UNITED24 - Make a charitable donation in support of Ukraine!

Military

SLUG: 2-298273 WFP/Ivory Coast (L)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=1/11/2003

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=W-F-P/IVORY COAST (L-Only)

NUMBER=2-298273

BYLINE=LISA SCHLEIN

DATELINE=GENEVA

CONTENT=

VOICED AT:

INTRO: The United Nations World Food Program says it plans to ask participants at Ivory Coast peace negotiations in Paris this week to include humanitarian needs on the agenda. Lisa Schlein in Geneva reports the W-F-P wants guarantees that aid workers will be allowed safe access to thousands of people trapped in combat zones.

TEXT: The World Food Program says aid workers have no access to tens-of-thousands of Liberian refugees and internally-displaced people in the western rebel-controlled areas of Ivory Coast.

W-F-P Spokeswoman Christiane Berthiaume says these people are in desperate need of humanitarian assistance. But, she says, the region is off limits to aid agencies because of nearly four months of fighting. She says the W-F-P wants the Ivorian government and rebel negotiators in Paris to open up special routes, with guaranteed safe passage for aid workers trying to reach vulnerable people.

/// BERTHIAUME ACT ///

What we would like to have is humanitarian corridors, routes that would be secure for our staff to go inside in a secure area in the western part of the county where we can bring relief food assistance, and these roads could also be used for refugees or displaced people to get out of this area, which is so insecure.

/// END ACT ///

The U-N refugee agency reports that tens-of-thousands of Liberian refugees are trapped in western Ivory Coast. It says the refugees would like to flee to safer areas in the south, or across borders into neighboring countries, but are prevented from doing so by both the rebels and by government sympathizers who are manning checkpoints.

Ms. Berthiaume says humanitarian corridors would make it possible for some of the refugees to leave this insecure area. She says, before the civil war broke out in September, W-F-P maintained a small school feeding program. But she says the agency has had to stop this program for children in the rebel-held areas. The agency still assists 41-thousand children in the government-controlled areas.

/// REST OPT ///

/// 2ND BERTHIAUME ACT ///

The government has asked us, as well, to help with the children that are displaced, to distribute food to them. They are going to be allowed to go to the schools, if they are not from that area, because they are displaced. And, we will distribute also rations, the meal at lunch, as well as rations to the families, at least for a three-month initial period to make sure they will send their kids to school.

/// END ACT ///

W-F-P appealed for six-point-six-million dollars in November. Ms. Berthiaume says only 30 percent of the money has come through. As a result, she says, the agency only will be able to feed 120-thousand instead of 170-thousand needy people in January and February. (Signed)

NEB/LS/DW/TW



NEWSLETTER
Join the GlobalSecurity.org mailing list