
NO RESPONSE TO APPEAL
Namibia: WFP, Unicef reissue appeal
after getting no response
Almost 120,000 children have lost their parents to
HIV/AIDS. Two United Nations agencies in Namibia on Wednesday reissued
an urgent appeal to the international community for funds to assist some
600,000 orphans, vulnerable children (OVC) and women suffering from the
combined effects of drought, chronic poverty and the worsening HIV/AIDS
epidemic.
Neither the World Food Programme (WFP) nor the UN
Children's Fund (UNICEF) received any contributions in response to their
US $5.8 million emergency appeal for Namibia in March.
”We are disappointed at the lack of support,
especially since the appeal was meant to assist those who do not have
any other means of supporting themselves. These beneficiaries are among
the neediest. Since we have not received any contributions, we have not
been able to feed anyone in May,” WFP Namibia head, Abdirahman Meygag,
told IRIN. He said WFP expected to distribute 8,000 mt of food to
111,000 rural children and their families in the six worst-affected
northern districts of the country. The UN food agency has again appealed
for US $5.2 million to fund emergency operations over the next six
months.
Meygag added that the situation in the northern
Caprivi region had been exacerbated by extensive flooding. “Already
faced with consecutive poor harvests and high rates of HIV, the recent
floods have made the situation desperate and urgent,” he said.
An estimated 43 percent of people in Caprivi are
living with HIV/AIDS, and more than 20 percent of those aged under 19
have been left orphaned by the disease. Across the country, at least
120,000 children have lost their parents as a result of the HIV/AIDS
pandemic in Namibia.
As part of the emergency appeal, UNICEF requested US
$616,000 to assist some 500,000 people until August but, like WFP, had
not received any assistance.
“The biggest concern is the impact of HIV/AIDS on the
capacity of families to produce food. The contributions were expected to
be channelled towards implementing long-term interventions to address
the impact of HIV/AIDS on the nutritional status of young children,”
UNICEF country representative Khin-Shandi Lwin said.
She noted that UNICEF required the funds to bolster
efforts by the government to provide insecticide-treated bed nets to
prevent malaria, expand immunisation campaigns, undertake Vitamin A
distribution and improve nutritional surveillance.
A recent UN mission to Namibia found that acute
malnutrition in children under five was as high as 15 percent in some
areas.
According to Meygag, one of the reasons for the
sluggish response to the appeal was the perception that Namibia was a
middle-income country, “which could feed and provide for its own people”
He said: “In the past Namibia has not called for international aid, and
there are perceptions that the government has the capacity to intervene
when there are food shortages. But the series of droughts and the HIV
epidemic has seriously compromised existing resources, and this is why
the authorities find themselves struggling to cope.”
Meygag noted that “perhaps preoccupied with other
humanitarian emergencies in the world, donors had forgotten about the
situation in Namibia”.
UN Integrated Regional Information Networks
6 May 2004
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