ReliefWeb ReliefWeb Home
Home
Latest Updates
Countries & Emergencies
Appeals & Funding
Policy & Issues
Professional Resources
Maps
Print Print Save to My ReliefWeb Save

Former President fills the cup in Kenyan village


A champion of the fight against hunger, former Ghanaian President John Kufuor, has just visited a remote Kenyan village to see how school meals are helping to secure an education for children from even the poorest families.

NAIROBI – John Kufuor visited the Masai village of Mailua last week to see a school meals programme which after being run for years by WFP is now so well established and so valued that the government has agreed to take it over.

In Mailua, as in many parts of Africa and the developing world, school meals act as an important nutritional 'safety net' and at the same time, by attracting kids to school, help to secure an education for children from even the poorest families.

Kufuor knows well the value of school meals programmes, having championed their implementation in his own country during his time as president. He's particularly convinced of their importance for girls, who are frequently the first to be pulled out of education.

Educate a nation

"A wise man in Ghana once said: you educate a man, you are educating an individual, but you educate a woman, and you are educating a nation," he said during his visit to Mailua.

"Why? Because this woman will become a mother and as an educated, informed mother most likely she will see to the proper education and upbringing of her children."

It was President Kufuor's first visit to the field with WFP (he'd arrived in Kenya from a brief visit to Ethiopia). As an Ambassador Against Hunger for WFP, he advocates specifically for WFP's school meals programmes and for proper nutrition for children in schools.

Breaking world records

Kufuor was joined on the trip to Mailua by Kenyan athlete Paul Tergat, also a WFP Ambassador against Hunger. Tergat is equally aware of the importance of school meals having received them himself as a poor kid in Kenya's Baringo district before growing up to win marathons and break world records in long distance running events.

"We have to make sure we give an opportunity to our children," Tergat told the villagers gathered under the midday sun. "Our future lies in our education – we will never make any meaningful change in our lives without education."

As part of its 'home grown' school meals initiative, WFP is handing over responsibility for school meals in certain parts of the country. The move is a demonstration of the government's commitment to school meals, even at a time when parts of the country are suffering the effects of the worst drought in living memory.

The arrival of the rains has laced the countryside with a green tinge, but while pasture may be regenerating and cattle growing slowly stronger, many people are still struggling to put enough food on the family table.

With the exception of public UN sources, reproduction or redistribution of the above text, in whole, part or in any form, requires the prior consent of the original source. The opinions expressed in the documents carried by this site are those of the authors and are not necessarily shared by UN OCHA or ReliefWeb.
Print Print Save to My ReliefWeb Save

FIND RELATED DOCUMENTS


By Emergency: East Africa Drought
By Country: Kenya
By Source: United Nations World Food Programme (WFP)
By Type: Press Releases