Politics and policy
By AFP
In Summary
- Last month WFP announced it had been forced to slash food handouts to nearly half a million people living in two camps in northern Kenya and who have fled conflict in Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan.
The UN World Food Programme (WFP) said Tuesday it
will resume full food rations to refugees in Kenya in January following a
successful appeal to foreign donors.
Last month WFP announced it had been forced to slash food
handouts to nearly half a million people living in two camps in northern
Kenya and who have fled conflict in Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan.
"Refugees depend on food assistance for their
survival and we are relieved that we can now once again meet the full
food needs of refugees in Dadaab and Kakuma," said Thomas Hansson, WFP's
Acting Country Director for Kenya.
The Dadaab camp complex in Kenya's northeast is
home to one of the world's largest refugee populations, housing over
350,000 Somali refugees. The Kakuma camp in the arid north-western
Turkana region mainly houses refugees from South Sudan, Sudan and
Somalia.
WFP said the $45 million in fresh contributions had
come from the European Union, Britain, Denmark, Germany, Saudi Arabia
and the United States, adding that rations would only be cut by 40 per
cent in December and return to normal levels in January.
WFP spends almost $10 million a month to hand out the 9,700 tonnes of food needed to feed some 500,000 refugees in Kenya.
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