South Sudan: FAO air operation delivers agriculture aid to hard-to-access areas
The recent deliveries of livelihood kits add to the 430,000 crop, vegetable and fishing kits FAO already distributed earlier this year to support an estimated 2.3 million people facing severe food insecurity and soaring malnutrition.
“In many parts of South Sudan the rainy season is hampering access by road and regular fixed-wing flights, so FAO has been using the only means possible to reach these communities – helicopters,” explained Abdoul Karim Bah, Emergency Response Manager for South Sudan.
“This means we can also more easily take advantage of small windows of opportunity to distribute aid -- so as the ceasefire continues to hold, we‘ve been able to move quickly to reach areas that haven’t been reached since the start of the conflict,” he said.
As of October 1, FAO has delivered more than 70,000 livelihood kits through the operation. Each kit weighs no more than 2 kg and contains seven varieties of vegetable seeds and fishing materials to increase people's food intake and combat high rates of malnutrition by diversifying diets.At the same time, FAO is carrying out control missions to prevent outbreaks of livestock diseases, administering drugs and vaccines to high-risk areas.
Access problems and concerns for staff security have been severely limiting aid reaching remote and isolated communities in conflict-affected areas in recent months, calling for alternative ways to deliver aid quickly and safely.
“With this operation, our presence on the ground is limited to a maximum of 30 minutes, which is just enough time to handover the inputs to our partners,” explains Serge Tissot, FAO Representative a.i. in South Sudan.
With more than two million people having been uprooted from their homes due to conflict, FAO is committed to enabling farmers, fisherfolk and herders to plant crops, fish waterways and protect livestock from fatal diseases in the areas where they have found shelter.“In the course of our rapid response operations in Northern Jonglei and in Unity States and are amazed by the strength and the resilience of the communities who have been facing recurrent shocks over the past years,” says Bah. “But these communities need urgent support to recover their livelihoods and be able to produce enough food to sustain themselves in uncertain circumstances.”
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