Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Featured Video

Latest Stories

Top 10 Music

Upcoming Events

SA Ghetto Tour

Sat, 15 Jun 2024 18:00:00 UTC @ Salt River Circle Hall (Cape Town) - Chi-Chi Beauty Parlour Entertainment Presents SA Ghetto Tour with live perormances from Jetu, Zonke and Pop Young at Salt River Circle Hall in Cape Town South Africa on 15 June 2024. Th... More Info
Stay Alive Listening Party

Sat, 15 Jun 2024 19:00:00 UTC @ Red Lounge In Lilongwe - Be one of the first 70 people to listen to the whole STAY ALIVE project by Chizmo Njuchi on 15th June at Red Lounge In Lilongwe. Stay Alive Listening Party will start from 19 to 22 PM.... More Info

UN agencies warn food shortage at Dzaleka Camp

UN agencies warn that Dzaleka refugee camp in central Malawi is running out of food supplies. The camp which caters for more than 23,500 refugees, mostly from the Great Lakes and Horn of Africa regions have access to only 40 percent of the daily recommended minimum of calories.

Due to lack of money the World Food Programme (WFP) has been forced to reduce food aid at Dzaleka camp in the last six months. Refugees are receiving only three of five planned foods – pulses, vegetable oil and maize – at half the amount they should get.

Without more funding, maize stocks are set to run out in mid-February, while vegetable oil, pulses and a nutrition-enhanced corn soya flour will likely be depleted by May, said the WFP and U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) in an appeal for an additional $2 million.

“The situation is becoming dire,” Monique Ekoko, UNHCR’s representative for Malawi, said in a statement.

“Many of the most vulnerable, including children, the chronically ill, pregnant and breastfeeding mothers, and the elderly are at the brink of malnutrition.”

When rations are cut, the camp environment becomes less safe for women and girls, the agencies said. A survey found that lack of food was a key driver of sexual and gender-based violence among the refugees, they added.

A Malawi’s Commissioner for Refugees, Bestone Chisamile, said the country would meet its international obligations to refugees, but needed support from WFP and UNHCR to do so.

“That is why we’re appealing to the international community to provide the necessary funding so that refugee families in Malawi do not go to bed hungry,” said Chisamile. – Daily Mail UK

Subscribe to our Youtube Channel:

Related Posts

1 COMMENT

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Popular Articles