Foreign Policy Blogs

US will give $8.4m to avert food crisis

ISLAMABAD, Sept 18: The United States will give $8.4 million to Pakistan through the World Food Programme to provide approximately 11,000 metric tons of wheat for over 1,600,000 people, including students of 3,200 schools.

The WFP will begin distributing food aid in 12 districts in the NWFP and Balochistan this month. An agreement to this effect was signed by the United States Agency for International Development and the United Nations World Food Programme here on Thursday. US Ambassador Anne W. Patterson and Food Minister Nazar Mohammad Gondal attended the ceremony.

The US grant will be a contribution to WFP's $71 million food assistance programme which will be completed in one year and help some 3.1 million people.

Ambassador Patterson said the programme would benefit thousands of people affected by the rising prices of basic food items which had increased by 100 per cent in one year, making them out of reach for millions of people.

WFP's country director Wolfgang Herbinger thanked the ambassador for her country's support and partnership in protecting schoolchildren and families in the parts of Pakistan that are suffering most from the sudden hike in food prices in the world.

Special "school days' will be organised for distribution of staples, including 50kg wheat bags, three times, between now and the beginning of the next wheat harvest in March and April next year.

Dawn

 

Author

Bilal Qureshi

Bilal Qureshi is a resident of Washington, DC, so it is only natural that he is tremendously interested in politics. He is also fascinated by the relationship between Pakistan, the country of his birth, and the United States of America, his adopted homeland. Therefore, he makes every effort to read major newspapers in Pakistan and what is being said about Washington, while staying fully alert to the analysis and the news being reported in the American press about Pakistan. After finishing graduate school, he started using his free time to write to various papers in Pakistan in an effort to clarify whatever misconceptions he noticed in the press, especially about the United States. This pastime became a passion after his letters were published in Vanity Fair and The New Yorker and his writing became more frequent and longer. Now, he is here, writing a blog about Pakistan managed by Foreign Policy Association.

Areas of Focus:
Taliban; US-Pakistan Relations; Culture and Society

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