The Daily Monitor (Addis Ababa)

Ethiopia: CRS Pledges Over $53 Millon for Emergency Food Assistance

17 September 2008


Addis Ababa — Catholic Relief Services (CRS) yesterday announced that it has signed a $53.4 million agreement with the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) to provide almost 3 million drought-affected Ethiopians with emergency food assistance.

Reprising its leadership of the Joint Emergency Operation Plan consortium, CRS will coordinate activities with CARE Ethiopia, Food for the Hungry International, Relief Society of Tigray, Save the Children-U.K., Save the Children-U.S. and World Vision Ethiopia to transport and distribute 75,140 metric tons of Title II food, it said on its website.

Accordingly, the emergency distributions will assist 2,979,788 people selected in consultation with the government of Ethiopia, USAID and the U.N. World Food Program living in the most severely-affected regions of Amhara; Oromia; Somali; Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples Region; and Tigray.

"After the short rains failed to come earlier this year in many pockets of Ethiopia, thousands of children began to show signs of malnutrition as families were left with little or nothing to eat," Lane Bunkers, CRS' country representative in Ethiopia was quoted as having explained.

"Resulting delays in planting long-cycle crops coupled with continued poor rains are now leading to potential crop failures for millions more farmers during the upcoming October and November harvest-drastically reducing expected food stores for the coming year." "Shipments of sorghum, wheat, pulses, corn soy blend and vegetable oil donated by the United States, scheduled to begin arriving in late October, will help families survive this critical food shortage," Bunkers added.

CRS said it has already provided $125,000 in private funds to the Ethiopian Catholic Secretariat to help dioceses respond to local needs, particularly in support of emergency medical and feeding services.

CRShas given another $150,000 in private funding to the Missionaries of Charity to help them feed 10,000 additional people at two of their centers for the destitute and dying in Addis Ababa; exponential increases in food prices and limited availability of local supplies constrict these relief efforts, however.

A $550,000 grant from the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs has also supported August and September distributions of seeds by CRS partners to more than 16,000 farmers in need in the Oromia region, according to the Relief Services.

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