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WFP cautions against early harvesting of crop

[Malawi] Cecilia Sande (30) and her children Chamazi (5), Clenis (8
months)and Mazizi (4) are resorting to eating weeds and roots to survive in
the village of Chataika, southern Malawi, as food shortages become
increasingly acute. Marcus Perkins/Tearfund
Women and children have been hard-hit by food shortages and the impact of HIV/AIDS
The World Food Programme (WFP) on Monday said it may have to extend its aid programme in Malawi, which was scheduled to end in March. There were concerns that the new crop of maize would not be ready for harvesting until June because of late planting in most parts of the country. "We are in dialogue with the government, donors and our implementing partners to assess what really needs to happen after March. The key concern is that the crops are not harvested too early. In a crisis situation there is a tendency to harvest maize before it matures, but then this means that farmers do not produce a full crop," WFP emergency officer Amy Horton told IRIN. There have already been reports of desperate villagers harvesting and eating green maize. The latest Southern African Development Community (SADC) vulnerability assessment estimates some 3.5 million Malawians (31 percent of the population) will require about 173,000 mt of emergency food aid through March 2003 - mainly due to drought. Horton said a rapid crop assessment would be conducted later this month which would determine the scale of the needs across the country after March. "Instead of general distribution, WFP intervention would likely target the most vulnerable populations, for example people living with HIV/AIDS who are too weak to get a crop for themselves," WFP regional spokesman Richard Lee told IRIN. Lee added that negotiations to extend WFP operations across the six countries in Southern Africa most at risk from crop failures were underway. Over 15 million people across the region face hunger through a combination of drought, poverty, the HIV/AIDS epidemic and alleged government mismanagement.

This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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