FAO and WFP will be using $10 million of Belgian government funding to improve access to food for more than 100,000 people in Greater Kasai, where some 18,000 households including displaced, returnee and host families stand to benefit.
"Thanks to this significant contribution, we are able to ramp up our efforts and work closely together to prevent people, including young children, from dying of hunger and malnutrition," said FAO representative ad interim Alexis Bonte.
The aid "will only protect vulnerable people, but help revive agricultural production and boost social cohesion in communities affected by the crisis," added Claude Jibidar, WFP's country representative in DRC.
Under the project, WFP will distribute fortified maize meal, legumes, fortified vegetable oil and iodized salt - as well as cash to victims of the crisis. Children aged 6 to 59 months, and pregnant and breastfeeding women, will be treated for three months with special nutritious supplements.
For its part, FAO will supply vegetable-growing kits - hoe, rake, spade, watering can, and vegetable and fruit seeds - that will allow each family to eat for two months and sell what they don't eat.
Refugees will be trained in raising guinea pigs as a source of protein; and in processing and marketing bamboo to use as firewood, kitchen utensils, baskets, canoes, fishing equipment and fences. Vegetable gardens near health centres and women's associations will meanwhile provide malnourished children, and pregnant and nursing women, with micronutrients such as iron and zinc, FAO and WFP said.
The joint initiative will be rolled out in partnership with the DRC's Agriculture Ministry and local NGOs, the agencies stated, warning that "as welcome as they are," the measures cannot meet anything like the full extent of humanitarian needs.
The conflict in Kasai, an anti-government stronghold that formerly was a maize-producing region, has forced a million people out of their homes and off their land. Some 3.2 million are now severely hungry and child malnutrition is widespread, according to the UN.
About 400,000 children in Kasai risk starvation in the next couple of months if emergency food is not delivered.
FAO and WFP urged nations to significantly increase funding as well as efforts to bring peace and security to DRC to allow the Congolese to rebuild their livelihoods and secure a more prosperous future.
Over 1.7 million people have fled their homes so far this year in DRC due to insecurity, according to the UN - an average of over 5,500 people per day - bringing the total number of refugees to over four million and making it the world's worst refugee crisis.
Earlier this month the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre - part of the Norwegian Refugee Council said the scale of people fleeing violence in DCR was "off the charts, outpacing Syria, Yemen and Iraq".
Kasai, Kivu and Tanganyika provinces, are the current epicentres of the conflict.
(This story has not been edited by Social News XYZ staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
Doraiah Chowdary Vundavally is a Software engineer at VTech . He is the news editor of SocialNews.XYZ and Freelance writer-contributes Telugu and English Columns on Films, Politics, and Gossips. He is the primary contributor for South Cinema Section of SocialNews.XYZ. His mission is to help to develop SocialNews.XYZ into a News website that has no bias or judgement towards any.
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