WFP Regional Bureau for Asia and the Pacific - 2016 SPRs RBB 2016 SPRs by country | Page 782

Standard Project Report 2016 The Government contributed significantly to ensuring the smooth implementation of WFP activities, particularly through the dedicated project management unit within the Ministry of National Policies and Economic Affairs. Six district management units in the Northern Province and Moneragala district in the Uva Province were established exclusively to support the implementation of WFP activities and monitoring. In order to provide nutritional support to vulnerable groups in Sri Lanka, especially women and children, WFP’s main operational partner was the Ministry of Health and Indigenous Medicine, as the lead government institute for all nutrition-specific interventions and related activities. The Ministry of Health owned a factory producing Thriposha, the corn-soya based specialised nutritious food used nationally to target 1.1 million children aged 6-59 months with underweight and moderate acute malnutrition, as well as all pregnant and lactating women regardless of their nutritional status. Accordingly, the partnership with the Ministry of Health provided an entry point for WFP to offer its technical capacity to assist the Government to map out the gaps in Thriposha production. Using WFP's recommendations, the Ministry was able to use its own internal funding to improve the production facility and the overall quality and supply chain of the product. WFP worked with the National Nutrition Secretariat under the President’s Office to undertake other activities including the revision of the national Multi-Sectoral Action Plan for Nutrition (MSAPN), the initiation of rice fortification, and the development of a national nutrition surveillance system supported by the SDG project funded by the Government of Spain. The Government provided an in-kind donation of 3,300 mt of rice for the school meals programme. In addition the Government also provided greenery funds for the purchase of fresh vegetables and condiments, enabling the provision of diversified nutritious meals. Broadly, WFP worked on a longer-term partnership strategy to enhance the implementation capacity of agencies involved. In 2016, the Ministry of National Policies and Economic Affairs experienced difficulties in securing resources for its contribution for the associated structural costs required for resilience-building activities, which negatively affected the implementation of projects. As a mitigation measure, WFP and the Ministry identified and prioritised resilience-building projects that required a lower percentage of structural costs, which were implemented for a short duration in January–March 2016. WFP initiated national and local preparations to engage line ministries, including through training sessions, to commence the resilience-building and livelihood interventions with funding support from the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) in 2017. District inception workshops were planned in December, but were postponed as a result