NEW YORK: A critical $150 million dollar lifeline for rural families in Afghanistan was announced by the World Bank on Monday, part of an overall package of $195 million, for critical livelihood and life-saving assistance, the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), said.
Some 19.7 million people – almost half of Afghanistan’s population – are facing acute hunger, meaning that they are unable to feed themselves on a daily basis, according to the latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis released last month by the UN and aid partners, including FAO and the World Food Programme (WFP).
“We are grateful to the World Bank and its Members for the generous and timely contribution”, FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu, said in a statement.
The ripple effects from the war in Ukraine are exacerbating the food security situation, pushing food prices to new highs, increasing food production costs, especially fertilizer, and placing pressure on countries in the region supplying wheat to Afghanistan, to restrict food exports, to ensure sufficient domestic supplies.
The new Afghanistan Emergency Food Security Project will boost the production of food crops for smallholder Afghan farmers.
It is the first tranche of a total $195 million, another $45 million will be released within the next 24 months.
“It is a historic moment for poor farmers in Afghanistan, and it represents an important milestone in our collective efforts to deliver results at scale, avert a looming catastrophe and make real transformative differences in the lives of vulnerable people,” Qu said.
FAO will be the sole implementing partner for the funding, which will be centred around two main components, the agency said. In terms of wheat production, it will support about 2.1 million people through the November and March-November 2023 planting seasons.
The project will also provide focused support on the nutritional needs of children, people with disabilities or chronic illness, and households headed by women. Seeds and basic tools will be provided for backyard kitchen gardening, together with technical training on improved nutrition and climate-smart production practices.
Almost one million people will benefit from this support, particularly rural women: some 150,000 of them will receive training on improved cultivation techniques and nutrition. The project will help link beneficiaries with local markets to facilitate the sale of marketable surpluses of wheat, vegetables and legumes.
Secondly, the project will increase access to water for irrigation, while improving soil and water conservation.
It will also bolster climate resilience by supporting the rehabilitation and improvement of selected irrigation and watershed management systems of over 137,000 hectares of land.
Through the project, FAO hoped more than 1.9 million people will benefit from cash for work activities, for the restoration of irrigation infrastructure and watershed management. –Agencies