Coordinator of Emergency Relief for the United Nations, Mr Mark Lowcock, on Friday, May 25, confirmed the release of $30 million from the United Nation’s Central Emergency Response Fund, CERF, to urgently intensify relief efforts in West Africa’s Sahel, where an acute drought has escalated.
CERF has allocated over $100 million for life-saving humanitarian response in the region since 20q7.
Thousands of families have exhausted their food reserves and are cutting down on daily meals and up to 1.6 million children are at risk of life-threatening malnutrition, and five million people need food and livelihoods assistance in what is expected to soon be the worst lean season — when food stocks deplete ahead of the next harvest – in years.
“To avert a catastrophe, we need to act early to get assistance quickly to the most vulnerable people. The window of opportunity to help these communities during the lean season and the most difficult months ahead is closing soon,” said Mr Lowcock. “CERF is without question one of the most effective ways to get urgent aid to people who need it the most.”
The CERF funds will enable humanitarian partners to reach affected people in the worst-hit communities, particularly in pastoral and agro-pastoral areas in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Mauritania.
In Chad, where the number of children suffering from severe acute malnutrition has more than doubled over recent months, a $10 million allocation will provide food security and nutrition assistance for close to half a million people.
Burkina Faso is facing an upsurge in insecurity and the worst food insecurity in years. An allocation of $9 million will enable the provision of food assistance and the treatment of acute malnutrition in the most affected areas.
In Mauritania, CERF has allocated $4 million to kick-start the provision of food, nutrition and livestock assistance as well as humanitarian air services.
The remaining $7 million will support lifesaving activities in the most affected areas of Mali, which has also seen food insecurity increase by 50 percent, compounded by the impact of ongoing conflict.
Additional funds are urgently required to sustain support to affected communities.
“I thank all donors for their generous contributions to CERF without which we would not have been able to provide this urgent support,” said Mr Lowcock. “But CERF funds alone are inadequate to tackle this crisis. I therefore call on all donors to do even more to help prevent a further deterioration of this situation. While we are responding to immediate life-saving needs of women, children and men, we must at the same time ensure that our response supports longer term solutions and resilience of the people of the Sahel.”
A total of $1.37 billion is needed to support most vulnerable people in drought-affected areas of Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Mauritania, Niger and Senegal, Business post reports.