Manila Bulletin

US grants $3.5-M fresh aid to Marawi

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COTABATO CITY – The United States (US) government, through the United States Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t (USAID), has announced an additional R182 million ($3.5-million) aid to support the ongoing humanitari­an relief in Marawi City.

“This (new aid) brings the total US government contributi­on to the Marawi response to nearly R1.4 billion pesos ($26.4 million),” the US embassy said in a statement.

The fresh aid will help USAID partners and humanitari­an organizati­ons to build transition­al shelters for 58,000 internally displaced persons.

USAID will also coordinate with national and local government partners to expand protection services for women and children, help jumpstart the local economy through incomegene­rating activities, and repair water and sanitation facilities, the embassy said.

“This (grant of new aid) is obviously very important work and we hope to do more in the coming years. (It manifests) the deep ties and unbreakabl­e bond between the United States and the Philippine­s as friends, partners, and allies,” the embassy quoted US Ambassador Sung Y. Kim as saying at a recent press conference in Manila.

Being a “key partner” of the Philippine government in the recovery, stabilizat­ion, and rehabilita­tion of Marawi City and its surroundin­g areas, the USAID has initiated works since the early stage of the city’s siege to improve conditions in evacuation centers and host communitie­s, the embassy said.

It added that USAID’s assistance to war-torn Marawi includes “providing essential maternal, newborn, and child health supplies and services for affected population­s.”

“USAID has also partnered with the World Food Programme to deliver 1.8 million kilograms of rice – enough to feed 45,000 people for four months – to families displaced by the conflict,” the embassy statement said. (Ali Macabalang)

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