Channelnewsasia.com
Friday, December 05, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Mumbai Attacks
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
Asia Pacific News

 
 

UN expanding food aid to rebellion-torn southern Philippines
Posted: 18 July 2008 2348 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 


MANILA : The United Nations said Friday it will expand its food aid programme in the southern Philippines to a further 500,000 people despite hopes the 40-year-old Muslim insurgency may soon be settled.

The UN World Food Programme, which launched school-based soup kitchens on troubled Mindanao island in 2006, will expand its coverage to 1.5 million people, country chief Stephen Anderson told AFP in an interview.

The agency supplies 12.5-kilogram (27.5-pound) packs of cereals and beans to about 187,000 children in 800 schools every month as an incentive to keep them in school.

The food rations are typically shared by the families of the children who live in, or were displaced from, areas of fighting between Muslim rebels and government forces or between rival Muslim clans.

"We're in the process of finalising our expansion phase, we're not ending for at least another year," Anderson said.

Anderson said the assistance had stabilised school attendance rates in conflict areas of Mindanao, where only 33 percent of children complete primary school compared to 67 percent for the rest of the country.

"The retention rate is extremely important when you're talking about education because once children drop out... it's very difficult to go back," he said.

In a country where a third of the population live on a dollar a day or less, the government says one in six children are not in school due to poverty.

The targeted schools are in areas with the highest child malnutrition rates in the country.

President Gloria Arroyo's government said this week it hopes to proceed to the final stage of peace negotiations shortly with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front after resolving the most contentious issues of the protracted talks that mainly deal with control over the region's natural resources.

The UN official said even if Manila signs a peace treaty with the rebels, "it would still take some time" before these areas can be weaned off food aid.

"Even if you bring in resources, you need to have structures, the institutions in place to handle them and that usually takes a bit of time," he said.

- AFP /ls

 

 



Other asiapacific News
Six dead in Pakistan market blast
Tourists flood out of Thailand but turmoil remains
Malaysia's government faces critical by-election test
Thaksin's ex-wife Pojaman flying back to Thailand
India, Russia sign nuclear energy, space deals
Major alert at Delhi airport, police say situation "normal"
Royal household says Thai king has "mild fever"
Taiwan ex-leader denies son laundered money in Japan
Rice says Pakistan pledges to investigate Mumbai attacks
Russia's Medvedev set to sign nuclear deal in India
Doctor visits Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi
Knife-wielding Indonesian pirates rob vessel off Malaysia's Tioman island
US, NKorea envoys in Singapore for talks
Indian opposition demands action against Pakistan
Polluted Indonesian river to get major cleanup, says ADB
Philippines says leftist rebels spurned 2009 peace treaty
Nine killed in southern Thailand violence
Japanese still splurging on New Year gifts
Indonesia conducts study on yoga before issuing fatwa
Japanese climber dies hours before rescue on NZealand mountain

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions