Technology can be a vital tool in the fight against the Ebola virus. The China Foundation for Poverty Alleviation (CFPA) is launching an online fundraiser with Tencent, a major internet company.
Read the full article at Examiner.
Technology can be a vital tool in the fight against the Ebola virus. The China Foundation for Poverty Alleviation (CFPA) is launching an online fundraiser with Tencent, a major internet company.
Read the full article at Examiner.
Filed under global hunger
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP), the lead agency fighting hunger, requires voluntary donations for its aid missions. Without these contributions they cannot feed the hungry in Syria, Iraq, South Sudan and many other countries in need.
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Filed under global hunger
The United Nations put out a warning today about the Ebola affected countries of West Africa.
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Filed under Uncategorized
There is alarming news coming from Somalia. The East African nation, which just three years ago suffered a famine, is in danger of a new hunger emergency.
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Filed under global hunger
What has caused tremendous hunger and suffering in the Sahel region of Africa? Drought. With drastic climate change taking place, droughts are creating food shortages in this region.
There is a crop that has tremendous resistance to drought. It is called fonio. It is a small, but very nutritious, cereal. This grain has been around so long, there are even stories of how the universe originated from it.
The charity International Relief and Development is trying to expand the growth and sale of fonio in Burkina Faso, one of the Sahel countries. IRD is using funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Food for Progress program.
They are helping farmers grow more fonio, and assisting them to sell it on the market. With fonio a bigger part of the farming strategy, they will have a food supply that can grow even during times of drought. Fonio requires little water to grow.
IRD thinks fonio can be spread to many more countries to help them adapt to drought. The Feed the Future program, which the Senate still needs to vote on, also supports programs to help farmers grow fonio.
This is another reason why food and agriculture programs need support. The Food for Progress and Feed the Future initiatives can help small farmers grow fonio and other nutritious crops. Farmers can grow more resistance to drought. That is a major step to ending hunger and the threat of famine.
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This fall, the U.S. ambassador to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), James C. Swan, redeclared a disaster in the African nation. Fighting continues to displace civilians and hunger is an extreme emergency.
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Filed under global hunger
The coming new year may be another of horror in South Sudan. Aid agencies, including Oxfam and Catholic Relief Services (CRS), warn that famine could strike the country if a peace deal is not reached.
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Filed under global hunger
Time Magazine recently named the brave people who fight the Ebola virus as their persons of the year. Among the heroes of West Africa is a woman with the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP).
Her name is Adama Kamara and she works with WFP in Sierra Leone, one of the countries hardest hit by the deadly virus. She brings food to hungry families victimized by Ebola. It’s very dangerous work. There is always the risk of the virus spreading to another person.
Adama and her fellow aid workers have to take precautions, such as wearing protective material when distributing food in quarantined areas. There is lots of handwashing. Adama has two children of her own. She is risking a lot to help WFP feed quarantined families or those in Ebola treatment centers.
Hunger is a crisis within the crisis of Ebola. Without food people will not have the strength to resist any disease. However, many impoverished families have their lost their livelihoods because of the disease. Food prices have gone up. Without WFP, people would starve to death in these areas.
Everyone has suffered in some way. Adama has seen this. She knew a mother who lost her life to Ebola. Djaounsede Pardon Madjiangar of WFP writes,
Like most people in Sierra Leone, Adama has seen the impact of Ebola of families. Her closest friend’s sister, a health worker who was treating Ebola patients, became infected with the virus in July and died soon after.”
Adama handles food distributions in Freetown, an area where she grew up. In fact, she used to receive school meals there from WFP!
Her WFP office was once her school. She knows the importance of good nutrition, especially for a child. The school meals helped her and classmates fight hunger. With food at school it gave her a chance to get an education. Food at school improves class attendance and performance. Adama recalls,
I can still remember how much we looked forward to the lunch bell. As soon as it rang, we were all out with our plates to get the food.”
Now Adama is bringing food and some hope to those in need. She is involved with one of the most dangerous humanitarian missions in the world.
WFP is trying to feed over one million people in the Ebola affected countries of Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. They are trying to make sure hunger does not escalate as the fight continues against the Ebola.
These are countries which suffered from hunger and poverty before Ebola arrived. People do not have much to fall back on in the way of resources in time of crisis. They need the help of WFP and other aid agencies.
Funding will be key going forward. WFP relies on voluntary donations from governments and the public. You can learn more about Adama, WFP and the Ebola response at their web site.
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Filed under global hunger
A bit of hope for refugee children from the Central African Republic.
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Filed under global hunger
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) says a donation from China is providing urgently needed food aid in West Africa. WFP is fighting hunger in nations affected by the Ebola outbreak, including Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone.
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Filed under global hunger