World Food Programme may have to pause food aid in Congo due to record low funding

World Food Programme may have to pause food aid in Congo due to record low funding
Victims of the April floods in the Tshangu district demonstrate in front of the residence of Democratic Republic of the Congo's President Felix Tshisekedi, in Kinshasa. (AFP)
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World Food Programme may have to pause food aid in Congo due to record low funding

World Food Programme may have to pause food aid in Congo due to record low funding
  • More than 3.2 million people are facing emergency levels of acute food insecurity in the eastern DRC

GENEVA:The UN World Food Programme warned on Friday it may have to pause food aid to help millions of malnourished people in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo by February due to a major funding crisis.
“We’re at historically low levels of funding. We’ve probably received about $150 million this year,” said Cynthia Jones, country director of the WFP for the DRC, pointing to a need for $350 million to help people in desperate need in the West African country.
More than 3.2 million people are facing emergency levels of acute food insecurity in the eastern DRC, characterised by large food gaps and high levels of acute malnutrition, according to a report by a global food monitor released on Tuesday.
The area has been rocked by more than a year of fighting. The Rwandan-backed M23 rebels staged a lightning offensive this year in South Kivu province that allowed them to seize more territory than ever before.
Rwanda has denied supporting the rebels. Both M23 and Congolese forces have been accused of carrying out atrocities.
Previously the WFP was reaching about 1 million people per month with food assistance, but has now had to reduce that number to 600,000 people per month amid dwindling funding.
“If we were to continue reaching 600,000 people per month, we would break completely by February, March. That’s the reality. That’s how dire the situation is,” Jones said.
In recent years the WFP had received up to $600 million in funding. In 2024 it received about $380 million.
UN agencies, including the WFP, have been hit by major cuts in US foreign aid as well as other major European donors reducing overseas aid budgets to increase defense spending. (Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin, Editing by Miranda Murray and Alex Richardson)


European military trainers should be part of Ukraine security guarantees, EU general says

Updated 7 sec ago

European military trainers should be part of Ukraine security guarantees, EU general says

European military trainers should be part of Ukraine security guarantees, EU general says
BRUSSELS: The European Union should move military trainers into Ukraine after the war there ends to strengthen Ukrainian forces as part of Western security guarantees, the EU’s top military adviser told Reuters.
General Sean Clancy, chair of the EU’s military committee, said the United States would remain important for Europe’s security even as the EU gears up to be ready to defend itself by 2030.
NATO will continue to provide “hard power” to defend Europe but the transatlantic relationship will be rebalanced with Europeans becoming more self-reliant, said Clancy, who is Irish.

HAVING EU TRAINERS IN UKRAINE AFTER WAR IS ‘OPTIMAL’
The EU’s defense push has been driven by Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine and US President Donald Trump’s demands for Europeans to take more responsibility for their own security.
With the war in Ukraine showing no sign of ending, Western officials have been developing post-war plans to bolster Kyiv’s forces and deter Russia from attacking its neighbor again.
Clancy said it would be “optimal” to move part of the EU Military Assistance Mission in support of Ukraine (EUMAM Ukraine) into the country after the war. The mission has already trained more than 80,000 soldiers outside Ukraine.
Clancy said strong Ukrainian forces would serve as a security guarantee for both Ukraine and Europe.
“Europe can provide a high degree of that level of training. Will some of that be in Ukraine? I think that is optimal,” he said.
EU foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas said in September there was broad support from EU countries to take such a step, but no decision has been made yet. It would likely depend on the terms of any ceasefire or peace deal, diplomats say, and would need the backing of all 27 EU member states.

SIZE OF MISSION WOULD DEPEND ON REQUIREMENTS
Clancy said the size of any EU presence inside Ukraine would depend on what Kyiv wanted and the type of training required.
“This is something that we are...prudently examining in concert with our colleagues in Ukraine. And their needs are changing as well,” he said.
As chair of the EU military committee, Clancy serves as the voice of the military chiefs of the bloc’s member countries in discussions on defense and security policy.
That has included providing advice for the European Commission’s “Defense Readiness Roadmap,” which aims to prepare Europe to “credibly deter its adversaries and respond to any aggression” by 2030.
But Clancy said the US-European security relationship would remain important, not least because Europeans would still be using US weapons systems, even while striving to expand their own defense industries.
“For Patriot missiles, for F-35s (fighter jets) — all of the equipment and the high-end equipment that we already have sourced in the United States has a lifetime of decades to come,” he said.