Just Earth News 04 May 2017, 05:35 am Print
WFP/Abeer Etefa
David Beasley, the Executive Director of the UN World Food Programme (WFP) on Wednesday wrapped up a three-day trip to the two countries to assess the growing needs. According to a press release, he spoke first-hand with Syrian refugee families in the Bekaa Valley and Beirut, and met with displaced women and children at a WFP distribution centre in Damascus.
“I am touched by the stories of the struggle and resilience of the many Syrians I met who are living away from home and loved ones,” Beasley said.
The UN agency provides monthly life-saving food assistance to more than four million vulnerable people each month inside Syria through regular deliveries as well as cross-border, cross-line and air deliveries to areas not reachable through regular means.
“In his meetings, Beasley appealed for regular, unimpeded and sustained humanitarian access to deliver urgently needed food assistance to people in besieged and hard-to-reach areas across war-torn Syria,” WFP reported.
He also commended Lebanon for its generosity in hosting over one million Syrian refugees.
During the trip, Beasley also visited warehouses, food distribution centres and WPF-contracted supermarkets where some of the most vulnerable refugees redeem monthly electronic vouchers.
In Lebanon, almost 700,000 vulnerable Syrian refugees receive food assistance through an electronic voucher (e-card) system. The e-cards are replenished each month with $27 per person, which can be used to buy food at one of 480 WFP-contracted shops across Lebanon.
- Afghanistan: Taliban Minister dies in Kabul blast
- Gunmen open fire on vehicle in Pakistan, 42 Shiites die
- Pakistan: TV journalist injured after unknown gunmen attack him in Karachi
- Twelve security personnel, six terrorists killed in Pakistan's Mali Khel area
- Several nations condemn suicide blast in Pakistan railway station