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WFP supports children nutrition and learning amid COVID-19

KATHMANDU, Aug 6: Fortified rice, lentils and vegetable oil, totaling to nearly 1,500 MT, were distributed to school...
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KATHMANDU, Aug 6: Fortified rice, lentils and vegetable oil, totaling to nearly 1,500 MT, were distributed to school children (from Grade1-8) in rural areas of SudurPaschim and Karnali States. The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and the Government of Nepal distributed the food stuffs donated by the United States to the indigent children.


The closure of schools is putting the future of millions of children around the world at risk, affecting not only their ability to learn but also their access to nutritious food and health-support schemes. Since March, 2.4 million children in Nepal have been missing out on the nutritious lunches they used to receive at school — the only proper meals many of them could count on.


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The donation from the United States will support 150,000 of the most vulnerable households in the area, stated a press release issued by the UN World Food Programme. “The United States is proud to stand together with Nepal in supporting and protecting the most vulnerable among us. Our partnership with the United Nations World Food Programme and the Government of Nepal to distribute rations to school children in Sudur Paschim and Karnali States will help 150,000 families through these difficult times,” said American Ambassador to Nepal Randy Berry.


Since 2005, the U.S. Government’s (USG) McGovern-Dole Food for Education and Child Nutrition Program, which is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), has been supporting the WFP school meals programme in Nepal. With a total contribution of more than $81 million, McGovern-Dole has helped over 250,000 children access daily nutritious lunches through WFP’s school meals programme. “The lockdown has put a far greater burden on parents to provide their children with balanced and nutritious meals at home”,said Pippa Bradford, WFP Country Director and Representative.


“These take home rations will provide an interim respite for these families until children return to school – while facilitating at-home learning. We are thankful to the United States as our long-standing partner in support of school children and rural families in Nepal, especially in these uncertain times.” In order to shift to long-term, nationally run school feeding programs, WFP has started handing over McGovern-Dole supported schools to the government, with about 95,000 students already integrated into the national school meals programme to date.


WFP, with the support of the USG, has made extra efforts to ensure and widen the supply of local food to schools and expand community ownership. Home Grown School Feeding, a programme also supported by USDA, has focused on linking school meals to local agricultural production. The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization, saving lives in emergencies, building prosperity and supporting a sustainable future for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.


 

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