Categories: Africa News

WFP Geneva Palais Briefing Note: Humanitarian Operations in northern Ethiopia


Download logo
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) calls on all parties to the conflict in northern Ethiopia to respect humanitarian operations and assets and allow unimpeded passage of humanitarian relief to civilians in need.

Last week, WFP was granted access to humanitarian warehouses in Kombolcha, Amhara region. Initial assessments revealed damaged equipment, vandalized storage units, and substantial amounts of food looted from the facilities. The loss of this food means fewer people in need can be reached by WFP and its partners.

Despite this setback, WFP, in partnership with the Joint Emergency Operation (JEOP), is pushing ahead with operations and will today begin a major food assistance operation to serve more than 450,000 people over the next two weeks in the northern Ethiopian towns of Kombolcha and Dessie.

To date, WFP has delivered emergency food and nutrition assistance to 2.9 million people in Tigray, 124,000 people in Afar and 220,000 people in Amhara. This has been achieved in the face of active fighting which closed the main corridors into Tigray and Amhara, substantially cutting access.

For WFP to scale-up the delivery of food assistance to save 3.7 million lives in Northern Ethiopia, all parties must cooperate to facilitate movement of supplies across battle lines and allow access to affected populations, wherever and whenever needed.

The conflict, and an unprecedented funding gap, are making humanitarian food assistance to millions of Ethiopians across the country uncertain. WFP’s Northern Ethiopia response urgently requires US$279 million to meet needs over the next six months. Across the entire country, WFP has an unprecedented funding gap of US$546 million to save and change the lives of 12 million people over the next six months.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of World Food Programme (WFP).

Facebook Comments

About

Share
More

This website uses cookies.