|



|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Dateline ACT
Malawi 01/04
Southern
Africa: Some gains made, but food needs continue
In
Malawi, ACT members' response to food crisis made a difference
By
Karen Plater, Presbyterian World Service and Development/ACT International
Malawi, January
26, 2004--Catherine Shawa is raising five children, ages 1 to 12,
on her own. A difficult job in any environment, it is more difficult
in Enkondhlweni, Mphembre, a remote community in northern Malawi.
Last
year, Catherine Shawa ran out of food to feed her children. Drought
caused her maize crop, which would have been harvested in June 2002,
to fail. It was the second failure in two years. Unemployed, with no
money to buy food for her children, Shawa and her family found themselves
caught in a food crisis that was threatening the lives of some 12 million
people in southern Africa. The majority of those affected were in Zimbabwe,
but a significant number of people in Malawi also lived with a similar
threat of running out of food.
The Livingstonia
Synod of the Church of Central Africa Presbyterian, a member of the
global alliance Action by Churches Together (ACT) International, was
one of several ACT members that responded to the crisis*. The synod
distributed maize and likuni phala, a special high-protein food supplement
for children under five, to 7,600 families in northern Malawi from October
2002 to March 2003. This was done in cooperation with local members
of ACT in Malawi and with support from ACT members around the world,
many of which provided funds to enable the work in Malawi to happen.
A thousand families in Mphembre, including Shawa's, received assistance
from this distribution. Without the food, Catherine Shawa feels that
she and her children would have starved.
This
year, while the situation in Malawi has improved, food assistance is
still needed. Several areas have experienced crop failures for the third
consecutive year due to harsh weather conditions - drought and floods
- and pest infestations. Deepening poverty and high unemployment mean
that people in these areas do not have the money to buy food, especially
after selling many of their assets to help them cope with crop failures
in the previous two years.
In addition, even
families that were able to plant crops last year face a precarious period
from now through March. Because of poor harvests, they have little or
no food stores with which to feed themselves while the current crops
are in the ground. Until harvest time in April, these families have
a serious gap in their food supply.
ACT
members in Malawi conducted assessments in their districts in June and
July last year to identify populations in need. Their results correlated
with the findings of the United Nation's Food and Agriculture Organization
and World Food Program assessments, which estimated that 400,000 people
will need food assistance between January and April.
Based on these results,
ACT members in Malawi submitted another appeal to the alliance - AFMW31.
The members seek to provide food relief and agricultural inputs, which
include maize seeds, and tools to help farmers recover. Earlier responses
by the ACT alliance helped families like Shawa's survive the food crisis.
The food helped children stay in school and farmers to have the energy
to continue farming. So far, however, funds for the latest response
are limited.
[* ACT members in
Malawi: Church Action in Relief and Development (CARD), Lutheran World
Federation/Evangelical Lutheran Development Programme (LWF/ELDP), Church
of Central Africa Presbyterian, Blantyre Synod (CCAP), DanChurchAid
(DCA), Norwegian Church Aid (NCA) and Christian Health Association in
Malawi (CHAM).]


|
 |