Emergency food aid is not getting out fast enough to the people who need it in Ethiopias troubled Somali region, a top US official says according to BBC online Friday.
Michael Hess, of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), says only 41 per cent of the food allocated for July has reached its intended recipients. The US supplies nearly all of the aid, and Mr Hess says such distribution is not good enough.
Ethnic Somali rebels have been fighting an insurgency in the region for years.
In a drought like this one, Ethiopia depends heavily on food aid – and that means that it depends on the generosity of the US. As the man in charge of this aid, Mr Hess has been to see for himself how the system is working.
Deliveries for food aid are hugely extended, with consignments starting at depots outside the Somali region and often having to travel right through conflict affected areas where no food is allowed to move without an army escort.
The World Food Programme, which brings in the food, has been pressing the government to allow it to set up depots within the region and to distribute food from there.
Now finally permission has been given. Mr Hess said he was expecting to see some big changes after 1 October when this so-called hub-and-spoke system comes into operation.