(Reuters): UN expecting to feed 6.5 million Ethiopians this year

From: Berhane Habtemariam <Berhane.Habtemariam_at_gmx.de_at_dehai.org>
Date: Tue, 13 May 2014 18:23:15 +0200

UN expecting to feed 6.5 million Ethiopians this year


Tue May 13, 2014 12:57pm GMT

GENEVA May 13 (Reuters) - The World Food Programme will help to feed nearly
6.5 million Ethiopians this year, the U.N. agency said on Tuesday, with the
country hit by locusts, neighbouring war and sparse rainfall.

"We are concerned because there is the beginning of a locust invasion in the
eastern part of the country, and if it's not properly handled it could be of
concern for the pastoralist population living there," WFP spokeswoman
Elizabeth Byrs told a U.N. briefing in Geneva.

"And in the northern part of Ethiopia there has been less rain than average
for the third or fourth consecutive year."

Ethiopia is also dealing with growing refugee numbers due to the conflict in
neighbouring South Sudan, sapping WFP's budget for feeding new arrivals in
the country, which is at risk of a shortfall as soon as next month.

More than 120,000 South Sudanese have crossed over into Ethiopia in the past
six months, mostly women and children who are arriving "famished, exhausted
and malnourished", WFP said in a statement.

The recent influx has brought total refugee numbers to 500,000 in Ethiopia.
The U.N. also provides food for millions of needy or undernourished
Ethiopians, including 670,000 school children and 375,000 in HIV/AIDS
programmes.

Ethiopia's overall situation has vastly improved over recent years and the
economy now ranks as one of the fastest growing in Africa. But deep problems
remain.

Malnutrition has stunted the growth of two out of every five Ethiopian
children and reduced the country's workforce by 8 percent, WFP said, citing
Ethiopian government data.

The International Monetary Fund expects Ethiopia's economy to grow 7.5
percent in each of the next two fiscal years but says the government needs
to encourage more private sector investment to prevent growth rates from
falling thereafter. (Reporting by Tom Miles Editing by Jeremy Gaunt)

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