FAO Regional Office for Asia and the Pacific
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Chicks land in Fiji

Mr Tomasi Tunabuna, Director of the Animal Health and Production Division of Fiji's Ministry of Agriculture holds chicks which will be used to rebuild stocks lost after TC Winston
24/04/2016 Suva, Fiji

In Fiji, 313 small farmers are the first beneficiaries of FAO Livestock Emergency Response Project, funded by donor agency, the Office of Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance (OCHA).  Each farmer, including women, will take delivery of a box containing chicks.

FAO is working closely with the Government of Fiji on this project, in response to Cyclone Winston which struck Fiji in March, and officers of the Ministry of Agriculture are responsible for the safe delivery of the livestock.

In all, 4,200 chicks will be delivered to 350 farmers and women’s groups in Fiji, those poultry farmers who lost their livestock in Cyclone Winston and Zena. They will also receive sufficient feed stocks to grow the chicks to maturity, in five to six weeks’ time, when they will be ready for use both as a source of protein and to assist in generating income.

Because of the scope of the devastation, there are large numbers of people who have lost their crops and/or livestock. In selecting farmers to receive the chicks, Government prioritised those with the most immediate needs.

The selections were based upon vulnerability assessments carried out by Government and availability of donor funding.

Damage to crops and livestock by T.C. Winston has been estimated at USD 104 million, with affected families at risk of becoming dependent upon food aid in the coming months.

FAO, in coordinating with Government, is targeting three priority areas, crops, livestock and fisheries, to restore food supplies and sources of income for those most badly affected by the cyclone.

 

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