U.N. says cuts Syria food aid over funding shortfall

A family of Syrian refugees sits on Kizilay Square in downtown Ankara on October 13, 2014.

A family of Syrian refugees sits on Kizilay Square in downtown Ankara on October 13, 2014.

The United Nations said on Monday that it has started cutting the food aid it provides to 4.2 million Syrians ravaged by war because of a shortfall in funding.

“Yes, we have already started … this month,” to cut supplies to the 4.2 million Syrians inside the country who have been receiving food aid, the World Food Program’s assistant executive director Elisabeth Rasmusson told AFP in an interview.

“We decided that because of the funding shortfall, we will provide food to everybody but its cut down to 60 percent of the normal [food] basket,” she said.

Around 2 million Syrian refugees in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt would also be affected by the WFP’s decision to scale back assistance from next month, Rasmusson said.

The WFP requires about $352 million until the end of the year as it has completely run out of funds and is totally dependent on “internal finance mechanisms” to operate, she said.

Rasmusson is in Kuwait to attend a meeting for main Syria donor countries and agencies. Kuwaiti officials complained during the meeting that some countries have not fulfilled their aid pledges for Syria.

Kuwait hosted two high-level conferences for Syria donors in January 2013 and January this year, with attendees pledging more than $6 billion.

Rasmusson said she understands a third conference is expected to be held in January, but the venue has not been determined.

Cutbacks in aid to refugees in countries neighboring war-torn Syria will start from next month. Syrians in Lebanon will receive 20-30 percent less assistance and in Turkey, WFP will not provide food to refugees in camps, the U.N. official said.

Rasmusson said WFP and U.N. officials are working “day and night” to contact donor countries and the private sector because “we do not want to stop providing food to the Syrians.”

She said WFP and U.N. aid agencies’ budgets have been strained by trying to respond to multiple crises around the world, particularly conflicts in the Middle East and the Ebola virus in West Africa.

“WFP budget projections for 2014 were $4.3 billion. Now, the needs are $8.5 billion,” said Rasmusson, adding that “the funding needs for the Middle East have at least doubled to around $4 billion,” with Syria accounting for half of the amount.

More than 180,000 people have been killed in the past three and a half years in Syria’s civil war, while militants from the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) seized swathes of territory in northern Syria and Iraq in an offensive in June. Conflicts have also erupted in South Sudan and Yemen.

WFP provides food aid to around 8.5 million people in Syria, Iraq and South Sudan.

 
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