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UN accuses US of delaying food aid to Somalia


Monday, November 09, 2009

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Ariel David 

Associated Press 

 

ROME: The United Nations says it’s running out of food for millions of starving Somalis in part because the United States is delaying aid amid fears it could be intercepted by militants linked to Al-Qaeda. Starting last month, the UN World Food Program (WFP) has cut rations by up to half for some people in the lawless, impoverished east African nation and will run out of supplies in December, the Rome-based agency said Saturday. 

“WFP’s food-assistance supply line to Somalia is effectively broken,” said Peter Smerdon, a spokesman for the agency in Nairobi, Kenya. “The pipeline break is partly because [the US government] has delayed US assistance to Somalia.” The US State Department confirmed it had concerns that militants could get their hands on humanitarian assistance and had temporarily suspended food shipments. 

“Renewal of some US non-food humanitarian programs was delayed while we reviewed conditions on the ground and their impact on our programs,” said Laura Tischler, a State Department spokeswoman. 

“US food aid deliveries to Somalia were temporarily suspended while we conducted our review,” she said. 

“However, the food aid pipeline for Somalia has not been broken.” The shortfall in aid lamented by the United Nations was first reported Friday by The New York Times. 

Other factors contributing to the ongoing problem include a drop in donations caused by the world economic crisis and an increased need for aid across the Horn of Africa, Smerdon said. 

The United States is WFP’s largest donor, providing usually around half of the food aid that the agency delivers to some 2.2 million people in Somalia. The country has been crippled by some 18 years of civil war, an Islamic insurgency, high food prices and a severe drought. 

So far this year, the State Department says the United States has provided $179 million to help Somalis, including $124 million in food aid.

Smerdon said that WFP and other humanitarian agencies were discussing with United States officials and other donor countries measures that would prevent aid from being diverted to Al-Shabab. The Islamic militant group is linked to Al-Qaeda and controls much of southern Somalia. 

“WFP understands the concerns of the United States and other donors regarding the appropriate utilization of resources in Somalia,” Smerdon said. 

“We remain hopeful that the United States will continue to fund food-relief programs in Somalia, understanding the difficult and complex political and operational environment in which agencies such as WFP must work.” 

Smerdon declined to discuss which measures were being considered, citing the sensitivity of the talks. 

He said the agency was willing to provide “sufficient assurances” while stressing the “need to preserve WFP’s neutrality as a humanitarian actor.”


Tags: Africa, Al-Qaeda, Islamic, Nations, Somalia, States, United Nations, United States, World

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