Thousands forced to eat grass


http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=08012002-024722-3570r

KABUL, Afghanistan, Jan. 8 (UPI) -- An acute food shortage has forced
thousands of malnourished Afghans to eat grass and thousands more may 
face starvation if they do not receive help, international aid agencies 
warned Tuesday.

"There is an urgent need to diversify distribution of food supplies in
remote areas of northwest Afghanistan," said the World Food Program.

The report said that even in areas where relief has arrived,
"supplementary foods such as lentils, oil and corn Soya blend are 
needed to meet the nutritional requirements of malnourished populations."

WFP began distributing food coupons to over 50,000 families 
(approximately 340,000 people out of a total population of 430,000) in the western 
Herat region this week. More than 2,600 metric tons of wheat will be 
distributed over the next 10 days.

But the International Rescue Committee, one of the aid agencies working 
in Afghanistan, warned that about 10,000 people in the northern 
mountainous region of Abdullah Jan have been forced to eat grass.

WFP is also taking food to another 10,000 starving people in Badhgis
district of western Afghanistan who face a similar situation.

The Red Cross estimates that 300,000 to 400,000 families could still be 
in remote mountain areas and in desperate straits.

"It's true, there's real crisis there," Ken Burslem, a spokesman for 
the International Rescue Committee told British Broadcasting Corp.

Logistical problems are also preventing aid agencies and U.N. officials
from reaching the affected area. Years of war and the chaotic Taliban 
rule have destroyed whatever infrastructure Afghanistan had. Most of the 
remote areas have no road, no transport and no distribution network.

A recent supply of 1,000 tons of flour from WFP took two weeks by 
truck, and four and one-half hours by donkey to reach famine-hit areas of
northern Afghanistan.

Although U.S. forces have dropped hundreds of food packages in remote
areas, aid agencies say this did not help much. According to the 
agencies, most of the food packages were collected by warlords and sold in the 
local market or fell in areas infested with land mines.





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