Interview with Olga Keita, World Food Programme Deputy Country Director for Burkina Faso

Part of: Ending World Hunger

Located in West Africa, Burkina Faso is classified as both a least-developed country, and a low-income and food-deficit country. More than 45% of the population lives below the poverty line. Very food-insecure, with high rates of both chronic and acute malnutrition (respectively 34.6% and 23.1%), the country is subject to recurrent drought, which results in cereal shortfall. The enrollment rate in primary school is one of the lowest in sub-Saharan Africa. The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) 2007 Human Development Report ranked Burkina Faso 176th out of 177 countries.

United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) assistance reaches an average of 450,000 beneficiaries per year in 25 provinces characterized by structural food insecurity, high rates of chronic malnutrition, low school enrollment, low literacy, and low attendance at health centers.

WFP school feeding provides meals to rural primary school children located in the arid Sahel Region of Burkina Faso. This region is the most food-insecure part of the country, with low yields and cereal production that sometimes covers only 50% of the population's needs. The climate is also a challenge, with a rainy season that lasts just three months and temperatures that range from 10° C in December to more than 43° C in March and April. School Gross Enrollment in the Sahel region is the lowest in the country (48.8% vs. 72.5%), with a high gender disparity, especially at the beginning of WFP’s school feeding program in 2003.

How many children are benefiting from WFP School Feeding programs within the country?

WFP’s school feeding program started in 2003/2004, with 234 schools and 30,000 pupils. During the current school year (2008/2009), this assistance will cover 86,187 pupils (40,823 are girls: 47.4%) in 590 schools across the four provinces of the Sahel Region (Oudalan, Seno, Soum and Yagha). Out of these, a total of 7,729 girls receive a monthly “take-home” ration to encourage regular attendance. In addition, 2,360 mothers receive dry rations for their participation in a program designed to sensitize women in support of girls’ school enrollment (the literacy rate for young women from 14 to 24 currently stands at 24.7 %), while about 1,200 women (cooks) also receive hot meals. In all, 89,747 people benefit from the program.

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Article Author: William Lambers

William Lambers is the author of Ending World Hunger. This book features over 50 interviews with officials from the UN World Food Programme and other charities discussing school feeding programs that fight child hunger. …

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