World Food Program (WFP) to employ record number of Afghan women to survey food needs
Tehran, Dec 4, IRNA -- In a sign of the drastically altered social landscape
in Afghanistan, the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) Monday announced
that it would employ a record number of women to survey food needs in Kabul
as part of a major distribution effort for the city, the United Nations Information
Center in Tehran said in a press release on Tuesday.
"WFP will start the largest-ever house-to-house survey and issuance of
food coupons to people living in the city of Kabul," spokesperson Lindsey
Davies told reporters in Islamabad. "Not only is it the largest survey
of its kind done in Kabul, but it also involves the largest number of women
paid by WFP in Afghanistan," she added, noting that some 2,400 women would
be among the 3,612 surveyors.
"Mobilizing these thousands of women to work en mass with WFP is hugely
significant," said Ms. Davies. "We're able to do something now that
we haven't been able to do for years," she added, referring to the period
of Taliban rule when women were virtually barred from working.
Following the registration process, expected to take several days, food distribution
can begin "hopefully by the weekend, " she said. Surveyors will issue
each household a token good for a 50-kilograms bag of wheat, roughly enough
to feed a family for one month. The agency will then use local radio and TV
stations to announce where families can collect their food.
In a related development, the Executive Director of the UN Children's Fund
(UNICEF), Carol Bellamy, spent the weekend in Kabul, where she pledged both
immediate and long-term relief aid and assistance to Afghan families.
"Ms. Bellamy said that for some time, Afghanistan has been one of the
worst places in the world for a child to grow up in," UNICEF spokesperson
Chulho Hyun told the press in Islamabad. "The challenges are daunting,
but there is also great opportunity."