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The United Nations World Food Program (WFP) – in partnership with the Ministry of Education of the Libyan Government of National Unity – has launched a central kitchen project in the Garyounis School in Benghazi to provide nutritious school meals to 7000 children from 13 schools across the city.
“Access to basic education and nutritious food is every child’s right,” said Dr. Saif Al-Nasr AbdulSalam from the Ministry of Education’s Department of International Coopration. “The MoE is extremely delighted with this accomplishment, and we hope to implement this project in other parts of the country so that more children have access to education and nutritious food,” he added.
Through the Central Kitchen, children will receive a lunch box consisting of a sandwich, fresh fruit, a dairy drink, a fortified date bar and clean water at school every day. The contents of lunch boxes are chosen based on the food available locally and its nutritional benefits.
WFP has supported this initiative by selecting a kitchen location close to 13 schools in Benghazi. In addition, WFP has also provided essential kitchen equipment as well as trainings on meal preparation, handling, and packing to some 30 young people from the community, around 12 of whom are women.
Through this program, the MoE in collaboration with WFP aims to enhance the children’s ability to learn, as well as increasing attendance and retention rates in some of the most rural parts of the country. For local communities, smallholder farmers and traders, the program helps generate income, especially at a time when the nation is reeling under the economic impacts caused by COVID-19.
“This is a milestone for children who live in the most rural parts of Libya. An investment in school feeding is an investment in the health, education and future of a child as well as the future of the nation,” said Rawad Halabi, WFP Representative and Country Director in Libya. “While this program benefits children, we will also boost the local economy by procuring food from local traders and smallholders as well as create job opportunities in communities surrounding the central kitchen,” she added.
Leveraging the momentum established through a Memorandum of Understanding with the MoE, WFP will also assist some 40,000 schoolchildren by providing date bars fortified with vitamins and minerals. Going forward, WFP will also focus on delivering social behavior change communications on nutrition-sensitive practices to targeted children and their families. This will be carried out Libya through the School Feeding Program in collaboration with the MoE, the Ministry of Health, the United Nations Children’s Fund and other NGO partners.
Since 2019, WFP has been supporting the School Feeding Program in Libya as part of its broader efforts to improve child nutrition, where more than 18,000 schoolchildren were assisted in 58 public schools in four municipalities in Eastern and Southern Libya. Between April to August 2020, when schools closed due to COVID-19, WFP distributed fortified date bars to some 18,000 schoolchildren as take-home rations. In addition, the School Feeding Program was implemented for 2,000 migrant children at 4 migrant schools in Sebha in collaboration with UNICEF under the “Education Cannot Wait” initiative in 2021.
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