WFP staff member Mustapha Tanko handing over a stove to Mrs Ali during the distribution of over 7000 cook stoves in Banki |
The World Food Programme (WFP), together with its partner
INTERSOS, has distributed fuel-efficient stoves to 7,340 displaced families
receiving WFP food assistance in the town of Banki, in Nigeria’s Borno state. The
stoves distribution is an effort to improve people’s quality of life and reduce
the protection risks faced by women and girls in particular, when they have to
gather firewood from unsafe areas.
WFP has been present in Banki since 2016providing monthly food
rations to some 45,000 people who are entirely dependent on humanitarian assistance.
The stoves, which were distributed under WFP’s Safe Access to Fuel and Energy(SAFE)
Initiative, are intended to bring multiple benefits to almost every family
living in the camp.
An assessment carried out by WFP in January 2018 in four local
government areas in Borno state, revealed that 85% of women felt at risk when
collecting firewood from various threats including violence, sexual assaultand
even abduction. 76% of those surveyed were not able to cover their daily
cooking needs due to inadequate supplies of firewood; and 70% have no access to
wood fuel resources in their immediate living environment as a result ofthe
insecurity arising fromthe ongoing conflict between the security forces and
Non-State Armed Actors which has limitedpeople’s movements.
“When we distribute food to a vulnerable population, our aim is to
make sure that people are able to prepare that food safely without putting
themselves in harm’s way”, explains Sarah Longford, Country Director a.i. in
Nigeria.
“We’re stepping in to protect women and young girls whose lives
are exposed to great danger while crossing unsafe territories to fetch firewood.
These stoves burn 50% less fuel when compared to conventional open cooking
fires. This reduces the burden of care on women and girls who can spend less
time spent on gathering firewood”.
Firewood is also becoming an increasingly scarce and expensive
commodity in towns where population movements are restricted.Quite often,
families have been forced into poor dietary habits because they cannot afford
fuel which means they risk eating undercooked food, rely on less nutritious
foods that does not require cooking oreat fewer meals. The stoves also have
additional health and environmental benefits.
They help to prevent further
deforestation and produce far less smoke than traditional fires, reducing the
incidence of respiratory diseases. Furthermore, the design of the stoves
reduces the safety risks, such as fires, when used inside houses.
Together with other food security partners, WFP
has been advocating with the Nigerian Armed Forces to ensure that affected
populations have safer access to firewood collection. Thisincludes increasing
the number of patrols responsible for accompanying civilians.
WFP plans to roll out the stoves distribution
programme across four additional local government areas in Borno and is
finalising plans to begin the second phase of a longer term project aimed at increasing
income-generating opportunities and boosting the livelihoods of people in the
camps. This involves training women and girls in how to manufacture and market the
fuel-efficient cooking stoves locally. Ends.
WFP recognizes the support of the donors to its food assistance
activities in northeast Nigeria this year. Canada, European Commission
(ECHO), Finland, Switzerland, the United Kingdom (DFID), the United States
(USAID), and private donors have made contributions to WFP Nigeria this year.
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