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BAKU: U.N.: 'Almost a million refugees face hunger'

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  • BAKU: U.N.: 'Almost a million refugees face hunger'

    U.N.: 'Almost a million refugees face hunger'

    Baku Sun: Azerbaijan
    Dec 24 2004

    GENEVA (AP) - Around a million refugees could face hunger and
    malnutrition next year because of meager donations from governments
    of more prosperous countries, the United Nations said Tuesday.

    Several hundred thousand refugees are already struggling to survive
    because aid agencies have had to drastically reduce rations to ensure
    there is enough to go round, said Ron Redmond, spokesman for the U.N.
    high commissioner for refugees.

    "We are especially worried for refugees in Africa," Redmond told
    reporters.

    In Zambia, handouts already have been halved in the past two months
    and soon will be slashed again, putting 87,000 people at risk of
    malnutrition.

    "Already, we are hearing reports of refugee women resorting to
    prostitution to support themselves and their children," Redmond
    added. "Field offices in Zambia also report there has been a marked
    increase in children dropping out of school, presumably to help their
    families find food."

    In Tanzania, rations were cut by a quarter in October. UNHCR and the
    World Food Program found last month that malnutrition is rising among
    some 400,000 refugees from Burundi and Congo who live in Tanzania's
    camps.

    Malnutrition also threatens some 118,000 refugees in Ethiopia, and
    another 224,000 in Kenya, Redmond said.

    In conflict-ravaged Congo, WFP says that next month it will need to
    make ration cuts of almost one third, Redmond noted.

    "Africa is not the only continent facing a breakdown in the food
    pipeline," he said.

    In January, 140,000 displaced a decade ago by conflict between Armenia
    and Azerbaijan face a complete cut in rations — just two months after
    handouts were halved.

    Non-U.N. aid agencies also have sounded the alarm, but some have
    chastised the United Nations for failing to respond fast enough
    to crises.

    On Monday, U.S.-based Refugees International said the world body was
    moving too slowly to hand out food to people who fled the conflict
    in Ivory Coast.

    --Boundary_(ID_/r+1LxpfzhAgRvatPbnSVg)--
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