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Four years
after the end of civil war, food security still
lacking in Angola
IRIN
(JOHANNESBURG, July 12, 2006) Four
years after the end of Angola's long-running civil war, the
mineral-rich southern African country is still battling to
achieve food security. According to a national crop
assessment published this week, more than 800,000 people in
a population of 16 million will require food aid until the
next harvest in May 2007.
The survey, a joint assessment by the UN's Word Food Program
(WFP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO),
estimated that as a result of poor rains, total cereal
production for 2005/06 would be 742,000 tons, a 15 percent
drop compared to the 912,000 tons harvested in the 2004/05
season.
Although the area of land under cultivation has increased
since the end of the war in 2002, the legacy of landmines
and lack of roads and services has slowed the pace of
rehabilitation.
"Angola has not yet recovered from the many effects of the
civil war. Most of the country remains inaccessible to
everyone, including aid agencies that are willing to help
redevelop the ravaged areas. Potentially productive farmland
remains under landmines and the demining program is moving
slowly in many provinces," said WFP spokesperson Patricia
Lucas.
"The transport and communications infrastructure is very
bad," noted FAO country representative Annatolio Ndongmba.
"This hampers the movement of supplies to farmers. In the
same way, it severely limits the movement of farm produce to
the markets. The farmers are unemployed and too poor to
afford implements and inputs, which are also hard to find in
most rural areas."
The joint assessment noted that, for example, although
potatoes grew well in the central highlands region, it was
cheaper to import from Brazil than truck them the 600km to
the capital, Luanda.
"Progress in restoring infrastructure and services is
tortuously slow. The agricultural sector in Angola is
predominantly subsistence: soil conditions are poor and use
of modern inputs is low, resulting in very low
productivity," the report said.
This season's poor rains hit those already vulnerable the
hardest: former refugees and IDPs who resettled in the past
year or two, female-headed households, and the sick and
elderly.
WFP is struggling to assist more than 700,000 Angolans -
mostly young children and returning refugees - but "donor
support for the agency's relief program has diminished
alarmingly since last year", the organization said in a
statement this week.
"The situation has deteriorated to the extent that we will
not be able to distribute food from next month, and will
have to close down our operation entirely in September
unless new contributions are received very soon," the head
of WFP's operations, Sonsoles Ruedas, was quoted as saying.
WFP needs at least US$12.6 million to distribute 7,700 tons
of food aid until the end of the year, and $90 million for a
three-year program.
WFP plans to assist more than 700,000 children in primary
schools, pregnant and nursing women, and those living with
HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and pellagra. It also wants to
support refugees expected to return from neighboring
Democratic Republic of Congo and Zambia.
The government has pledged $1.3 million towards WFP's
school-feeding scheme this year, with the possibility of
increasing the donation in 2007 and 2008.
Angola's civil war lasted for 27-years, but the oil-rich
country has now one of the world's fastest growing
economies. Donors have faulted Luanda in the past for
not spending enough on humanitarian programs. "I cannot say
how much has been invested, but government is now getting
more involved in food security programs," said Ndongmba.
This article first appeared in IRINNews,
a regional news publication affiliated with the United
Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.
The original of this article can be viewed at
http://www.irinnews.org/print.asp?ReportID=54575
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