Arab News

Aid into Ethiopia’s Tigray ‘not matching needs’: WFP

- AFP Addis Ababa

The World Food Programme (WFP) said aid deliveries into Tigray were “not matching the needs” of the stricken region even as a ceasefire takes hold in war-torn northern Ethiopia. Restoring aid deliveries to Tigray was a key part of an agreement signed on Nov. 2 to end a two-year war that has killed untold numbers of people and unleashed a humanitari­an crisis. The WFP said all four road corridors into Tigray had reopened since the ceasefire and humanitari­an flights were flying into major cities, allowing a significan­t uptick in aid supplies reaching the region.

“However, deliveries of assistance within Tigray are not matching the needs and WFP and its cooperatin­g partners urgently need access to all parts of the region,” the UN food agency said in a statement on Friday.

Aid into the region ground to a halt in late August when fighting resumed between the Ethiopian government and their allies, and

fighters loyal to Tigray’s rebellious authoritie­s.

Even before the suspension of aid, the UN had warned many in Tigray already faced starvation, with some 90 percent of its 6 million people dependent on food assistance.

The region was isolated from the world for over a year, and faced severe shortages of medicines and limited access to electricit­y, banking and communicat­ions.

Since Nov. 15 when road access improved, WFP said nearly 100 trucks had transporte­d 2,400 metric tons of food and 100,000 liters of fuel into the region. Humanitari­an flights carrying passengers to Mekele, the regional capital, resumed

Friday for the first time since August after receiving government approval. Aid charters into Shire, a northern city, have also commenced for the first time ever.

But despite improved access WFP said “some parts of eastern and central zones of Tigray remain constraine­d,” hindering sufficient aid delivery.

“Since the start of November, WFP has reached 29 percent of its caseload of 2.1 million people with food assistance in the Tigray region,” it said.

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