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         Government Us Ngos:     more books (56)
  1. Megacommunities: How Leaders of Government, Business and Non-Profits Can Tackle Today's Global Challenges Together by Mark Gerencser, Reginald Van Lee, et all 2008-03-18
  2. Paved with Good Intentions: The NGO Experience in North Korea
  3. International Institutions and National Policies by Xinyuan Dai, 2007-10-31
  4. Non-Governmental Organizations in China: The Rise of Dependent Autonomy by Yiyi Lu, 2008-12-27
  5. Social Capital and Associations in European Democracies: A comparative Analysis by William A. Maloney, 2009-01-28
  6. Democracy Beyond Borders: Justice and Representation in Global Institutions by Andrew Kuper, 2004-11-18
  7. The International Olympic Committee and the Olympic System: The Governance of World Sport by Brenda Kübler-Mabbott, 2008-12-30
  8. A History of Organized Labor in Cuba by Robert J. Alexander, 2002-11-30
  9. Transnational Private Governance and its Limits by Andreas N?lke, 2009-01-23
  10. Democracy and the Role of Associations by Sigrid Rossteutscher, 2007-03-30
  11. The United Nations and Democracy in Africa: Labyrinths of Legitimacy by Zo? Wilson, 2009-01-22
  12. Global Environmental Institutions by Elizabeth R. DeSombre, 2010-05-05
  13. Political Ethics and the United Nations: Dag Hammarskj?ld as Secretary-General by Manuel Fr?hlich, 2009-01-23
  14. A Crisis of Global Institutions?: Multilateralism and International Security by Edward Newman, 2009-03-28

21. Officially Recognized Native Communities Of The US
Non profits and ngos Nonprofits and ngos Midwest Treaty Network. Index Art Art (Native us) Crafts (Native us) Dance government and Legal (us
http://www.americanpentimento.com/govUS.htm
Officially Recognized Tribes
Native Websites (US) Tribal constitutions and Legal Codes
Tribal Codes
Tribes by State (inc. non-Federally recognized) ...
National (U. S. Indian Policy Center

UnTrustworthy US Trust
This site has been temporarily shut down by court order because unlike other sites that handle money, this one had virtually no security!
Minnesota Indian Affairs Council

Utah Division of Indian Affairs

North Dakota

Gambling

Morris Udall's speech Legislation, Non Profits Legislation (Aus. Canada, NZ, US) Bill's List (comprehensive but often outdated) Non profits and NGOS Non-profits and NGOS ... Home

22. PAI: Resources: Global Gag Rule Guide - Introduction
us ngos can continue to perform, counsel, refer, or advocate on abortion with fundsfrom nonus government sources without risking their eligibility to receive
http://www.populationaction.org/resources/publications/globalgagrule/

Resources Home
Fact Sheets Recent Publications Publications Library ... Download publication
Introduction
O n January 22, 2001—his second day in office and the anniversary of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion—President George W. Bush announced the reinstatement of the restrictions on overseas health care organizations in effect during the mid-1980s and early 1990s, commonly known then as the “Mexico City Policy." The policy reversal has potentially serious ramifications for the future of U.S. support for international family planning and reproductive health programs around the world. Now referred to by family planning supporters as the global gag rule , the restrictions prohibit U.S. assistance for family planning from being provided to foreign non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that use funding from any other source to perform abortion in cases other than a threat to the life of the woman, rape, or incest; to provide counseling and referral for abortion; or to lobby to make abortion legal or more available in their own country. U.S. NGOs can continue to perform, counsel, refer, or advocate on abortion with funds from non-U.S. government sources without risking their eligibility to receive U.S. family planning assistance.

23. AllAfrica.com -- PanAfrica [document]: NGOs Issue Recommendations On Implementat
That the us government should provide technical assistance for eligible countriesto That ngos should make concerted effort to encourage and assist women to be
http://allafrica.com/stories/200301160488.html
Algeria Angola Benin Botswana Burkina Faso Burundi Cameroon Cape Verde Central African Republic Chad Comoros Congo-Brazzaville Congo-Kinshasa Côte d'Ivoire Djibouti Egypt Equatorial Guinea Eritrea Ethiopia Gabon Gambia Ghana Guinea Guinea Bissau Kenya Lesotho Liberia Libya Madagascar Malawi Mali Mauritania Mauritius Morocco Mozambique Namibia Niger Nigeria Rwanda Sao Tomé and Principé Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Somalia South Africa Sudan Swaziland Tanzania Togo Tunisia Uganda Western Sahara Zambia Zimbabwe
NGOs Issue Recommendations on Implementation, Progress and Future Objectives of Agoa
Email
This Page
Print
This Page Government of Mauritius (Port Louis) DOCUMENT
January 16, 2003
Posted to the web January 16, 2003 Port Louis The Forum of Non-Governmental Organizations, organized as part of the Second AGOA Conference in Mauritius, issued the following document at the conclusion of their meeting. The first AGOA -NGO Forum took place from 13 to 15 January 2003 at the Indira Gandhi Centre for Indian Culture in Phoenix, Mauritius. The Forum was convened by the Foundation for Democracy in Africa in partnership with the African Union, The Atlas Foundation for Economic Research, The Africa America Institute, ACDI/VOCA, Bread for the World, The International Leadership Institute, The International Foundation for Education and Self-Help, Opportunities Industrialization Centres International, American Bar Association-Africa Section, The Mauritius Council of Social Service (MACOSS) and in collaboration with the Government of Mauritius. 150 Participants attended the Event. These included representatives from US, the different Regions of Sub-Saharan Countries and Mauritius.

24. Friends Of The Earth - News Release
Peruvian government officials visited Washington last week to drum up from the IDBand the us ExportImport ngos point to the project sponsors’ violations of
http://www.foe.org/new/releases/0203camisea.html
Home News Room Find out more about the Camisea Gas Project.
For Immediate Release
Feb. 25,
Contact:
Jon Sohn, Friends of the Earth: 202 783 7400
Nadia Martinez, SEEN, Institute for Policy Studies: 202 234 9382
Atossa Soltani, Amazon Watch: 310 456 9158 (Janet Lloyd, UK +44 1830 540201)
U.S. Public Banks Back in the Spotlight Over Financing for
Maps, Photos, Video Footage, Related Reports Available Upon Request

25. World Conference Against Racism
Numbers of us ngos Concerned About government Role in World Conference.(Press Release May 29, 2001) Concerned about the us government's
http://www.whrnet.org/wcar/press_coverage/numbers.htm

26. US Women Connect
of national and local women’s ngos have come this country, which are outlined inthe us Women’s network to strengthen efforts for government accountability
http://www.uswc.org/women2000.html
Women 2000/ Fourth World Conference on Women
1995 UN Fourth World Conference on Women
What is Women 2000/Beijing+5?
Creation of US Women Connect

Beijing Platform for Action
1995 UN Fourth World Conference on Women
Platform for Action
, which was adopted by the 189 governments represented at the Conference obliging governments to empower women in 12 critical areas. The Platform for Action was the result of a two-year process that included meetings at the community, national and international level and which engaged thousands of women in the policy-making process, many for the first time. The Platform is not legally binding, but sets forth goals to sere as a guide for improving the lives of women and girls. The role of governments is to implement the Platform; the role of non-government organizations (NGOs) is to hold them accountable, and to assist governments in implementation. The Platform for Action is an important tool for NGO's efforts to promote the advancement of women.
In June 2000, the United Nations and its member governments assessed progress in implementation of the Platform for Action. This assessment, called "

27. About US Women Connect - Initiatives 1999-2000
ngos also prepared their own assessments of progress. The USWC report card assessesUS government performance in the twelve Platform areas women and poverty
http://www.uswc.org/activities2000.html
US Women Connect Initiatives 1999-2000 US Women Connect Initiatives 1999-2000 Women Action 2000 Internet Focal Point: In September 1999, US Women Connect was designated as the U.S. focal point of the NGO Global Communications Network, Women Action 2000. Women Action 2000 was created to use electronic networking among NGOs globally to assess gains and gaps in the critical areas of concern of the Platform and to share experiences on advocacy. US Women Connect's website is the US Internet gateway to key information and campaigns related to NGO advocacy and follow-up on the 1995 UN Conference on Women. Online Working Groups on Critical Areas of Concern: In spring 2000, USWC sponsored three online working groups on three areas of the Platform for Action and US Women's National Action Agenda: Women's Economic Security and Justice Girls Speak Up ; and Women in Power and Decision-Making . Each group operated for about five weeks and was moderated by an "expert," who was identified and prepared in online moderating by US Women Connect. USWC also supervised and provided ongoing technical support to the moderators. Seventy women participated in the Economic group; 25 in the Girls group; and 60 in the Decision-making group. The purpose of the online working groups was to provide a means for women and girls across the country to contribute their views to the Beijing +5 review process. Reports were prepared based on each group's deliberations, focusing on obstacles to progress and recommendations for future action which have been sent to members of the Presidents InterAgency Council on Women, selected members of Congress, and leaders of national women's organizations.

28. Communitybuilders.nsw: Capacity Building For NGOs
Capacity Building for Non government Organisations (ngos). management staff and volunteers;government regulation and Let us know of initiatives and what your
http://www.communitybuilders.nsw.gov.au/capb/
Text only version Full graphics version
Resources
Reference Group Information Technology Fundraising and Financial Management ... Capacity Building for NGOs
Capacity Building for Non Government Organisations (NGOs)
This module provides information and resources developed by the Reference and Working Groups for the Capacity Building for Non Government Organisations Project. Each topic, except Resources and the Discussion Forum, provides Contacts, Minutes, Discussion Papers, Case Studies. The Capacity Building for Non Government Organisations is a project of the NSW Premier’s Department, Strengthening Communities Unit in partnership with Non Government Organisations, State Government Agencies and Community Organisations. The aim of the project is to enhance the organisational capacities of non-profit, non-government organisations in NSW, which can lead to improvements in service delivery and broader community well being. Framework for Action provides more detailed information on the project.

29. U.S. Government Policy On The Environment
Development Related Links us State Department United States Department of Energyus government, ngos, Think Tanks and Universities Environmental Impact
http://www.usis.usemb.se/Environment/
This section provides information about U.S. Government policy on the Environment, and also links to related sites on environmental diplomacy and environmental cooperation in the Baltic Sea region. There are also specific site links for environmental issues important to the region. Global Issues Environment
Global Issues Sustainable Development

Bureau of Oceans, Environmental and Scientific Affairs

United States Environmental Protection Agency
...
USAID's Strategies for Sustainable Development

Related Links
U.S. State Department

United States Department of Energy

U.S. Government, NGOs, Think Tanks and Universities

Environmental Impact Analysis Data Links
...
Initiatives
Embassy of the United States of America Home Public Affairs Section US Mission Commercial Service ... webmaster@usemb.se Last Modified: Friday, 10-Jan-2003 10:36:15 CET

30. U.S. Government Policy On The Environment
This section provides links to us government, Multilateral Organizations,ngos, Think Tanks and Universities that deal with environmental issues.
http://www.usis.usemb.se/Environment/nongovlinks.html
This section provides links to U.S. Government, Multilateral Organizations, NGOs, Think Tanks and Universities that deal with environmental issues. U.S GOVERNMENT MULTILATERAL ORGANIZATIONS USDA Agricultural Biotechnology Biotech at the World Intellectual Property Organizations EPA Office of Science Coordination and Policy EuropaBio ... FAO Codex Alimentarius BIOTECHNOLOGY DIRECTORIES FAO Biotechnology and Food Safety Academic Information: Biotechnology FAO Electronic Forum on Biotechnology in Food and Agriculture Bio.com ... OECD Biotech Overview NON-GOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS THINK TANKS AND
UNIVERSITIES
Center for International Environment Law American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research Earth Island Institute Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs ... National Center for Food and Agricultural Policy
Embassy of the United States of America
Home
Public Affairs Section
US Mission Commercial Service ...
webmaster@usemb.se

Last Modified: Tuesday, 13-Mar-2001 12:43:58 CET

31. COMMON AGENDA Joint Report 1996 HEALTH & HUMAN
The government of Japan initiated training courses for ngos in this area in Thailandand Tokyo, with the technical support of us ngos. Women in Development.
http://www.mofa.go.jp/region/n-america/us/agenda/report96/health.html
PROMOTING HEALTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Children's Health
The eradication of polio continues to be a remarkably successful collaborative effort by the Governments of the United States and Japan. Together, our two Governments, in conjunction with organizations such as the WHO, UNICEF, and Rotary International, have virtually eliminated polio in the Western Pacific region, have made significant progress in polio eradication efforts in Southeast Asia and are expanding this program into sub-Saharan Africa. The Governments of the United States and Japan are working towards the ambitious goal of eradicating polio world-wide by the year 2000. Complementary activities in this area have focused on supporting National Immunization Days, strengthening surveillance capability, and providing vaccines and the necessary refrigeration equipment for their preservation. The two Governments have also contributed to advancing the global Children's Vaccine Initiative by increasing the availability of vaccines in developing countries and furthering research on vaccines for children. The two Governments will also explore cooperation on the control of Iodine Deficiency Disorders and support of micronutrient programs in developing countries.
Population and HIV/AIDS
Joint cooperation on slowing population growth and combating HIV/AIDS is one of the largest programs under the Common Agenda. Under this initiative, the Governments of the United States and Japan have sent joint project formulation missions in 1995 to the Philippines, Indonesia, Bangladesh, and India. In Kenya, locally-based U.S. and Japanese personnel carried out joint population and health sector assessment and design formulation.

32. Cooperation On Global Challenges
was an increase in the involvement of ngos/CSOs, which in the Joint Report on theUSJapan Common the development of new links between government, the private
http://www.mofa.go.jp/region/n-america/us/agenda/gpers.html
Cooperation on Global Challenges
1. Overview
2. The U.S.-Japan Common Agenda for Cooperation in Global Perspective

(1) Overview

(2) Major Accomplishments

THE SIX MOST DISTINGUISHED STORIES OF THE COMMON AGENDA (3) Cooperation with the Private Sector
1. Overview
Japan and the United States, aiming towards a common goal of establishing peaceful and prosperous world in the 21st Century, have been making cooperative efforts in tackling global challenges.
In June 2001, Japan and the United States announced the Partnership for Security and Prosperity. In that Partnership, Prime Minister Koizumi and President Bush recognized the past cooperative efforts of the two countries in tackling complex global challenges, and pledged to build on these successes to further expand bilateral global cooperation.
In his remarks to the Diet on February 2002, President Bush pointed out the importance of cooperation between Japan and the United States in various areas such as development, education, science and environment.
Many of the cooperative efforts are still on going, and these cooperative efforts will continue in various areas.

33. Kidsnewsroom's Weekly News For Kids
The United States does not directly fund Chinese NOGs, Turner said. Instead,the us government funds us ngos, who in turn fund Chinese pursuits.
http://www.kidsnewsroom.com/newsissues/013103/index.asp?page=AroundWorld3

34. DefendAmerica News - Profile Article
According to Dalili, the CMOC lets the us government and ngos coordinate theiractivities in Paktia Province without having to worry about corrupt people
http://www.defendamerica.mil/articles/feb2003/a020403d.html
Government FirstGov EPA FAA FEMA ... White House Military DefenseLINK Army Navy Air Force ... Army National Guard How To Help Civil Air Patrol Coast Guard Auxiliary FBI Liberty Unites ... Fisher House Transcripts Defense Department State Department White House From left to right, Dr. Robert P. Finn, U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan; Raz Muhammed Dalili, governor of the Paktia Province; and Shah Mahmood Wat, Afghanistan minister of rural rehabilitation and development, talk to reporters at a press conference following the opening of the Gardez Civil-Military Operations Center. U.S. Army photo by Spec. Jim Wagner Gardez Office Opening Signals
Shift in Afghanistan Mission By U.S. Army Spc. Jim Wagner
109th Mobile Public Affairs Detachment The first of eight test sites throughout the country, the PRTs house members from Civil Affairs, the 82nd Airborne Division, assorted Special Forces units and support staff, who work behind the scenes to ensure the success of the Civil-Military Operations Centers. In the past, there have been cases where NGOs working in remote areas of the country provide aid in the form of food or supplies to an impoverished village, only to find out warlords have seized the items for their personal use.

35. Donors Shift More Aid To NGOs
The us stance is being followed, to varying degrees Nairobi, Kenya, told journaliststhat his government, which spent aid to governments and give more to ngos.
http://www.un.org/ecosocdev/geninfo/afrec/subjindx/131ngo.htm
From Africa Recovery, Vol.13#1 (June 1999), page 6 Donors shift more aid to NGOs But cooperation between governments and NGOs is critical for greater effectiveness By Sam Chege A major shift in funding development in Africa, already under way for several years, is accelerating. In February US Ambassador to Kenya Prudence Bushnell announced her government would now channel most of its development aid in Africa estimated at $711.3 mn this year through non-governmental organizations (NGOs), rather than governments. A public affairs officer in the Africa Bureau at the State Department, Mr. Louis Segsvary, later explained that Ambassador Bushnell's views reflected a US policy, adopted in 1992, of working more closely with NGOs in situations where governments are widely seen as corrupt. By 1996, the US was already channeling more than 30 per cent of its aid through NGOs. The US stance is being followed, to varying degrees, by other major donors. Britain and Germany, whose combined aid to sub-Saharan Africa totaled $2.5 bn in 1996-97, have also been urging African governments to eradicate corruption or face cuts in aid. France, which in 1996-97 gave more than $2.6 bn (making it the biggest single donor to sub-Saharan Africa), recently said it was overhauling its bilateral aid to make it more efficient and transparent. Less than two months after the announcement by Ambassador Bushnell, Mr. Jelte van Wiueren, the cultural attache in the Dutch embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, told journalists that his government, which spent $835 mn in development assistance to sub-Saharan Africa in 1996-97, will also decrease direct aid to governments and give more to NGOs.

36. Will NGOs Save Ukraine?
institutions, the us government, various research and think tanks, and numerousfoundations have poured billions of dollars into the creation of ngos in CEE
http://www.civilsoc.org/resource/ukraingo.htm
The Ukrainian Weekly #35, August 31, 1997
The Ukrainian Weekly
Will NGOs save Ukraine?
by Myron B. Kuropas In the minds of many U.S. government officials, the future of Central and Eastern Europe (CEE) depends on the ability of the people to organize themselves into non-governmental organizations or NGOs. NGOs are private associations, federations, unions, societies, and groups not founded or funded by the government. When it comes to servicing the poor, providing low cost services, building grass-roots organizations, and adapting or creating innovative programs to meet local needs, it is clear that in many instances, NGOs can often accomplish more than government agencies. Old-line NGOs in our community are the Ukrainian National Association and the Selfreliance Federal Credit Unions. Voluntarism is as American as apple pie. It is a unique American way of getting things done, an integral part of our civil society. Alexis de Tocqueville noticed this as early as 1832 and wrote about it in Democracy in America, his classic critique of life in the United States. "Americans of all ages, all conditions, and all dispositions, constantly form associations," he wrote. "They have not only commercial and manufacturing companies, in which all take part, but associations of a thousand other kinds ­ religious, moral, serious, futile, general or restricted, enormous or diminutive. The Americans make associations to give entertainments, to found seminaries, to build inns, to construct churches, to diffuse books to send missionaries to the antipodes; they found in this manner hospitals, prisons, or schools. If it be proposed to inculcate some truth, or to foster some feeling by the encouragement of a great example, they form a society."

37. InterAction.org | Disaster Response
Email lists that are established primarily to disseminate news reports on a particularcrisis will be open to DRC members, other ngos, and us government and UN
http://www.interaction.org/disaster/email_lists.html
this site
all member sites
Disaster Response Committee (DRC)
About Us DRC Services Resources and Links ...
CBRN

Inside InterAction Global Partnership Campaign International Development Disaster Response Refugees Gender Equality Media About Us Buy Publications Monday Developments Disaster Response Committee Email Lists DRC email lists are used to disseminate news reports, meeting announcements and summaries, and other information of interest to Committee members. An email list may be created at the suggestion of a Committee member or Disaster Response Unit (DRU) staff. DRU staff will send out an email message to the DRC email list to assess interest in an email list. If at least ten DRC members express interest in a topic-specific email list, the email list will be established.
Inclusion on an email list will depend on the purpose of the email list. Email lists that are established primarily to disseminate news reports on a particular crisis will be open to DRC members, other NGOs, and US government and UN officials at the discretion of DRU staff. Other email lists that carry more sensitive information may be limited to DRC members or members of a working group.
  • To request inclusion on a list, please submit your subscription request at the link below, or send an email to a DRU staff person indicating your name, organization, phone number, email address, and the list to which you wish to be added.

38. NGO Letter To U.S. Government On Policy Toward Sierra Leone, Feb. 1999
Letter to White House and State Department on Sierra Leone ngos Call for us SupportECOMOG The us government needs to substantially increase the resources and
http://www.loga.org/AfSierraLttr.htm
Lutheran Office for Governmental Affairs
(LOGA) 122 C Street N.W., Suite 125
Washington, D.C. 20001
Tel: 202-783-7507 loga@ecunet.org Letter to White House and State Department on Sierra Leone NGOs Call for U.S. Action on Sierra Leone February 9, 1999 The Honorable Madeleine K. Albright Samuel R. Berger Secretary of State Assistant to the President U.S. Department of State for National Security Affairs 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W. 2201 C Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20520 Washington, D.C. 20500 Dear Madam Secretary and Mr. Berger: As organizations closely monitoring the deteriorating situation in Sierra Leone, we appeal to you to commit the United States to more meaningful action for peace in that country. "A nightmare is unfolding in the civil war in Sierra Leone ... ," reads a recent Washington Post editorial. "The fighting is now overwhelming what national forces of order remain, leaving a desperate civilian population abandoned and defenseless; an international force does what it can." Sierra Leone's nightmare has been unfolding for eight years now. As the fighting reaches the more populous coast, the surging flow of refugees has finally caught the attention of the world. What distinguishes this conflict from others waged in the region is the widespread use of terror as a weapon. Rape and kidnaping of civilians have become commonplace. The insurgents, who lack popular support, have committed barbaric reprisals against anyone suspected of favoring the democratically elected government. Villagers are burned alive not only men, but women and children. Victims whose hands or feet have been hacked off serve as a warning to others.

39. Reuters AlertNet - NGOs Struggle As Zimbabwe Farm Showdown Looms
Participating ngos include CAFOD, the Farm Community Trust, Care Zimbabwe and Plan Lastmonth, the Zimbabwe government refused 10 tonnes of us maize that
http://www.alertnet.org/thefacts/reliefresources/500613

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22 Aug 2002 00:00:00 GMT
NGOs struggle as Zimbabwe farm showdown looms
By Busani Bafana Photo by BUSANI BAFANA BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe (AlertNet) - Relief agencies in Zimbabwe are preparing for an even bigger aid operation as the food crisis worsens and a showdown looms between the government and commercial farmers defying an order to vacate their lands. More than six million people in Zimbabwe, formerly the breadbasket of southern Africa, face starvation. The government has stepped up food imports despite limited financial resources, a poor response to its international appeal and an increasingly negative perception of the country abroad. The impasse between Zimbabwe's 2,900 white commercial farmers and the government has done little to help the country's efforts to ensure that no one starves.

40. Reuters AlertNet - NGOs Fear Food Crisis May Cost Lives In Zimbabwe
Dube said the consortium of ngos was unlikely to close to the Z$100 million (us$1.8 million government representatives quote official figures that they say
http://www.alertnet.org/thefacts/reliefresources/395208

About AlertNet
Contact Us Feedback
Tuesday, 08 April 2003 Search
Homepage
Relief Resources > NGOs fear food crisis may cost lives in Zimbabwe Email:
Password:
(Forgot it?)
Login>> Sign-up to AlertNet! Become member NGO ... Get weekly email THE NEWS Newsdesk From the Field Photo Gallery THE FACTS Relief Resources Country Profiles Satellite Images THE PEOPLE Members Suppliers Jobs THE EVENTS Diary Training
Donate online now!
APPEAL OF THE WEEK
CAFOD Launches Iraq Appeal

21 Feb 2002 00:00:00 GMT
NGOs fear food crisis may cost lives in Zimbabwe
By Busani Bafana Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe speaks at an election rally. Photo by HOWARD BURDITT BULAWAYO, Zimbabwe (AlertNet) - The start of emergency food aid deliveries provided by the U.N. World Food Programme (WFP) this month is the tangible sign of a crisis denied by the government but which NGOs fear may become life-threatening. Stocks are low as a result of floods two years ago, combined with a long dry spell and patchy rains that have led to revised yields expected this year. Norbert Dube, spokesman for six NGOs working in Zimbabwe, told AlertNet: "The food situation we are facing is an open secret. The situation is bad, there is no funding and the food has run out in some areas. We are likely to record some deaths of children in some of the areas."

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