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The UN World Food Programme (WFP) said on Tuesday it had resumed distributing food aid in parts of Ethiopia’s Tigray region after a three-month pause.
WFP paused food aid to the northern region in May following reports of widespread theft of donations. It then suspended aid to all of Ethiopia in June. The United States did the same.
More than 20 million people need food assistance in Ethiopia, Africa’s second most populous nation, largely due to the Horn of Africa’s worst drought in decades and a two-year civil war in Tigray.
The WFP had been providing emergency food assistance to nearly six million of them.
It said it started testing and verifying new measures on July 31 to deliver food assistance in four districts of Tigray to just over 100 000 eligible people.
“The test distributions are being rolled out at seven food distribution points where WFP and partners have completed targeting of beneficiaries and digitally registered them,” the agency said in a statement.
The WFP said it would continue to work with its partners in testing the latest measures prior to any wider distributions of aid, including to people in Amhara, Afar and Somali regions.