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30/8/2002
Looming Food Shortages Face Western Sahara Refugees
A
serious lack of food aid and insufficient funding are combining
to threaten the health and welfare of refugees living in quarter-century
old camps along Algeria's border with Western Sahara, two United
Nations agencies warned this week.
Some
155,000 Western Saharan refugees almost entirely dependent on humanitarian
aid provided through the UN World Food Programme (WFP) are living
in the four remote camps, and fresh contributions are urgently needed
for their survival, according to WFP and the UN High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR).
Without
a new infusion of funds, by October the refugees will get only 11
per cent of their daily food aid requirements - about 231 kilocalories
for each person - compared to the standard UN ration of flour, lentils,
beans, vegetable oil and other items totalling 2,100 kilocalories
daily.
In
order to meet the refugees' nutritional needs through this year,
WFP needs 8,336 metric tons of food valued at $3.7 million.
But
securing the funds could be problematic, UN officials said, because
the condition of the refugees is not well-known. "With the
lack of international attention to their plight, obtaining regular
contributions of food aid for the Western Saharan refugees is extremely
difficult," said the WFP's Daly Belgasmi. He warned that without
new contributions, "the drastic reduction in October's food
package will have severe consequences on the health of the refugees,
particularly for children under five, pregnant women and lactating
mothers."
UNHCR's
budget to care for the Western Saharan refugees in Algeria is also
experiencing a cash crunch, with only $1.5 million pledged so far
out of the $4.6 million required. While the agency can pool funds
to cover part of the gap, its overall annual budget also faces a
shortfall.
Officials
with the refugee agency say the plight of those in Western Sahara
is severe. "Thirty-five per cent of the children suffer chronic
malnutrition, and 13 per cent of the children are acutely malnourished,
leading to a high level of stunting among young children,"
said UNHCR's Radhouane Nouicer, who oversees operations in North
Africa and the Middle East.
In
September, UNHCR and WFP will conduct a comprehensive nutritional
survey of Algeria's refugee population, many of whom first fled
Western Sahara in 1975.
©EuropaWorld 2002
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