UN cuts food aid to
1.7 million refugees from Syria
A
lack of funds has forced the United Nations to stop providing food vouchers for
1.7 million Syrian refugees in Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt, the
World Food Programme (WFP) said on Monday.
“Without WFP vouchers, many families will
go hungry. For refugees already struggling to survive the harsh winter, the
consequences of halting this assistance will be devastating,” said the UN
agency, which needs $64 million to support the refugees for the rest of
December.
Suspension of the assistance programme
comes as many vulnerable Syrian families enter their fourth bleak winter in
difficult living conditions after fleeing a homeland racked by conflict since
March 2011.
“This couldn’t come at a worse time,” said
UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres in a statement.
The impact could be particularly
devastating in Lebanon, where more than 1.1 million Syrian refugees—one-quarter
of the country’s permanent population—are scattered across some 1,700
communities, according to the UN refugee agency. Many live in makeshift
settlements, sheds, garages and unfinished buildings.
The electronic voucher programme has
already injected about $800 million into local shops in the countries hosting
refugees, and WFP will immediately resume it if new funding arrives, it said in
the statement.
It was not clear how hungry Syrian refugees
might fill the gap left by WFP suspending its voucher programme.
WFP
had warned last month that it might be forced to impose such a suspension and
said it might have to announce a similar measure in January for people reliant
on aid within Syria, where at least 7.6 million people are internally
displaced.
The Rome-based agency has already cut
rations for 4.25 million people it is providing food supplies to in Syria.
“WFP will not be able to continue its
life-saving operations inside Syria in February without additional funding,”
WFP spokeswoman Elisabeth Byrs told Reuters on Monday.
The UN refugee agency has said that a lack
of cash has forced it to prioritise as it helps those in need prepare for
winter, with preference for people at higher, colder altitudes and vulnerable
refugees such as newborn babies.
(REUTERS)
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