Category Archives: Uncategorized

School Meals Lifeline At Risk in Drought-Ravaged Kenya

The World Food Programme works with the Kenyan government to provide school meals for children. A massive drought has caused food shortages making children vulnerable to dangerous malnutrition. (file photo provided by WFP/Francesco Broli)

Schools are just days away from opening here in the United States. In newspapers and on local access channels, you might soon start to see school lunch menus appear. It’s a very important, albeit seemingly routine, part of the school year.

But a world away in Kenya right now, that school lunch is literally a lifeline for families trapped in the massive drought that has hit East Africa.

Many families are unable to support themselves, following the loss of crops and livestock. Imagine losing your livelihood, and your sources of food start to dwindle. Where do you turn for help?

In Kenya the UN World Food Programme (WFP) provides school meals for children. This is a vital safety net that families are counting on; but this source is under severe strain.

Charles Njeru of the World Food Programme in Kenya told me Monday: “The situation has drastically changed since the last time we communicated…. Our school feeding programme has been severely affected by the drought. We have seen an increased influx into schools, especially as more children are attracted to school by the food.”

WFP is currently feeding 678,000 children under its Kenya school feeding mission. Even though schools are closed in August, they have kept the meals program running because of the urgency of the crisis. But the need is more widespread, and WFP wants to scale up its school meal response in Kenya.

Njeru says: “WFP requires funding to provide meals for approximately 200,0000 additional children in arid areas of the country affected by the drought. This figure is likely to continue rising as the drought intensifies through the months of August and September which are traditionally the driest months of the year.” This additional funding would total $6 million for 12 months of feeding.

The children are in some of the areas hardest hit by the drought, including Turkana, Moyale, Marsabit, Wajir, Garissa, and Mandera districts.

Throughout East Africa, WFP needs to expand its school meal reach and sustain it over an extended period. Now is the time to act to keep an already tragic situation from becoming much worse.

You can donate to the East Africa Relief Fund at the World Food Programme.

Article first published as School Meals Lifeline At Risk in Drought-Ravaged Kenya on Blogcritics.

For background on school feeding in Kenya see:

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Mastering the Famine in East Africa

President Obama says the famine in East Africa is not receiving enough attention and a global response is required. He is right.

Mary Bruce of ABC news reported on Obama’s exchange with reporters on the famine threatening over 11 million people. Obama stated, “I think it hasn’t gotten as much attention here in the United States as it deserves.”

Read the full article at Yahoo! Associated Content.

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Famine Strikes Again in Africa. America Needs to Respond

Children are starving to death in East Africa.  Famine has overwhelmed aid agencies.  The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) says that more than 11 million people desperately need life-saving food aid.

Will Americans respond?  History suggests that they will.

America has a long and deep humanitarian tradition of responding to the cries of the hungry, wherever they may be.  We saw that in Haiti following the massive earthquake there in 2010.  But American humanitarianism has a history that reaches much farther back.

Read the full article at History News Network.

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WILLIAM LAMBERS: Another starving nation cries for assistance

Children are starving to death in East Africa. Famine has overwhelmed aid agencies. The United Nations World Food Program says that more than 11 million people desperately need lifesaving food a

Will Americans respond? History suggests that they will.

America has a long and deep humanitarian tradition of responding to the cries of the hungry, wherever they may be. We saw that in Haiti following the massive earthquake there in 2010. But American humanitarianism has a history that reaches much farther back.

Read the full article at the Bakersfield Californian

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Josette Sheeran, World Food Programme Director, Visits Somalia

Video footage of Josette Sheeran, director of the World Food Programme, visiting a feeding center in Mogadishu, Somalia. To donate to famine relief efforts go to www.wfp.org/donate/hoa_banners

 

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1000 Days of Peril in Yemen: The Children Must Be Fed

Yemen is living in peril with dangerous political instability, and violence in the south between the government and suspected Al-Qaeda militants.

But for a newborn child in Yemen, the greatest danger lies in lack of nutrition, for their future hinges on whether they can receive it.

Read the full article at Yahoo! Associated Content

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FEED Foundation Starts Africa Emergency Fund

FEED Projects was started in 2006 when acclaimed model and activist Lauren Bush designed a bag to benefit the United Nations World Food Program's (WFP) School Feeding operations

The Feed Foundation has started a fund to help the famine afflicted East Africa. See below for details and visit their web site:

FEED Africa Emergency Fund

The worst drought in 60 years threatens an already struggling people in Somalia and its neighboring countries in the parched Horn of Africa. Man-made problems like rising food prices, a crippled economy, and a lack of central government have only heightened the devastating effects of this natural disaster.

Refugees from hard hit areas are flooding two main refugee camps in Dadaab, Kenya and Dola Ado, Ethiopia. The journey is often very dangerous and many have died of malnutrition along the way.

The FEED Africa Emergency Fund supports organizations like UNICEF and the World Food Programme that are providing critical services on the ground to the more than ten million children and families who urgently need aid. Your donation to the fund will help provide food, water, medicine, and other supplies- and save lives.

The following is an example of the supplies your donation could help purchase:

  • Vitamin A capsules
  • Oral rehydration therapy tablets
  • High-energy protein biscuits
  • Measles vaccinations
  • Water contains and purification tablets
  • Tents

2 million children facing starvation. More than 10 million families at risk. Help us FEED the Horn of Africa.

Visit www.thefeedfoundation.org/Africa to donate.

Feed Foundation photo

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William Lambers: Well-fed must aid the hungry

We all live on the same planet, but there are two different worlds. In one, food is so plentiful that you can choose from hundreds of varieties within a square mile of your home. In the other, some small children go for days without one thing to eat.

This is what is happening in East Africa as Somalis flee their homeland to escape the severe drought and famine that has descended on it. Children perish in this desperate search for food. Others are severely malnourished as they arrive in refugee camps.

Read the full article at The Providence Journal

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East Africa famine is taking countless lives, mostly children

Josette Sheeran, the director of the UN World Food Programme, sent this message yesterday via WFP USA about the famine in East Africa.

Here is the text of the letter:

I’ve just returned from a trip to Somalia and Kenya where it’s truly a life and death situation. I met a young mother in Mogadishu who walked for four days in search of food. She lost three children.

The famine is taking countless lives, mostly children. We’ve been scaling up our operations for six months, but Somalia has been hit especially hard by consecutive droughts and an ongoing conflict that has limited humanitarian access.

We’re starting emergency airlifts to get food to children who desperately need it.

The suffering is terrible across the Horn of Africa. In Kenya, lack of water and high food prices are causing a dramatic rise in the number of severely malnourished children. At the refugee camps in Dadaab, which I visited on Saturday, we’re providing three-week food rations to families arriving from Somalia, many of whom haven’t eaten for days.

Your recent contribution provides food that will save lives. Thank you so much for your generosity.

We’ll keep you updated on the situation and how we’re responding. As always, thank you for fighting hunger with World Food Program USA.

Sincerely,

Josette

Josette Sheeran
Executive Director
World Food Program

To donate visit www.wfpusa.org/hornofafrica

 

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The Korean War: Humanitarian Heroes Fighting Hunger

It is June 1950, and North Korean troops have crossed over the border to attack South Korea. Heavy artillery and tanks move in. War has erupted that would soon involve U.S. forces coming to the aid of the South, and the Communist Chinese army joining with the North.

If you are a civilian trapped in between this conflict, you would be in shock. You could try to outrun the enemy and flee to safer ground. Maybe you can escape. Maybe not.

Read the full article at Blogcritics Magazine

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