Nepal: Food crisis in the west growing - NGOs

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May 8, 2006, 11:23:18 PM5/8/06
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Nepal: Food crisis in the west growing - NGOs
14:49:32 GMT
Source: IRIN

Kathmandu, 8 May (IRIN) - International development agencies in Nepal
are seriously concerned about an acute food shortage in several hill
and mountain districts in the western region of the Himalayan kingdom.

The Dutch development agency (SNV) and Action Contre la Faim (ACF), the
French international NGO, have said that lack of food is very visible
in several remote districts of the impoverished Karnali province in
northwestern Nepal.

Nepal's worst food deficit districts: Mugu, Humla, Kalikot, Jumla and
Dolpa - all in Karnali, where most Nepalese live on less than US $1 day
- have had a history of food shortages for many decades.

Food production from farming in these districts barely lasts six months
each year. But now the situation has become much worse with
significantly less food being produced, recent assessments show. The
region suffered the worst drought in 40 years from February to march
this year.

"Due to a lack of rains, all the fields have gone to waste and look
barren at a time when they were supposed to be filled with greenery and
crops," said SNV's Rick van Keulen, who went to Humla to observe the
food security situation there.

"There is no more food stock left with most families. We will be
launching our emergency supplementary food feeding programme as soon as
possible," explained Mireille Seneclauze, head of ACF in Nepal.

ACF, which had conducted a food security assessment in 10 villages
around Humla and Mugu earlier this year, also reported that there was
widespread acute malnutrition in the area, particularly affecting
children.

Nepal already has one of the world's highest rates of chronic
malnutrition: affecting nearly 63 percent of Nepalese children,
according to the 2004 UN Human Development Report on Nepal.

"The main aid agencies for Nepal have not given much attention to this
issue," said Chandra Shahi, a member of the Nepalese parliament from
Mugu district. He has been lobbying the newly formed Nepalese cabinet
in the capital, Kathmandu, to act to end the hunger.

"Many villagers don't even have a single wheat grain in their houses,
they are now forced to eat aromatic and herbal plants to survive," he
added.

Until now, the Ministry of Local Development (MLD) had been flying rice
from the capital to the isolated region, but these supplies are limited
to the district centres and hungry villagers often have to walk for up
to six days to get to the food aid.

The UN's World Food Programme (WFP), along with the Swiss Development
Corporation (SDC) and UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), has
sent assessment teams to seven of the food deficit districts to collect
information and will present the findings in 10 days.

"We are starting to have a contingency plan for a possible or potential
response," said Jean Pierre de Margerie, acting director of WFP in
Nepal.

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