The
World Food Programme (WFP) needs to raise $70 million to feed 1.3 million
people at risk from shortages in Ebola-quarantined areas in West Africa, with
the agency’s resources already stretched by several major humanitarian crises,
its regional director said.
WFP’s
West Africa Director Denise Brown said the organisation was currently providing
food for around 150,000 people in Ebola-striken nations but needed to rapidly
scale that up as the worst ever epidemic of the virus advanced.
Senegal
on Friday became the fifth country to confirm it had been touched by the
outbreak that has infected more than 3,000 people – killing some 1,550 of them
– since it was detected in March. The World Health Organization (WHO) said on Thursday
the outbreak could infect a total of
20,000 people before it ends.
Guinea,
Liberia and Sierra Leone have pledged to impose a ‘cordon sanitaire’ on the
most affected communities in their joint border region, restricting travel to
and from the areas and limiting their access to food supplies.
“We
need $70 million. That’s for 1.3 million people for three months,” Brown told
Reuters late on Friday. “We’ve agreed this morning…that we need to extend that
because WHO is already talking about 6-9 months before this is contained.”
Brown
said the WFP would look from donations from major donors like the United
States, the European Union, the World Bank and Japan, as well as from
non-traditional benefactors such as Arab states.
She
warned, however, that the agency’s resources were already thinly stretched by
major humanitarian crises in Syria, Iraq, South Sudan and Central African
Republic.
“I
don’t think the world has ever seen so many concurrent crisis on such a huge
scale. The humanitarian community is stretched beyond belief,” she said.
Brown
said WFP started food distribution in Guinea around 4 months ago, and more
recently in Liberia and Sierra Leone, mostly delivering food to isolation wards
in hospitals before gradually increasing the scope of the mission.
Travel
restrictions imposed by neighbouring African countries, notably Senegal – a
regional hub for the humanitarian sector – had made it more difficult to get
staff and supplies into the affected region, Brown said.
The
operation was also made more challenging by precautions to stop the disease
spreading and staff becoming infected.
“We
don’t want to go in and do a distribution for 10,000 people. We want smallgroups
of people, which is going to be very hard for us to manage,” Brown said. “Yes,
it probably makes us a bit slower but we need to get this right.”
The
area of Liberia hardest-hit around the northern Lofa county include some of its
main food producing regions and the quarantine imposed on this area has raised
fears that supplies to the rest of the country will be restricted.
Brown
said that prices for rice and cassava at one of the main markets in the capital
Monrovia had already risen by around 30 percent and there were reports that
farmers had not been able to plant their crops because of contagion fears,
suggesting shortages were likely to worsen.
Reuters
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