UN stores food in Jordan

Published March 23, 2003

ROME, March 22: The United Nations food aid agency scrambled on Saturday to move food to warehouses near the border with Iraq to prepare for the possible arrival of thousands of refugees fleeing the U.S.-led invasion.

The collapse of the UN-backed oil-for-food programme after the United Nations ordered its international staff to leave Iraq on Monday has denied fresh food supplies to 60 percent of the country’s 25 million people.

“We are continuing our preparations, and we may have to assist about two million Iraqis in an initial phase,” Trevor Rowe, chief spokesman of the UN World Food Programme (WFP), the world’s biggest food aid agency, told Reuters.

In Jordan, the WFP was erecting a portable warehouse at Al-Ruwayshid near the border with Iraq on Saturday, Rowe said.

He said it would store up to 400 tonnes of food and added that around five tonnes of high-energy biscuits were already there, ready for handing out by the UN refugee agency UNHCR.

In Syria, WFP has stockpiled basic food rations to feed 20,000 potential refugees or for delivery to Iraq, Rowe said.

In Kuwait, the agency was procuring bread that could be used to feed some 200,000 people over 10 days.

In Turkey, WFP planned to send some 50 tonnes of high-energy biscuits to Silope in the southeast over the next few days.

Up to half a million Iraqis fled cities in the northern Kurdish areas ahead of the invasion, moving their families to outlying villages, aid agencies said on Saturday.

The city of Dohuk near Turkey is “almost depopulated”, and people have also poured out of the key oil hub of Kirkuk, the UN Office of the Humanitarian Coordinator for Iraq said.

The UN estimated there were 350,000 to 450,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the north, and movements continued.

In Amman, WFP officials said food deliveries in Iraq would begin as soon as it was safe for staff to work in the country.

“It’s too early to make a judgement. We believe people have enough food to sustain them until the end of April,” spokesman Khaled Mansour said.

Rowe said he was not aware of imminent plans to move food aid into Iraq via the southern port of Umm-Qasr.—Reuters