The World Food Programme (WFP)
today signed an agreement with National Planning Commission (NPC) and the
Ministry of Agriculture Development (MoAD) to transfer and institutionalise the
national food security monitoring system under the ownership of the government.
The Nepal Food Security
Monitoring System, popularly known as Nepal Khadya Surakshya Anugaman
Pranali (NeKSAP), has the primary objective of collecting, consolidating
and analysing food security data to be used by decision makers, allowing them
to take coordinated and timely action to alleviate food insecurity in the
country.
It was established in 2002 by
WFP, and is currently managed in collaboration with the ministry. "NeKSAP
has evolved over time based on a strong collaboration between various national
institutions," said WFP deputy country director Nicolas Oberlin. "The
new agreement will further strengthen the system and fully capacitate the
government to design evidence-based food security policies and programmes to
tackle food insecurity in the country."
NeKSAP collects and analyses food
security data and disseminates information from across the country, covering
household food security, emerging crises, food markets, agricultural production
and nutrition. District Food Security Networks established in 72 of the 75
districts, are at the core of NeKSAP. They comprise of officials and
representatives from district-based government agencies, development partners
like NGOs, and UN agencies, as well as civil society.
The district networks assess and
monitor the food security situation in the respective districts using a
standardised food security phase classification approach.
The WFP is providing technical and
financial support to the government, with financial assistance from the
European Union. The planning commission will provide overall policy guidance
and ensure inter-ministerial coordination, while the ministry will take the
lead in implementing the project as the key technical institution.
The hand-over process will be
gradually implemented, to ensure full ownership of NeKSAP by the government by
2016.
More than 3.5 million
people are currently considered to be food-insecure in Nepal, and 41 per cent
of the population is estimated to be undernourished. The WFP is currently providing
food assistance to over one million people in the country.
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