Funding Shortage Threatens to Cut Off Vital Air Service in Central African Republic

The World Food Program warns a lack of money is threatening to ground the crucially important U.N. Humanitarian Air Service in Central African Republic early next year. 

More than half of Central African Republic’s population of five million depends upon international humanitarian assistance to survive.   The U.N. Humanitarian Air Service or UNHAS transports the people who provide and implement vital assistance programs to hard-to-reach areas of the country.

C.A.R. is a huge country.  The roads are largely impassable, and the presence of armed groups makes road travel very dangerous.  The World Food Program, which runs UNHAS, says aid workers from the U.N. and non-governmental organizations depend upon this air service to reach people living in remote areas.

WFP spokesman, Herve Verhoosel, tells VOA this service will be forced to shut down in 2019 if donors do not come up with the cash needed to keep it operating.

“If we do not find the three million in the coming weeks, the $3 million U.S., we will need after January to stop the service and that will obviously be catastrophic for the country, catastrophic for the humanitarian community there because they will need to stop the activities in many cities of the country because of the lack of access,” said Verhoosel. 

Fierce fighting among armed gangs erupted in November in the central, north-west, east and south-east regions of C.A.R.  Following these clashes, Verhoosel says UNHAS transported more than 2,000 aid workers, a record for a single month, to provide help to the thousands of desperate civilians caught up in the violence.   

Since conflict erupted in 2013, some 700,000 people have become internally displaced and more than 570,000 have fled to neighboring countries as refugees.  This year, WFP has provided food aid to more than 1.2 million people.

 

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