Implementation of Food Aid (in Response to High Food Prices in the Developing Countries)
July 29, 2008
- On July 29, Japan decided to extend grant aid totaling 6,620 million
yen as food aid for the ten countries listed below, as part of the measures
to cope with the problem of high food prices.
- On April 25 this year, Japan announced that it would implement emergency
food aid of approximately 100 million US dollars in the next three months
in response to increasing food prices. Also on July 4, Japan announced
that it would implement food aid of approximately 50 million dollars by
October this year. The decision on this aid is, therefore, part of
the concrete implementation.
- For the aid to be provided through the WFP, Mr. John M. Powell, Deputy
Executive Director of WFP’s External Affairs and Resource Development Department,
and Mr. Yuji Nakamura, Japanese Ambassador to Italy, will exchange Notes
to this effect today in Rome. The Exchanges of Notes for the bilateral
assistance will be made in sequence in the future.
Of the decision made this time, a total of 4,710 million yen will be bilateral assistance and a total of 1,910 million yen will go through the WFP.
- The food aid provided by Japan, including the donation of this time, accounts for about 203.12 million US dollars in total at this point.
[Reference] Breakdown of the food aid decided (amount provided):
- Eritrea (630 million yen)
- The Republic of Cote d’Ivoire (670 million yen)
- The Democratic Republic of Congo (840 million yen)
- The Democratic Republic of Sao Tome Principe (450 million yen)
- The Republic of Sierra Leone (560 million yen)
- The Republic of Liberia (780 million yen)
- The Republic of Haiti (780 million yen)
- The Republic of Timor-Leste (240 million yen)
- The Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka (820 million yen)
- The People’s Republic of Bangladesh (850 million yen)
(1) Bilateral Assistance
(2) Through the WFP
(END)
Related Information (Agriculture, Fisheries and Forest)
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