How to use the Lisbon metro
Like any city, getting acquainted with public transport in Lisbon can be a challenge.
Rise to the occasion by following these steps to going underground.
Is there anything better than walking around Lisbon? After about six months living here, you’ll discover yes… not walking in Lisbon.
When I first moved here, I must have racked up millions of steps on my Fitbit per day, if I owned a Fitbit. Point is, I walked a lot, sometimes four hours a day gleefully because Lisboa is a walking town, with so much to see. Soon I started being late to every appointment. No bother, this will happen to even the most punctual Lisboan newbies. After one sprained ankle, I started to notice why the city is lined with shops selling foot support products and a rather uncanny number of crutches-only supply stores. Once the novelty of soaking in the sites wears off (okay, this part never goes away), and you think: “NO MORE” going up and down some of the biggest, uneven
WFP Mozambique Country Brief, January 2021
Format
5,721.9 mt of food assistance distributed
USD 2.03 million cash-based transfers made
US$ 81.5 m six months (February 2021 – July 2021) net funding requirements
Operational Updates
• Cyclone Eloise made landfall in Sofala province on 23 January, affecting over 441,000 people and displacing more than 43,000. In the aftermath of the cyclone, WFP supported 35,000 people evacuated and displaced in temporary accommodation centres in Sofala province. WFP is currently designing a programme to support those who will face long-term consequences of cyclone Eloise.
• According to the Government, 565,000 people are known to be displaced in Cabo Delgado out of which some have moved towards Nampula, Niassa and Zambezia provinces. In January 2021, WFP provided food assistance to 270,725 IDPs in the province of Cabo Delgado and Nampula. The January cycle of food distributions will continue into February due to operational challenges.
WFP Mozambique Country Brief, November 2020
Format
US$ 4.7 m cash-based transfers made
US$ 142 m six months (December 2020 – May 2021) net funding requirements, representing 34.6% of total
724,434 people assisted in November 2020
Operational Updates
• Recent weeks have been marked by a continued increase in the sophistication and geographical reach of non-state armed group (NSAG) attacks in Cabo Delgado province, leading to an increase in population displacements and humanitarian needs.
• According to the Government, 565,000 people are known to be displaced in Cabo Delgado, of which some have moved towards Nampula, Niassa and Zambezia provinces.
• In November, WFP experienced delays in resource confirmation, food procurement, and dispatch to Cabo Delgado and Nampula for October and November cycles. The October cycle distributions were only completed during the last half of November, resulting in a delay of November distribution into December 2020. Due to these delays,