UN World Food Programme to cut food aid for over 1 million people in Myanmar
The WFP said would need $60 million to continue food assistance in Myanmar and called on its partners to identify additional funding.
PTI
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BANGKOK, 14 MAR
The United Nations
food agency said on Friday that more than 1 million people in the war-torn
nation of Myanmar will be cut off from food assistance due to critical funding
shortfalls.
A statement released
by the World Food Programme said that most food rations currently distributed
in Myanmar will be cut off in April, as the country faces a desperate
humanitarian crisis caused by bitter fighting between the military government
and powerful militias opposed to its rule. The WFP said would need $60 million
to continue food assistance in Myanmar and called on its partners to identify
additional funding.
It was not
immediately clear if the WFP's decision was directly related to Trump
administration's recent moves to stop most foreign aid and dismantle the US
Agency for International Development, which have had wide-ranging effects on
humanitarian efforts around the globe.
A 90-day freeze on
foreign assistance programmes announced by US President Donald Trump has led to
other cuts in services for refugees from war-torn Myanmar, including the
shutdown of hospital care in camps in neighbouring Thailand where more than
100,000 are living, according to activists and Thai officials.
The nationwide armed
conflict in Myanmar began after the army ousted the elected government of Aung
San Suu Kyi in February 2021 and suppressed widespread nonviolent protests that
sought a return to democratic rule.
In Friday's
statement, the WFP said 15.2 million people, nearly one-third of the total
population, are unable to meet their minimum daily food needs and some 2.3
million face emergency levels of hunger.
The WFP said it will
only be able to assist 35,000 of the most vulnerable people, including children
under the age of 5, pregnant and breastfeeding women, and people living with
disabilities.
“The impending cuts
will have a devastating impact on the most vulnerable communities across the
country, many of whom depend entirely on WFP's support to survive,” said
Michael Dunford, WFP's Representative and Country Director in Myanmar. “WFP
remains steadfast in its commitment to support the people of Myanmar, but more
immediate funding is crucial to continue reaching those in need.”
The WFP said the cuts
will also impact almost 100,000 internally displaced people, including Rohingya
communities in camps in Myanmar's western state of Rakhine, who will have no
access to food without WFP assistance.
The Rohingya, a
Muslim minority, have long been persecuted in Buddhist-majority Myanmar. More
than 700,000 have fled from Myanmar to refugee camps in Bangladesh since August
2017, when the military launched a clearance operation against the minority in
response to attacks by a rebel group.
More than 600,000
Rohingya remain in Myanmar, confined to squalid displacement camps, in addition
to those living in crowded refugee camps in Bangladesh. Still more have fled
toward Bangladesh and elsewhere in recent months as violence surged again when
a group called the Arakan Army started fighting against Myanmar's security forces.
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