USAID CONTRIBUTES US$16.5 MILLION TO WFP FLOOD RESPONSE IN PAKISTAN
Dr. Jassim Taqui
DG Al-Bab Institute for Strategic Studies
Islamabad, October
7, 2022: The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has welcomed a US$16.5
million contribution from the United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) for its emergency response in Pakistan, where the lives of
33 million people have been upended by unprecedented floods.
“It will be a
tough journey ahead for the millions of people devastated by the floods, but
the United States will continue to stand by Pakistan's side,” said Reed
Aeschliman, USAID Pakistan Mission Director. “The depth and strength of the
U.S.-Pakistan partnership are reflected in the immediate actions undertaken by
USAID through its Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA) to support the
Pakistani people during this time of great need. Our assistance is saving lives
and reducing suffering among some of the most heavily affected communities.
USAID remains steadfast in our support to the Pakistani people, and we will
continue to support them to recover and rebuild for a brighter future.”
The Government
of Pakistan is leading the response through the National Disaster Management
Authority (NDMA). The Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) is serving as the
vehicle for cash-based transfers, and over 2 million people have received cash
assistance across flood-affected districts in Balochistan, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
(KP), Punjab, and Sindh so far.
To complement
the Government response, WFP has ramped up its operations to provide food,
nutrition, recovery, and resilience support to 2.7 million people, including
those with high levels of food insecurity across flood-affected districts. To
date, WFP has reached close to 700,000 people with food and livelihood support,
and 23,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women and children with specialized
nutritious foods to prevent and treat malnutrition and boost their immunity.
Vulnerable groups, including persons with disabilities, transgenders, and
households headed by children or women are at the center of WFP’s response.
“Pakistan,
despite contributing far less to global warming than other nations, is now on
the frontline of climate devastations,” said Chris Kaye, WFP Country Director
in Pakistan. “The unimaginable sufferings borne by the people here is a stark
reminder that it is the poorest who are paying the heaviest price of climate
change. We thank USAID for its solidarity with the Pakistani people. The
funding will help WFP save hundreds of thousands of people’s lives and provide
them with the critical support needed to restore livelihoods and build
resilience against future shocks.”
Through WFP’s
field offices in the provinces of Balochistan, KP, Punjab, and Sindh, WFP is
coordinating with humanitarian partners to ensure an integrated response for
affected communities. Working closely with USAID’s BHA, WFP has received all
its relief cargo of non-food items dispatched via an airbridge to Islamabad and
also Sukkur and Karachi in Sindh and is supporting transport and temporary
storage of these items before they are distributed to the affected population.
WFP has also supported NDMA with logistics, storage, and management of its
relief cargo.
In many parts
of the country, waters are receding. Sindh province, however, continues to be
heavily affected by flooding, hindering humanitarian agencies’ ability to
deliver aid and creating a public health crisis for vulnerable families.
Outbreaks of water-borne diseases are now a new deadly threat, particularly for
the hundreds of thousands of people who remain displaced.
With massive
losses of livestock and damages to crops and agricultural land, food insecurity
and malnutrition, which were already high before the monsoon, will deteriorate
further. The recent Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC)
assessment carried out in the high-risk districts of Sindh, Balochistan, and
Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KP), which were later devastated by floods, finds that
nearly 6 million people are estimated to be facing Crisis (IPC Phase 3) and
Emergency levels of food insecurity (IPC Phase 4) between July and November.
Before the floods, the number was expected to rise to 7.2 million between
December and March 2023. Now, the latest WFP and FAO assessments indicate that
the number of people requiring emergency food assistance will increase to 14.6
million.
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