Make a secure online donation today to help us assist more children and their families affected by the famine or phone 13 PLAN (13 7526).Niger is the second poorest country in the world with 63% of its population living on less than $1.40 a day and its 11 million people being mainly dependent on subsistence agriculture.
Severe food shortage
In Niger, the locust swarms ravaged vast stretches of farm and grazing land, which together with localised drought and an early end to the rainy season, have contributed to create a national food security crisis.
A recent assessment by the Cellule de Crise Alimentaire . a government body - revealed a national net cereal deficit of over 223,000 tons. This equates to 100% of the 2004 crops in some areas.
Increases in food prices following the shortages in stock over the last years have resulted in nationwide protests and social unrest, as price hikes have made it impossible for poor families to feed their children. Food prices in March 2005 were 46% higher than in the same period in 2003.
A reduction in food consumption is taking place, with children showing signs of severe malnutrition, making them more vulnerable to disease and illness. An evaluation study has revealed that 42% of children under the age of 3 are undernourished.
Migration
People are migrating. They are leaving their villages in search of prospects for food and work in large cities as well as neighbouring countries like Ghana, Nigeria and Benin, causing disruption to the education of their children.
Plan Niger has been working to improve food security in 14 villages Plan current works with in the devastated Tillabery region with approximately 3,111 families, focusing on ensuring relief nutrition to more than 9,000 children. In early June Plan signed a memorandum of understanding with UNICEF to support these children.s nutritional rehabilitation centers and food distribution for communities.
Plan is now expanding its emergency work to 68 villages in the region. The intensification of work will seek to target some 14,501 households - a total population of some 101,507 people. Each household is to receive 100 KG of rice. This will help maintain communities until the harvest season starts in October.
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Where Plan works in Niger |
Our activities include:
In the coming months
Plan's work forms part of a national strategy to avoid further loss of life, this includes mass cereal distribution in all departments to all families. Due to the nature of the crisis, authorisation has been given to suppliers to import rice from Asia.