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Food Departs U.S. for Iraq

Wheat Shipment is Enough to Feed 4.5 million Iraqis for One Month


U.S. AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
PRESS RELEASE


WASHINGTON, DC 20523
PRESS OFFICE
http://www.usaid.gov
(202) 712-4320

2003-023

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 3, 2003

Contact: USAID Press Office

Galveston, TX - Fred Schieck, Deputy Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), was joined today by Deputy Undersecretary of Agriculture Jim Butler and other Administration officials at a press conference in the port of Galveston, Texas to send-off a shipment of U.S. emergency food assistance to the people of Iraq. The press conference was held dockside as 28,000 metric tons of bulk hard red winter wheat was being loaded on the M/V Free Atlas, a bulk carrier bound for the Iraqi port of Umm Qasr. Another 28,500 metric tons were loaded previously on the M/V Yellow Rose, which departed Tuesday, April 1st.

The wheat shipment is enough to feed 4.5 million Iraqis for one month. It is, however, only a portion of the total food aid the U.S. government is providing to the people of Iraq. The U.S. will provide up to 610,000 metric tons of food worth $300 million to feed the Iraqi people. An additional $260 million is being provided to the U.N. World Food Program for food distribution and logistical support.

The wheat contained in this shipment, which was grown in the states of Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas, comes from the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust, an emergency reserve administered under the authority of the Secretary of Agriculture. On March 20, the Bush Administration announced the immediate release of 200,000 metric tons of wheat from the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust, with another 400,000 tons to be made available as needed.

"This ship, the M/V Free Atlas, is carrying 28,000 metric tons of hard red winter wheat from the heartland of America to the people of Iraq. But that is not all. This ship carries the unshakable commitment of the United States of America to liberation of Iraq, the freedom of its people, and the reconstruction of the country," said Mr. Schieck.

"When milled, today's shipment of 28,000 tons of hard red winter wheat from the farms of Kansas, Oklahoma, and Texas will provide every man, woman, and child in Iraq with almost 1 pound of flour," said Jim Butler, U.S. Deputy Undersecretary for Farm and Agricultural Services. "This shipment is only the beginning. Working hand-in-hand with other government agencies, the World Food Program and private voluntary organizations, we will work to make sure food reaches the people who need it most."

The U.S. government is fully prepared to provide humanitarian and reconstruction assistance to the people of Iraq - to save lives, alleviate suffering, and mitigate the impact of emergency situations. For the last several months, USAID, working in close coordination with the Department of State and other U.S. agencies, has planned for a possible humanitarian emergency by pre-positioning stockpiles of emergency supplies and commodities; communicating and coordinating with U.S. and international humanitarian organizations; and making contingency plans for reconstruction activities.

Several members of Congress also made statements about the significance of today's shipment. U.S. Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas stated: "As we fight to remove the grip of Saddam Hussein's repressive regime, this shipment of wheat demonstrates that America is prepared, as President Bush said, to live up to its responsibility to provide for the Iraqi people."

"Saddam's brutal regime has left his people lacking nourishment as well as freedom. I'm proud Texas is providing this contribution of wheat so Iraqis receive the humanitarian assistance promised them," U.S. Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas said.

"As President Bush has said time and again since Operation Iraqi Freedom began, our goal is to improve the lives of the Iraqi people," said Congresswoman Jo Ann Emerson of Missouri. "That involves not only dismantling the regime of Saddam Hussein but bringing food and medicine to places so the Iraqi people can live a normal life and have hope. The food aid made available through the Bill Emerson Humanitarian Trust makes that goal possible and will make a real difference in the lives of those Iraqi people who have been suppressed and starving for far too long."

NOTE: Media interested in video footage today should contact local affiliates covering the event. Alternatively, you can get USAID B-roll tomorrow and Sunday at the following coordinates (for exact times, see: http://ibb7-2.ibb.gov/tvschedule/):

EUROPE:
EUTELSAT HOTBIRD 3
FOOTPRINT MAP
Digital
Longitude: 13 Degrees East
Freq:12.4845 GHz
FEC: 3/4
Symbol Rate: 8.3 MS/s
Typical L-band Freq: 1734.5 MHz
Local Oscillator (LO) freq: 10.75GHz
Signal Polarization: Vertical
Network ID#1: H-pol setting to provide 19V to LNB for High Ku-band.
-OR-
Network ID#4: V-pol setting to provide 13V for polarizer control.
 
ASTRA ANALOG
FOOTPRINT MAP
Astra 1B
Longitude: 19.2 degrees east
Transponder: 27
D/L Frequency: 11.612 GHz
Audio Sub-Carrier Freq: 7.56 MHz
Polarization: Horizontal

NORTH AMERICA:
AMC 2
FOOTPRINT MAP
Digital
Longitude: 85 Degrees West
Polarization: Horizontal
Freq: 4.140 GHz
Signal Type: NTSC/PAL
Transponder: 22
FEC: 3/4
Symbol Rate 25 MS/s
ID: 5

NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA:
NEW SKIES SATELLITE 806
FOOTPRINT MAP
Digital
Longitude: 319.5 Degrees East
DL Freq: 4123.25 MHz
L Band DL Freq: 1026.75MHz FEC: 3/4
Symbol Rate 8.90 MS/s
Network ID: 2

ASIA AND THE GULF REGION:
ASIASAT 2 DIGITAL
FOOTPRINT MAP
Digital
Longitude: 100.5 Degrees East
Polarization: Horizontal
Freq: 3880 MHz
FEC: 1/2
Symbol Rate: 20.4 MS/s

ASIA AND AFRICA:
NEW SKIES SATELLITE 703
FOOTPRINT MAP >
Digital
Longitude: 57 deg. E
Transponder: 35 (Global beam)
Freq: 4055 MHz
FEC: 1/2 rate
Symbol Rate: 20.4 MSym/s Network ID: 3
D/L Pol: RHC
Typical LO Freq: 5150 MHz Typical L-band IF:1095 MHz Video Format: PAL


The U.S. Agency for International Development has provided economic and humanitarian assistance worldwide for more than 40 years.

For more information on USAID's humanitarian relief efforts in Iraq, please visit www.usaid.gov/iraq/.

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