The emergency in Haiti continues to dominate the WFP world – it’s a massive operation and people are being pulled in from all over the globe, including some from our office here in Dakar, to help bring it together and get food out to those affected.
On the 'home front' I've been continuing to work on the various IT projects within the West Africa region, with my main focus still being on the Food Voucher project, which I've mentioned in previous blogs. This is becoming an increasingly important means of providing aid, but its still in its early days for WFP. In a recent conference call with some of the WFP IT senior management team in Rome I outlined the proposed solution and I'm hopeful that we can get it adopted as the basis for a global solution for these kind of programmes.
I also spoke about the Food Voucher project in an interview I did back in mid-December with an English journalist based here in Dakar. The interview was for Voice of America and has just been broadcast - you can catch it on www1.voanews.com/english/news/africa/west/. Never having done anything like this before I was unsure what to expect, but it was all quite painless, although the editing process has managed to make it sound like we are already running a pilot with the mobile phone solution for Burkina Faso, which is not actually the case.
Outside of work - well I'm still very busy, although this week I've tried to keep fairly low key. On Sunday my wife, Raksha, and daughter, Naina, are coming over to Senegal. Naina is only here for a short while, so most of the time will probably be in Dakar and around, but then in mid-February Raksha and I are planning a trip down to Casamance in the very south of Senegal which I'm really looking forward to.
On a final note - Senegal has run out of petrol! Apparently a tanker is due in on Friday, but in the meantime if your car or motorbike runs on petrol (as opposed to diesel which is still in supply) then its fingers crossed you don't run out in the next couple of days as there's none to be had anywhere. Luckily I managed to fill up my scooter just before the pumps dried up, but had to drive half way across town to get it and there was a near riot on the forecourt with drivers desperate to fill up before it all disappeared. Oh well, that's Africa I guess.
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