Nigeria, 36 Other Countries to Benefit from $110 Million Japan’s Support to Vulnerable People
Nigeria, 36 Other Countries to Benefit from $110 Million Japan’s Support to Vulnerable People
Nigeria and 36 other countries across Africa, Asia, and the Middle East will benefit from a $110 million support to vulnerable people.
United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) has already welcomed the total contribution of $110 million from the Government of Japan towards its food assistance and livelihood support to vulnerable people.
Some $20.6 million will be used to provide life-saving support to families in conflict-stricken Yemen, where nearly 50,000 people are living in famine-like conditions, with 5 million just a step away from those same desperate conditions.
On International School Meals Day, WFP and Ministry of Education commit to expanding support to all schoolchildren
miragenews.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from miragenews.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Japan provides US$110 million for food assistance to the most vulnerable people in 37 countries
Format
YOKOHAMA – The United Nations World Food Programme has welcomed a total contribution of US$110 million from the Government of Japan towards its food assistance and livelihood support to vulnerable people in 37 countries across Asia, the Middle East and Africa
Some US$20.6 million will be used to provide life-saving support to families in conflict-stricken Yemen, where nearly 50,000 people are living in famine-like conditions, with 5 million just a step away from those same desperate conditions.
In Afghanistan, a US$12.9 million allocation will support WFP’s response for families affected by the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
9 vivid and eye-catching March art events no Houstonian should miss
9 vivid and eye-catching March art events no Houstonian should miss
Dragon76 mural courtesy photo The Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern world premieres Anri Sala s new immersive film project Time No Longer.
Photo by Anri Sala
James C. Watkins, “Double-Walled Basket,” 2019. Wheel thrown and hand built, fumed and low-fired clay at Center for Contemporary Craft.
Photo by James C. Watkins
Anna Mayer, “Fireful of Fear: Store These Records in a Safe Deposit Box or Other Secure Place (Kanan Dume),” 2008-2018. Wildfired ceramic at
Center for Contemporary Craft
Photo by Anna Mayer After our weird winter of discontent, spring approaches. We sense it artfully in the air because not only does March bring us some blooming new art in galleries and art centers, but outdoor installations and murals are popping up all over this month.
March 8th, 2021 in Podcast. Closed
Girls Gotta Run, a non-profit in Ethiopia, currently invests in and empowers 195 girls through running programs and education. (Photo: Girls Gotta Run)
Press Release
Girls Gotta Run Receives the Catherine Bertini Trust Fund for Girls Education Award!
This International Women’s Day is especially exciting as Girls Gotta Run celebrates it’s Catherine Bertini Trust Fund for Girls Education award from the World Food Program USA.
In recent years, only about 50 percent of Ethiopian girls who enroll in primary school ever made it to Grade 5. COVID-19 has further threatened girls’ access to school and has made them increasingly vulnerable to child marriage due to nation-wide school closures for several months in 2020. As a result of this grant, Girls Gotta Run will be able to bring on a new cohort of girls who will not only attend school but get the unique training they need as leaders and changemakers through local run clubs
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.