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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

25 March 2003

Fact Sheet: U.S. Coordinating Iraq Aid With Nongovernmental Groups

(Says it has emergency food, supplies already in region) (1210)
The United States is coordinating with nongovernmental and
international organizations to provide rapid humanitarian assistance
to the people of Iraq, according to a fact sheet released March 25 by
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID).
The United States has positioned food, blankets, plastic sheeting,
hygiene kits, treatment facilities and water containers in warehouses
throughout the region for the Iraqi people, the fact sheet states.
Following is the text of the fact sheet:
(begin fact sheet)
U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
FACT SHEET
WASHINGTON, DC 20523
March 25, 2003 
The U.S. Government, in coordination with international organizations
and non-governmental organizations, is fully committed to providing
humanitarian assistance to the people of Iraq -- to save lives,
alleviate suffering, and mitigate the impact of emergency situations.
The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), working in
close coordination with the Department of State and other U.S.
agencies, has planned for humanitarian assistance by:
-- Deploying a specially trained U.S. humanitarian rapid response
team;
-- Continuing to pre-position stockpiles of emergency supplies and
commodities;
-- Communicating and coordinating with U.S. and international
humanitarian organizations; and
-- Funding the planning and preparation efforts of international
organizations (IOs) and non-governmental organizations (NGOs), whose
relief professionals will help deliver assistance.
Rapid response. The United States trained and deployed the largest
Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) in U.S. history because of
the multiple contingencies we needed to prepare for in Iraq, outside
of an Urban Search and Rescue response. Initially, it is headquartered
in Kuwait City and will have three mobile field offices. The DART will
conduct assessments, direct assistance towards vulnerable populations,
and provide funding to IO and Non-Governmental Organizations (NGO)
responders. The DART is comprised of more than 60 humanitarian
response experts from USAID; the Department of State's Bureau of
Population, Refugees and Migration (PRM); and the Department of Health
and Human Service's Public Health Service. In addition to technical
experts in areas such as health, food, water, and shelter, the DART
has the authority to provide grants on-site, and includes
administrative officers in logistics, transportation, and procurement,
enabling the team to function as a turnkey response mechanism for
assessment and funding in the field.
Commodities. The United States has pre-positioned emergency supplies
for the Iraqi people, including materiel in warehouses throughout the
region. In addition to pre-positioned and in-transit food, these
supplies include wool blankets, rolls of plastic sheeting for
emergency shelter, personal hygiene kits, World Health Organization
Emergency Health Kits, and water jugs, bladders, containers, and
treatment units.
Coordination. U.S. agencies have met for several months with a wide
range of U.S.-based and international organizations planning for a
humanitarian response in Iraq. In the region, the DART will continue
to serve as a central point of contact for U.S. government
humanitarian operations, facilitating the exchange of information, and
assisting in the coordination of humanitarian assistance among NGOs,
U.N. agencies, IOs, and the U.S. military. The U.S. Government fully
supports the U.N. mandate for the coordination of humanitarian
assistance. USAID has funded a significant contingency coordination
effort for many NGOs preparing to assist in Iraq called the "Joint NGO
Emergency Preparedness Initiative" (JNEPI), offering support to the
NGOs in assessment, logistics, stockpiling, and staffing needs. PRM
funding has also gone to contingency preparations of international
humanitarian relief organizations.
Focusing on areas of greatest need. DART's areas of expertise and
responsibility include:
-- Health and medicines
-- Water and sanitation
-- Food and nutrition
-- Emergency shelter
-- Protection against reprisals and atrocity monitoring.
-- Protection of internally displaced persons and refugees
-- Humanitarian assistance infrastructure 
Health and medicines. Through technical assessments, pre-positioned
supplies, and the ability for immediate response, the U.S. Government,
in coordination with IOs and NGOs, will work to ensure the essential
basic healthcare needs of the Iraqi people are met. Goals include:
-- Assessing local health infrastructure, including facilities,
medicine availability, and immunization rates.
-- Preventing excessive deaths by focusing on preventative and primary
healthcare.
-- Expediting funding for UN agencies, IOs, and NGOs.
-- Assisting in the establishment of a national Health Information
System (HIS) platform.
Water and sanitation. A successful emergency response requires
adequate levels of potable water, and sanitary waste disposal and
wastewater removal systems. Other goals include:
-- Overall damage assessment of water and sanitation facilities that
reach all major populations centers.
-- Immediate assessment and response in order to provide adequate
supplies of potable water.
-- Extensive coordination with, and expedited funding to, water and
sanitation experts and organizations.
Food and nutrition. It is estimated that 60 percent of the Iraqi
people are completely reliant on food aid, and that households
currently have an average of one month of food stocks. The DART will:
-- Help to ensure the nutritional needs of the population are met
through food availability and distribution.
-- Work with international organizations to maintain the countrywide
public food distribution ration system on an emergency basis and
support internally displaced persons and refugees.
Emergency shelter.  The DART's emergency response will include:
-- Helping to meet emergency shelter needs of vulnerable populations
through the provision of pre-positioned plastic sheeting and tents.
-- Expediting funding to the U.N. and NGOs to meet basic shelter needs
for vulnerable populations.
Internally displaced persons (IDPs) and refugees. The DART will focus
on meeting the basic needs of newly displaced populations and
refugees. This will include:
-- Ensuring access to healthcare, clean water, nutrition programs, and
shelter.
-- Expediting funding to the U.N., IOs, and NGOs to establish and
manage assistance programs for displaced populations inside Iraq or in
neighboring countries.
-- Promoting conditions that enable the return of IDPs and refugees to
places of origin.
Humanitarian assistance infrastructure. Emergency interventions and
high-impact projects will be used to facilitate humanitarian access
and program implementation. These will include:
-- Monitoring the physical transportation infrastructure to ensure
access to populations in need.
-- Contracting transportation to move and distribute supplies.
-- Communicating with vulnerable populations regarding the
availability and location of assistance.
-- Small grants that support community infrastructure and
reconstruction projects.
Humanitarian assistance and relief funding to date.
Thus far, USAID has positioned $206.4 million for Iraq humanitarian
relief, food distribution, reconstruction and transition initiatives.
Additional funds are in the pipeline.
Food for Peace has made available 610,000 metric tons of commodities
valued at $300 million to ensure the that nutritional needs of the
Iraqi people are satisfied.
PRM has contributed $36.6 million to the U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees, the International Committee of the Red Cross, the
International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, and
the International Organization for Migration for pre-positioning
emergency relief supplies and staff and early humanitarian response.
Additional funds are in the pipeline.
Support to implementing NGOs for including $900,000, which has been
provided to establish a consortium to conduct
chemical/biological/radiological/nuclear detection training for other
NGOs.
An additional $100,000 was provided to the NGO consortium,
Interaction, to fund an NGO observer to the Humanitarian Operations
Center to Kuwait.
The U.S. Agency for International Development has provided economic
and humanitarian assistance worldwide for more than 40 years.
For more information on USAID's humanitarian relief efforts in Iraq,
please visit www.usaid.gov/iraq/.
(end fact sheet)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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