Sri Lanka welcomes funding from WFP & Korea to help supply Thriposha to children & mothers
The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) and the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) are supporting the Government of Sri Lanka with funding worth USD 600,000 (LKR 117 million) to procure maize for the production of Thriposha.
The funding will be used to produce
Thriposha, a maize-based fortified food product, which will be provided to 1.1
million mothers and children. The grant from Korea helps ensure continuation of the
Thriposha programme, which the Government of Sri Lanka has been conducting for
almost 50 years to provide nutrition to undernourished children and pregnant
and lactating women.
Thriposha, which means triple nutrients, is a locally
produced supplementary food product, provided free of charge to children below
5 years of age who are underweight or with a slow rate of weight gain and
pregnant and lactating women with a low body mass index (BMI), through the
public health system.
“The world is facing unexpected
circumstances while battling with the pandemic,” says Kang Youn Hwa,
KOICA Sri Lanka Office Country Director. “The contribution from KOICA for the Thriposha
National Programme was extended with the objective of improving the nutritional
status of vulnerable people, especially children and pregnant/lactating women who are
disproportionately affected by Covid-19. KOICA stands in solidarity with the Government of Sri Lanka during
this difficult time.”
This
latest contribution forms part of the activities carried out by KOICA — the
Official Grants Division to the Embassy of the Republic of Korea
— in response to Covid-19. KOICA has been present in Sri Lanka for
over two decades, with programmes that support a variety of sectors including education,
health, rural development, water management and transportation. One such
intervention is the “R5n” programme, a joint project conducted with WFP since
2019. “R5n” aims to improve the lives and livelihoods of rural smallholder
farmers by strengthening their resilience to recurring climate shocks,
especially drought. KOICA’s support for the procurement of maize to produce Thriposha
complements its on-going assistance to the Government of Sri Lanka.
Covid-19
has brought about fresh challenges in the country, including an estimated rise
in unemployment and reduced incomes. This affects a family’s ability to access
nutritious food and threatens to have long-lasting impacts on the health and nutrition
standards in the country. The Thriposha
programme provides a readily accessible source of nutrition to mothers and
children when they need it the most.
The
Ministry of Health requested WFP’s support in ensuring a continuous supply of
Thriposha. In response to this, WFP together with KOICA, arranged to provide
funding to bolster the Thriposha programme and help safeguard the health and
nutrition of women and children.
“WFP
has been supporting the Thriposha programme for over a decade, as part of its
efforts to improve nutrition standards in the country,” says Andrea Berardo, Deputy
Country Director of WFP Sri Lanka, highlighting that Sri Lanka ranks among the
countries with the highest rates of wasting, known as thinness, among children
under 5 years of age (15 percent). “This latest contribution reflects
our long-standing support to the government to not just treat, but also prevent
these high rates of malnutrition and importantly, safeguard development gains
made within the country.”
In 2021 and beyond, WFP will continue to work
with the government to enhance the national health system as part of its
efforts in achieving Sustainable Development Goal 2 of enhancing food security
and improving nutrition in the country.
