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FIRST WFP FOOD AID SHIP ARRIVES IN SOMALI PORT OF MOGADISHU IN MORE THAN A DECADE

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WFP News Release


MOGADISHU, Sept 4 (WFP) –  A ship chartered for the United Nations World Food  Programme docked yesterday in Mogadishu ? the agency’s first  delivery in the Somali capital’s port in more than a decade.
The MV Redline docked at Mogadishu port on Sunday loaded with 3,300  metric tons of WFP food ? 2,400 tons of cereals, 780 tons of pulses, 90 tons of highly nutritious blended food and 30 tons of vegetable
oil. The food will be trucked to the drought stricken regions of Bay and Bakool in the south.

Rival claims by competing warlords closed Mogadishu port in February 1995  until  the Union of Islamic Courts seized the capital in June. The port was reopened to shipping in August.


 “Mogadishu  is  once again a key entry point for getting food stocks  into  the  country. The reopening of the port makes it easier for us to reach more than one million people across the country who rely on our  assistance,”  said  WFP Somalia Acting Country Director Leo van der  Velden.   “It should also bode well for the peace and stability that Somalia needs.”

Van  der  Velden  said  that using the country’s largest port should reduce  unloading  times and help ease logistical problems that have complicated WFP’s supply lines into Somalia over the past 10 years.

With Mogadishu closed to shipping, WFP-chartered ships had to unload their cargo at beach ports near the capital and at the port of Merka to  the  south. Cranes unloaded the food commodities from ships onto      smaller  barges,  which  then  ferried  them  to the shallows, where porters waited to wade ashore with the bags.

Van  den  Velden  said  WFP  was  discussing  with Mogadishu’s newly appointed  port management the use of WFP food in return for work to clean up the facility after years of disuse.

A  spate  of  pirate  attacks in Somali waters in 2005 forced WFP to bring  food  aid  to  the  drought-stricken  south  by  road because shipping  companies  were  unwilling to risk voyages to Somalia. Two
WFP-chartered ships were seized by pirates in 2005 and one escaped a pirate attack in March 2006.

Although  the  recent harvest has provided a respite for some people in  Somalia, many families are still struggling to recover from last year’s devastating drought.

An  interagency assessment completed in August on the outcome of the March-June  Gu  main  rains  found that 1.4 million people in North, central or southern Somalia face either an acute food and livelihood
security  crisis or humanitarian emergency until at least the end of December 2006.

In  addition,  400,000  internally  displaced  people need prolonged humanitarian assistance.

Up  until  the  Gu  rains  assessment,  WFP  assisted a total of 1.3 million   people   in   Somalia,  where  it  has  11  offices.  Most distributions  are  emergency  relief for families whose livelihoods have   been   destroyed   by   drought.   Other  activities  include supplementary  feeding  for  malnourished  children, school feeding, food for work, and food for training and rehabilitation.

WFP  needs  a total of US$37 million to assist 1.1 million people in Somalia until July 2007.


To  date  contributors  to  WFP’s Somalia programme in 2006 are: the United   States   (US$26.2   million),    Britain’s  Department  for International Development (US$9.64 million), the Netherlands (US$5.3 million), Saudi  Arabia  (US$3  million),  Canada (US$1.3 million), Ireland  (US$1.2  million), Italy (US$1.17 million), Sweden (US$1.16  million),   United   Nations   Central   Emergency   Response   Fund  (US$851,000), Australia (US$752,000), Belgium (US$643,000), Finland (US$605,000),  African  Development  Bank (US$500,000), Switzerland (US$379,000), Turkey (US$300,000), Norway (US$206,000) US Friends of
WFP (US$74,000) and private donations (US$55,000).


Source: WFP, Sept 4, 2006

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