Today, the World Food Programme (WFP)
announced it would reduce food assistance to refugees in Rwanda by a dramatic
60 percent, as of March 2021. Some 135,000 Burundian and Congolese refugees in
camps in Rwanda rely on humanitarian assistance to meet their basic food needs
each month.
“This is a desperate situation and, without an immediate
response from donors, we simply have no choice but to reduce our assistance to
the refugees,” said WFP Country Director
Edith Heines. “While WFP appreciates the
support received so far, we are urgently appealing to donors to quickly come to
the aid of the refugees and provide additional funding so that we can return to
full rations and avoid any prolonged negative impacts.”
WFP provides refugees with a
monthly cash transfer to buy food in local markets. Each person
receives RWF 7,600 (US$ 7.72) under a full
ration allocation, which provides the basic foods to meet minimum nutrition
requirements for that person.
WFP requires US$9 million to
avert ration reductions from March through June 2021, and US$20.6 million to
continue full assistance to refugees throughout 2021. If no new funding is
received, deeper reductions will be necessary in the coming months.
Despite the reductions, WFP will
maintain full rations of targeted nutrition support to refugees identified as
particularly vulnerable, such as children under two years, schoolchildren, and
pregnant and nursing mothers, as well as people living with HIV and tuberculosis patients under treatment. A total
of 51,000 refugees including 37,000 schoolchildren are being assisted.
This comes at a time when many refugees have been
particularly hard hit by the impacts of the COVID-19
pandemic. WFP data from June and November
2020 noted an increased reliance on external aid among refugees since the onset
of the pandemic.
Ration reductions are likely to cause widespread food
insecurity and potentially lead to increased tensions within the refugee community.
In late 2017 through mid-2018, WFP was forced
to reduce rations by twenty-five percent due to funding shortfalls. A WFP survey in 2018 found that as a result the percentage
of refugee families with poor household eating habits doubled.
In 2021, the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and WFP are jointly
moving towards needs-based humanitarian assistance instead of the current
blanket assistance for refugees. This exercise will further allow scarce
donor resources to be prioritized for the most vulnerable. The strategy
will also strive to create more access to livelihood opportunities for
refugees.
“This new approach will allow us to prioritise funding and
focus on those refugees who need our help the most,” said Heines. “But in
order for it to be successful, the refugee operation must be fully supported at
this critical stage to ensure we have the support of the refugee community as
we transition to this new way of programming.”
The Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework (CRRF) outlines a commitment of the international community to
meet the immediate humanitarian needs of the refugees to ease the burden on
Rwanda. Additional support is needed to support the host government and its
goodwill and to not undermine developmental gains.
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