WFP: Gaza kan snart mangle mad

Hedebølge i Californien. Verdens klimakrise har enorme sundhedsmæssige konsekvenser. Alligevel samtænkes Danmarks globale klima- og sundhedsindsats i alt for ringe grad, mener tre  debattører.


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The UN World Food Programme (WFP) said Monday that food was running out in the Gaza Strip and appealed to the Israeli authorities to allow food consignments to reach the tens of thousands of people in Gaza who depend on food aid to survive.

At the same time, WFP called on the Palestinian Authority to take all necessary steps to ensure the security of WFP staff and other humanitarian aid workers inside the occupied Palestinian territory, to enable them to carry out their work unimpeded.

WFP said the extended closures of the Karni commercial crossing between Israel and Gaza have had a devastating effect on food availability in the Palestinian enclave. Stocks of wheat flour are already critically low and there are fears that there will soon be no basic commodities in Gaza.

– Our food supplies have almost run out and the bakeries are also empty. People are now having to rely on their own stocks, which will last only a few days at best, said William Hart, WFP Deputy Country Director in the occupied territories.

– The situation is critical, especially for the poorest and most vulnerable, who are dependent on our food aid, added he.

WFP provides food aid to some 430.000 palestinians, 160.000 of them in the Gaza Strip. Even before Hamas won parliamentary elections in January, WFPs operations were 65 percent under-funded. Since then, the Israeli blockade, combined with deteriorating security in the occupied territories, have reduced food supplies to a trickle.

– We call on all sides to allow humanitarian operations to continue unimpeded (uhindret). This means lifting the blockade on aid convoys and commercial food deliveries, as well as ensuring safe conditions in the West Bank and Gaza for our international and national staff to work normally, Hart said.

As a result of the blockade, flour mills have been unable to provide 8.000 metric tons of wheat contracted earlier by WFP. Wheat flour makes up 80 percent of the basic diet in Gaza. Other commodities, including sugar, baby formula and dairy products, are also in short supply, leading to food prices soaring by more than 30 percent since January.

WFP has so far received only 37 percent of the 81 million US dollar required for its two-year operation to provide food aid for non-refugee Palestinians up to 31 August 2007.

Donors to date include (all amounts in US dollar): the European Commission (13.9 million), the United States (7,9 million), Japan (1,4 million), France (1,2 million), Norway (450.000), Austria (300.000), Switzerland (250.000) and Italy (70.000). A further 800.000 has been received in multilateral donations, as well as 13.000 from the private sector.

Kilde: www.wfp.dk

More information: Mikael Bjerrum, Director WFP Nordic office, Denmark, Tel.: 35 46 71 30, mobile 40 11 38 83.