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‘School closures deprive 370m children of school meals’

The World Food Programme (WFP) and UNICEF are urging national governments to prevent devastating nutrition and health consequences for the 370 million children missing out on school meals amid school closures.

“For millions of children around the world, the meal they get at school is the only meal they get in a day,” said WFP Executive Director David Beasley on Wednesday, adding that: “Without it, they go hungry, they risk falling sick, dropping out of school and losing their best chance of escaping poverty”.

He said: “We must act now to prevent the health pandemic from becoming a hunger catastrophe.”

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School meals are especially critical for girls, according to Beasley.

He stressed that, in many poor countries, the promise of a meal can be enough to make struggling parents send their daughter to school.

“School is so much more than a place of learning. For many children, it is a lifeline to safety, health services and nutrition.

“Unless we act now – by scaling up lifesaving services for the most vulnerable children – the devastating fallout caused by COVID-19 will be felt for decades to come,” said Henrietta Fore, UNICEF Executive Director.

The duo insisted that alongside school meal programmes, children in poor countries often benefit from health and nutrition services – such as vaccinations, deworming and iron supplementation – delivered through their schools.

In response to a recent report from the United Nations Secretary-General, which highlighted the number of children missing out on school meals, WFP and UNICEF are working with governments to support children who are out of school during the crisis, according to a statement from Kelechi Onyemaobi, National Communications Officer of WFP.

“In 68 countries, governments and WFP are providing children with take-home rations, vouchers or cash transfers as an alternative to school meals.

“Under the partnership, WFP and UNICEF will assist governments in the coming months to ensure that when schools reopen returning children benefit from school meals and health and nutrition programmes.

“This will also provide an incentive for parents to send their children back to school. The agencies are also working together to track children in need of school meals through an online School Meals map,” the statement added.

UNICEF and WFP are therefore, appealing for US$ 600 million to carryout the task – which will initially focus on 30 low-income or fragile countries to support 10 million children.

Many countries of the world have closed down schools in a move to halt the spread of the ravaging COVID-19 pandemic.

Schools in Nigeria have been shut for almost a month as well and there is no sign of them being reopened anytime soon with the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases soaring.

As at 29 April, Nigeria’s COVID-19 cases have risen to 1,532.

On Tuesday, the Federal Government said there was no date for the reopening of schools yet although it had earlier on Monday announced the easing of lockdown in the Federal Capital Territory, Lagos and Ogun States from April 4.

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