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VOICE OF AMERICA
SLUG: 2-318247 Aid Agencies/Angola (L)
DATE:
NOTE NUMBER:

DATE=8/15/2004

TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT

TITLE=AID AGENCIES/ANGOLA (L-ONLY)

NUMBER=2-318247

BYLINE=LISA SCHLEIN

DATELINE=GENEVA

CONTENT=

HEADLINE: Aid Agencies say Angola Humanitarian Operations In Financial Crisis

INTRO: International aid agencies say their humanitarian operations in Angola are facing a severe financial crisis. As Lisa Schlein in Geneva reports, the agencies are warning that tepid donor response is threatening efforts to create a stable, peaceful society in the country.

TEXT: The aid agencies say a lack of money is hampering their efforts to return one-point-four-million refugees and internally displaced people to the homes they fled during Angola's long civil war. This, they say, is damaging prospects for a lasting peace.

At the beginning of the year, the World Food Program appealed for 253-million dollars to assist Angolan refugees and homeless people to restart their lives over the next two years upon their return home.

But a spokeswoman for the World Food Program, Christiane Berthiaume, says WFP, so far, has received only 45-million dollars.

/// BERTHIAUME ACT ///

"It has been so bad that we had to reduce by 50 percent the ration of cereal, and if there is no more contribution, rapid contribution, the situation is going to be so serious that we will not have any cereal at all to distribute in September. September marks the beginning of what we call the lean season. It is the period just before the crops. It is the period when people have exhausted all their stocks. They have nothing."

/// END ACT ///

Ms. Berthiaume says the United Nations refugee agency and the WFP had hoped to assist an estimated 70-thousand Angolan refugees return home from camps in Namibia, Zambia and the Democratic Republic of Congo this year. But, she says, many of these people are aware of the misery and hardship they are likely to face upon their return and are becoming discouraged.

/// BERTHIAUME 2nd ACT ///

"There is nothing in the places where they go back. Many places are mined. There is not a lot of water. There is not a lot of schools, no health centers and, in some places, in many places, electricity is a dream. It does not exist. So if on top of that there is no food aid, people will not want to go back home."

/// END ACT ///

Ms. Berthiaume says she believes the international community is making a big mistake in not supporting the United Nations' repatriation operation. She says it is much better to assist people who go home than to assist them in refugee camps where they remain permanently dependent on international handouts. (SIGNED)

NEB/LS/ALW/TW



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