The Niagara Falls Review

WFP thanks Canada for support after capturing award

- MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

OTTAWA — The United Nations World Food Program is thanking Canada for its support after the organizati­on won the Nobel Peace Prize, saying support is essential with hunger rising due to COVID-19.

Spokespers­on Julie Marshall says Canada is the UN organizati­on’s seventh-largest donor, contributi­ng more than $250 million in 2019, and has supported its work for 50 years.

Because the WFP is fully reliant on voluntary donations, she says the contributi­ons are essential to feeding the rising number of hungry people in the world.

Marshall says the COVID-19 pandemic has made that job harder because the WFP now estimates it will have to feed 138 million people, up from the 100 million it had previously estimated.

The WFP is predicting a funding shortfall of $6.4 billion for 2020.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded the peace prize to WFP for its work in helping feed hundreds of millions of starving people in conflict zones around the world in the midst of the pandemic.

“This prize is for everybody. But Canadians can be very proud to share in this recognitio­n of this great award,” Marshall said in an interview, adding conflict, climate disaster and economic turmoil are the main drivers of hunger.

“But then we have COVID-19. And because of COVID-19, it’s making the hungriest hungrier and the poor poorer,” Marshal said.

She says that will lead to the “biggest and largest response of WFP’s history. And that means we have some really big funding challenges.”

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