Malnutrition treatments halted in Ethiopia due to underfunding, WFP says

FILE PHOTO: A severely malnourished child drinks from a bottle, at a camp for internally displaced people in Afdera town, Afar region, Ethiopia, February 23, 2022. REUTERS/Tiksa Negeri/File Photo
The World Food Programme suspended malnutrition treatment
for 650,000 malnourished women and children in Ethiopia this week due to severe
funding shortages, the U.N. agency said, with millions more at risk of losing
access to aid.
WFP gets financing from 15-20 donors, including the United
States, but many of them have cut funding this year, said Zlatan Milisic, WFP
Country Director in Ethiopia. The agency has received exemptions from U.S.
President Donald Trump's aid freeze that has disrupted humanitarian
work around the world, he added, but little for 2025 so far.
More than 10 million people in Ethiopia are gravely short of
food, including 3 million displaced by conflict and extreme weather conditions, as well as refugees from war-torn neighbouring Sudan, according to the WFP.
Milisic said WFP had already reduced rations in recent
months but that its operations were now at "breaking point" due to
severe underfunding, forcing more drastic measures.
"We've been left no choice but to this week suspend
treatment for 650,000 malnourished women and children — simply because we've
run out of commodities and funding," he told a Geneva press briefing by
video from Addis Ababa.
A WFP spokesperson later added that those cut off were in
various locations, including the northern regions of Tigray and Afar, and that
the U.N. agency is actively seeking funding to purchase more supplies to resume
treatments.
Around 3.6 million people could lose access to assistance,
including some being treated for malnutrition, if more funding is not received
by June, Milisic added.
"I would hope that we will get the resources and put in
place measures to really do our best to assist them. But if they don't receive
assistance, we will have serious consequences."
Ethiopia's food crisis has worsened in recent years as a
result of a 2020-22 civil war in Tigray. The country also faced the Horn of
Africa's worst drought in decades in 2022.
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