31 October 2013 – Two United Nations humanitarian agencies
announced today that they will be forced to reduce food rations for more
than half a million refugees in the Dadaab and Kakuma refugee camps in
northern Kenya beginning tomorrow due to lack of resources.
“We have done everything possible to avoid this, but it has become
necessary to reduce ration sizes by 20 per cent in November and December
in order to stretch our existing food stocks to last through the end of
the year,” said Ronald Sibanda, Country Director in Kenya for the World Food Programme (WFP).
“We hope this will be a temporary measure as we appeal to donors to come
to the assistance of the hundreds of thousands of refugees who rely on
WFP to meet their daily food needs.”
WFP urged donors to respond to its urgent appeal “as quickly as
possible,” noting that it needs about $10 million every month to
distribute more than 10,000 metric tons of food to refugees in the two
camps.
While reduced rations will allow food distributions to continue for the
535,000 camp-based refugees through the end of the year, further cuts
may be necessary if no additional resources become available, as food
stocks will be nearly exhausted by January.
“We believe that the international community understands the importance
of continuing this vital food lifeline for the refugees in Dadaab and
Kakuma,” said Raouf Mazou, the Representative of the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) for Kenya.
“We are concerned that a reduction in rations could have a negative
impact on the health and nutrition of refugees who rely on the food
assistance,” he stated.
The 20 per cent reduction in ration sizes means that refugees will not receive the World Health Organization’s (WHO) minimum recommended energy requirements of 2,100 kilocalories per day and will instead get 1,680 kilocalories.
WFP has been providing food assistance, consisting of cereals, pulses,
vegetable oil and salt, to thousands of refugees from across the region
since the camps in Dadaab and Kakuma were established more than 20 years
ago.
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