, targeting areas where hunger and malnutrition
levels are highest. Year after year, the agency noted, it has been forced by
financial constraints to shrink its areas of coverage.
As schools reopen across Guinea, WFP is resuming its school meals programme in all four regions of the country. Photo: WFP/Sanoussy Barry
"In most countries in West and Central Africa " in the
grip of chronic hunger and malnutrition, and increasingly affected by conflict
" school meals have been a lifeline for children, as they are often the only
regular and nutritious meals they receive," said Mr. Dieng.
In Chad " where, in some regions, as many as four-fifths
of the population do not get enough food for a healthy life " WFP's school
meals programme has shrunk by more than 90 per cent in the past three years due
to funding shortages, from more than 200,000 children assisted in 2013 to just
15,000 in 2016. In Senegal, current resources will cover school meals for less
than a fifth of the children targeted by the programme. In Mauritania and
Cameroon, funds ran out during the 2015-2016 school year, forcing WFP to halt
assistance in January and May respectively. In Guinea, WFP will halve its
assistance this school year.
WFP also flagged that during or after conflict in the
Central African Republic, Mali and Niger, or in the aftermath of a major health
crisis such as the Ebola outbreak, school meals have played an important role
in providing children in need with nutritious meals; encouraging families to
send their children to school; and, more broadly, helping children regain their
childhood.
Key donors to WFP's school meals programme in West and
Central Africa for the 2015-2016 school year are Canada, the European Union,
Japan, Luxembourg, Saudi Arabia and the United States.