Highlighting the assistance it provides to the victims of terrorist attacks in Cabo Delgado, the UN agency, however, expressed concern that its funding situation “has been worrisome for some time, and we are now running out of options.”

In the February 3 interview with ACI, Mr. Viljoen said that stopping food distribution in Cabo Delgado may have “severe” implications among the IDPs who are already struggling.

“The humanitarian situation in Cabo Delgado is already dire. I was there towards the end of last year and the people had not received rainfall for a very long time. Up to now, they have not planted anything. They only rely on aid,” Mr. Viljoen said.

The DHPI Director said that for a long time, WFP has been the main source of aid to the IDPs who have been forced to live in camps by the Al-Shabaab.

“The people are fully dependent on WFP. Yes, we have Caritas Nampula, Caritas Pemba, and other Church and nongovernmental organizations that are trying their best to fill the gaps but these organizations combined do not have enough funds to sustain the IDPs who are about one million,” he said.

Violence in Cabo Delgado has intensified in recent months, with unprecedented attacks in districts close to its capital, Pemba, and in neighboring Nampula province, forcing more and more people to flee their villages.

According to the November last year WFP report, the number of displaced people has quadrupled to nearly one million people in the last two years.

WFP has been providing emergency assistance to displaced people, including in previously inaccessible areas such as Macomia, Muidumbe, Nangade, Palma, and Quissanga.

The UN agency says that it has, however, “had to cut rations in recent months”, leaving the IDPs in Cabo Delgado to survive with very little.

The agency reports that in addition to challenges to fund its food assistance operations, it is faced with funding shortfalls for the United Nations Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS) that runs on behalf of the entire humanitarian community.