The U.N. World Food Program's director arrived in Colombo on Saturday for a two-day tour of areas in the country that were ravaged by last month's tsunami. James Morris is traveling to the hard-hit southern coastal town of Galle. He will also meet with Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga. The WFP is leading a mammoth effort to feed up to 2 million survivors in the countries devastated by the Dec. 26 earthquake-triggered tsunami, which killed more than 157,000 people. Nearly 31,000 Sri Lankans perished in the killer waves, while 800,000 were made homeless. In Sri Lanka, the Rome-based agency is providing food for up to 750,000 people, said Selvi Sachithanandam, a WFP spokeswoman in Colombo.