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South Sudan: Internews Humanitarian Information Service - UN House PoC 3, Juba, Central Equatoria State (Wave 1 Assessment: August 2014)

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Source: Internews Network
Country: South Sudan

Introduction and Overview

In August 2014 Internews launched Boda Boda Talk Talk (BBTT) in the Protection of Civilians (PoC) site known as PoC 3 in Juba. PoC 3 is the newest site and is adjacent to the United Nations Mission in South Sudan (UNMISS) UN House base that contains PoC 1 and PoC 2.

BBTT is a professionally produced recorded audio Humanitarian Information Service (HIS). In order to reflect the voices of the community, Internews recruited and trained community correspondents who themselves had been affected and displaced from their homes. The service is designed as a platform for people to discuss issues, share ideas, and ask questions of each other and humanitarian agencies operating in the PoC.

The project was rolled out following the success of the BBTT project in Tong Ping PoC, which was launched earlier in the year in February 2014; and after the successful launch of the project in UN House PoC 1 and PoC 2 in April 2014.

The HIS uses low technology ‘mini-media’ with two new 20-minute programs produced a week that are played on speakers and megaphones with USB functions. Although there are radio stations in Juba that reach the PoCs, the information produced is specific to, and contained within the PoCs, for protection reasons. The program is full of engaging content including a three-minute drama, Q&As, feature stories, music and news bulletins from NGOs. The BBTT program provides people living in the PoCs with ‘hyper local’ relevant, accurate, and timely information that helps them navigate life inside the site. The programs aim to inform, entertain, dispel rumors and reduce tensions and the correspondents act as mediators in what can be high-tension environments.

This Wave 1 assessment was conducted in August 2014, as the project was being established in PoC 3. However, most of the people who moved to PoC 3 were relocated by UNMISS from the Tong Ping PoC site and were familiar with the project and the BBTT programs that had been running there since February. Some of the community correspondents from Tong Ping also relocated to PoC 3, and the familiarity with staff, the BBTT branding, quad bike and the content helped support community acceptance and trust very quickly. Nevertheless there were a number of people displaced from other parts of the country who were less familiar with the project.

The Wave 1 assessment for all three UN house sites was conducted at the same time, but PoC3 is reported on separately due to the significant differences in living conditions, dates of sites opening, and the HIS program launch.

PoC 3 now has 14,000 people and is full to its planned capacity. 2000 to 3000 people remain in Tong Ping – some refuse to ever leave, while others are newly displaced arrivals from other parts of the country.

In total 161 interviews with individuals were collected inside PoC 3. The survey aims to inform Internews on the nature and content for BBTT, and assess people’s need for, and access to, information in a context where communication channels are limited and access outside the sites are limited. A follow-up study will be conducted approximately four months after this Wave 1 assessment, that will aim to ascertain the impact and benefit BBTT has provided individuals in the UN House PoC 3. Findings will also be compared to the HIS studies done in other sites across the country to help evaluate the best way to establish an HIS and to have the greatest impact.


World: Migration Health Annual Review 2013

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Source: International Organization for Migration
Country: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Cambodia, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Ghana, Haiti, Italy, Jamaica, Jordan, Kenya, Mozambique, Nepal, Philippines, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Sri Lanka, Syrian Arab Republic, Tajikistan, Turkey, Viet Nam, World, Yemen

Foreword

Migration has been and always will be a fact of life; we have to ensure that it is also a safe process that does not negatively impact the health of migrants and host communities. Population mobility influences, guides and supports economic and social development, social stability, and the greater integration of global processes in countries of origin, transit, destination and return. The healthier migrants are, the more efficient and balanced the future of our integrated and globalized world will be.

Whereas migrant health is getting increasing global attention, the key challenge in the past year has been to raise this topic in relevant platforms to find it a place in the post-2015 development framework.
We believe that this is needed for three key reasons – firstly, migrants have a right to health; secondly, including migrants in the health system can improve public health outcomes; and thirdly, healthy migrants can contribute to positive development outcomes. IOM will continue to work closely with its Member States, migrant beneficiaries, the United Nations, civil society and other stakeholders to ensure multisectoral collaboration for promoting the health of migrants.

With this report, the Migration Health Division (MHD) is pleased to present a review of selected IOM health projects and activities in 2013. This was a busy year again for the MHD, as evidenced by this report. Total expenditure of the MHD in 2013 amounted to USD 96.4 million, with projects across our three main areas, namely, migration health assessments, health promotion and health assistance in crises. Sincere gratitude and admiration go to all staff, colleagues, partners and Member States who promote migration health – a rapidly growing area of IOM work.

This annual report includes an editorial on why and how the health of migrants should be included in the post-2015 tuberculosis (TB) strategy. It is encouraging to note that the World Health Assembly Resolution on the new TB strategy emphasizes the importance of working on cross-border issues and promotes collaboration between high- and low-TB incidence countries. In the coming years, IOM and its partners will have to work together to ensure operationalization of proposed TB strategies for migrant communities.

Davide Mosca
Director, Migration Health Division
Department of Migration Management

Ethiopia: UNHCR begins relocation of 50,000 South Sudan refugees in Ethiopia before the rains come

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Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Country: Ethiopia, South Sudan

GAMBELLA, Ethiopia, March 17 (UNHCR) – The UN refugee agency this week began relocating more than 50,000 South Sudanese refugees from flood-prone areas of western Ethiopia ahead of the start of the rainy season in late April.

The refugees are being moved from the Leitchuor and Nip Nip refugee camps in the Gambella region. Last year, in August, both camps were severely hit by floodwaters during unusually heavy seasonal rains, which caused the Baro River to burst its banks.

The first group of 377 refugees left in a convoy of 11 vehicles with a security escort on Monday. The refugees received high energy biscuits and water as they boarded buses for the 300-kilometre-long journey, which takes about eight hours.

"I'm extremely excited to be relocating to a camp where we won't fear that, come the rainy season, our houses will be flooded again," said one refugee, 26-year-old Nyawour, a mother of two.

More than 51,300 refugees from flood-prone areas in the two camps will be relocated, most of them (about 48,430) from Leitchuor. While the new Pugnido camp, which currently hosts nearly 56,000 South Sudanese refugees, has been extended to receive the refugees from Nip Nip, an additional camp was also opened over the weekend. The new camp, Jewi, is located some 18 kms from the regional capital Gambella and will host the refugees from Leitchuor.

"Our plan is to relocate all willing refugees in a safe and dignified manner," said Angele Djohossou, head of the UNHCR sub-office in Gambella, adding that the strategy also includes the development of projects aimed at ensuring peaceful co-existence between refugees who opt to remain and the host community.

The camps in Leitchuor and Nip Nip were established last year when tens of thousands of South Sudanese fled to Ethiopia's Gambella region, escaping the violence that had erupted in mid-December 2013 in the world's youngest nation. An additional new site is also being developed to accommodate the larger group of refugees from Leitchuor and the first refugees are expected to be transferred to that camp early next month.

Finding the land with the right conditions to set up another refugee camp has been a huge challenge, as several sites that had been identified immediately after last year's rainy season were subsequently declared unsuitable. More land is still needed to accommodate the new arrivals from South Sudan.

UNHCR is undertaking the relocation exercise in collaboration with the Ethiopian government and other organizations, including the International Organization for Migration, which is transporting the refugees.

Some 2 million people have been uprooted by the violence in South Sudan since December 2013. Nearly 1.5 million people are displaced inside the country and more than half a million across the border into neighbouring countries, most of them to Ethiopia.

Ethiopia is Africa's largest refugee-hosting country with more than 670,000 refugees, mainly from Somalia, followed by South Sudan, Sudan and Eritrea. This includes more than 250,000 South Sudanese refugees in the Gambella region, of whom more than 194,000 have arrived since mid-December 2013.

By Sulaiman Momodu in Gambella, Ethiopia

World: Global Emergency Overview Snapshot 11–17 March 2015

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Source: Assessment Capacities Project
Country: Afghanistan, Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Colombia, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Guatemala, Guinea, Haiti, Honduras, India, Iraq, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Liberia, Libya, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, occupied Palestinian territory, Pakistan, Philippines, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, Uganda, Ukraine, Vanuatu, World, Yemen

Snapshot 11–17 March 2015

Vanuatu: 24 people are confirmed dead so far after Tropical Cyclone Pam hit on 13 March. Shefa, Tafea, Malampa, and Penama are among the worst affected provinces. Access challenges are significant.

Cameroon: The number of people internally displaced in the north has almost doubled since 10 February, to 117,000. This brings the number of displaced in Cameroon to an estimated 412,700, including 66,000 fleeing Boko Haram violence in Nigeria and the rest from the Central African Republic.

Updated: 17/03/2015. Next update: 24/03/2015

South Sudan: DFID delegation visits Malakal protection site

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Source: UN Mission in South Sudan
Country: South Sudan

16 March 2015 - Officials from the United Kingdom’s (UK) Department for International Development (DFID) today visited the protection site at the UNMISS base in Malakal, Upper Nile State.

Leading the delegation, DFID South Sudan Deputy Head Vicky Stanger, affirmed the commitment of the British government to improve the livelihood of people affected by the ongoing crisis in the country.

“We here today with our partners to look at the humanitarian efforts that have been undertaken in Malakal in terms of support to (protection sites) and also to visit Malakal town and Wau Shilluk to see the provisions that might be needed for the sustainability of people’s livelihoods in nearest future,” said Ms. Stanger.

The delegation toured the old and new protection sites at the base to assess the conditions of health as well as water, sanitation and hygiene facilities, waste management and schools set up by humanitarian partners.

The DFID officials visited Malakal Teaching Hospital, where the first phase of renovation is ongoing.

They also met with the internally displaced persons (IDPs) Peace and Security Council and discussed a range of issues including how to support their livelihoods.

The council members reiterated their commitment to work with all partners, including those from the UK, to support peace building within the protection site by settling disputes among the IDPs.

“We will continue encouraging peace process like the previous peace and reconciliation conference that was concluded successfully last month,” said council chairman Mathew Choul.

Women representatives repeated their called to parties to the conflict to stop war for the sake of the South Sudanese people.

“As women in this country we tired of war and instability. (What we) need is to see peace prevail,” said Achol Nyibong, a woman’s representative. “I wish leaders of the warring parties would listen to the calls of the vulnerable people who include children, elderly and women in this country.”

The DFID delegation also met with UNMISS state management, led by State Coordinator Deborah Schein, as well as representatives of different humanitarian agencies and government authorities.

In November 2014, DFID contributed £1.6 million for expansion of the UNMISS protection site in Malakal, where more than 21,000 displaced people are currently seeking shelter.

South Sudan: Absence of peace could lead to grave humanitarian consequences, Lanzer says

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Source: UN Mission in South Sudan
Country: South Sudan

17 March 2015 - Lack of real progress on the political front was raising concerns that this could result in more fighting which would have more consequences on people’s lives, UN Humanitarian Coordinator Toby Lanzer said in Juba today.

“We’re already in a very precarious situation after 15 months of conflict,” said the top UN humanitarian official in the country. “The situation is very grave and in the absence of peace, it has every possibility of becoming more serious.”

Mr. Lanzer, who is also the Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary General (DSRSG), listed challenges, including two and a half million people who are severely food-insecure and 500,000 children who dropped out school because of the conflict.

“On top of the fact that there is an absence of peace, I am also very worried about the economic situation,” said Mr. Lanzer.

He explained that income from the petroleum sector had gone down by 75 per cent, making it difficult for South Sudanese institutions to function, as well as to pay bills and salaries.

Mr. Lanzer said that such a situation raised the temptation to print money, but noted that doing that with nothing to back the value of the currency usually leads to hyper-inflation.

“If that was to occur in South Sudan, we would be in an ever-more grave situation and the people who have managed to eke out a life so far, despite the crisis, would also be added to those terrible numbers that I quoted earlier,” he said.

The DSRSG said that UN agencies and non-governmental partners were gearing up with focus on three key areas.

One of the priorities was to reach people in need by road, he said, adding that until the middle of June, aid agencies would be trying to deliver 300,000 metric tonnes of relief items to different locations.

He commended both parties to the conflict and the country's authorities for facilitating increased access by road within the country, as well as authorities in Ethiopia and Sudan for cross-border access by road.

Another key area was to help 500,000 children get back to school, the top humanitarian and development official in the country said.

“We have to invest much more in emergency education and UNICEF and other organizations are spearheading that effort,” he said.

Mr. Lanzer said humanitarian partners were also focusing on getting ready for the planting season, noting that this was absolutely vital for subsistence farmers and the entire economy of South Sudan which is heavily reliant on people’s ability to move freely with their livestock and to be able to plant their crops especially during April and May.

“If they can do that, the South Sudanese as we know are resilient and they can do much to help themselves,’ he said.

He added that the UN Food and Agriculture Organization was currently spearheading the international effort to get as many seeds and tools to communities throughout the country.

Thanking the international donor community for a series of pledges made during a high-level meeting in the Kenyan capital Nairobi in mid-February, Mr. Lanzer revealed that currently there was about $620 million pledged against the $1.8 billion humanitarian appeal for this year.

“We cannot take this generosity for granted,” he said. “We do need real signals from the political leadership that things are going to get better.”

Ethiopia: Ethiopia: South Sudanese new arrivals in Gambella - Post 15th December 2013 (as of 17-March-2015)

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Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Country: Ethiopia, South Sudan

South Sudan: South Sudan: Logistics Cluster Concept of Operations, March 12, 2015

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Source: World Food Programme, Logistics Cluster
Country: South Sudan


South Sudan: Building a Culture of Peace through Dialogue in South Sudan

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Source: The Sudd Institute
Country: South Sudan

Benjamin Machar

Summary

• Building a culture of peace through national dialogue centered on justice and accountability is the viable mechanism for realizing peace in South Sudan. South Sudan needed a national dialogue immediately after the signing of the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA) and it had another opportunity after the declaration of independence, but it was also missed.

• The on-going crisis calls for a comprehensive dialogue to resolve the political, military and civil grievances that lie at the root of the conflict. The ruling elite’s manipulation of the military and ethnicity to maximize their power gain remains a serious threat to national cohesion and perpetuates violence. Peace should be anchored on deliberative dialogue at various levels of society with serious consideration for justice and accountability, which are essential to any process to end ethnic conflicts and impunity.

• This nation has inflicted serious wounds on itself and dialogue is a necessary catharsis to reset societal relations. Dialogue succeeds when it employs a participatory approach to tackle the pressing national issues by involving actors at national and local constituencies to achieve justice.

• Dialogue should address deep-seated ethnic rivalry, tackle the separation of the military from politics and treat the civil and cultural spheres as separate spaces from politics.
When political actors are engaged in political discourse, these disputes tend to spill into the military; which is a recipe for political instability.

• Peace through dialogue should be anchored on three inter-linked dimensions: 1) Political dialogue—encompassing inter-party and intra-party dialogue, as well as intragovernmental dialogue 2) political-military-civil dialogue and 3) broad-based statesociety dialogue. The three-pronged model is utilized to isolate the spillover of political, military or civil issues into each other1.

Kenya: UNHCR Kenya Factsheet - February 2015

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Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Country: Kenya, Somalia, South Sudan

HIGHLIGHTS

22,456 Identified unaccompanied minors

9 Households provided with cash grants in year 2015

98,596 NFIs distributed since January 2015

184 Shelters distributed since January 2015

South Sudan: Women and malnutrition - the case of South Sudan

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Source: IRIN
Country: South Sudan

KODOK, 18 March 2015 (IRIN) - Pregnant breastfeeding women are the demographic group most at risk of malnutrition in South Sudan after children, making up some 12 percent of all those on supplementary feeding programmes.

Such women’s vulnerability can be largely attributed to the higher nutritional needs associated with supporting a foetus or nursing an infant.

But there is also a social component. In a country with strict gender roles, women do more physical labour than men, but may not get as much food. Pregnant women traditionally refrain from eating certain high-nutrition foods, such as eggs and liver, for (misplaced) fear they could cause birth defects. Women have little say in family planning decisions even during lean times.

They also often go without food so their children have enough.

"I can't take more than my children," explains Khadija, a malnourished mother of four displaced by the civil war that re-ignited in December 23 and is now living in Fashoda County of Upper Nile State.

Nursing her youngest, a boy of six months, she said: "I don't like to see my children suffering more than me."

While providing additional food is the first line of defence against malnutrition, it also important to educate both men and women about how to attain adequate nutrition for mothers.

"Malnutrition persists because there is a cultural line to doing things," says Zahra Mokgosi, gender adviser for the World Food Programme. "Fighting patriarchy is like changing the status of the culture...we really have to work with women, the community leaders, with the religious leaders."

Fashoda has only moderate rates food insecurity, nutritionists here say, so the fact that even here there are cases of severe malnutrition among pregnant and lactating women shows the fragility of that group's health.

Adult deaths from malnutrition are extremely rare, but malnourishment can have negative effects on pregnant or lactating women and their children.

Malnourished women can experience prolonged labour because they may not have the energy to push the baby out, and malnourished mothers often give birth to malnourished babies.

"Nutrition starts in utero," says Carol Kaburu, a nurse in the ante-natal clinic in Fashoda's hospital run by the International Committee of the Red Cross. Kaburu warns that poor nutrition can lead to birth complications.

"If you are not well nourished, you get anaemia, then when you give birth you will have low haemoglobin levels and you will tend to bleed a lot. So nutrition is key in pregnancy."

Day to day, being pregnant without enough to eat is exhausting.

"It's like I'm sick, but I'm not sick," says Angelina, a malnourished mother in Fashoda who is seven months pregnant. "Talking is not easy. When I start to move to work, my head spins. I can even fall down."

Angelina eats just one meal a day, a half kilo of sorghum made into porridge shared with her husband and child. Sometimes two spoons are all that's left for her once the rest of her family finishes eating, she says.

This half-kilo of sorghum is all some families in South Sudan have to eat for a whole day Malnutrition isn't only related to the amount of food going in, it's also the amount of energy going out, and women in South Sudan work hard.

"Women have to look for firewood, they have to cook what little they have, they have to wash, there is quite a range of activities they are doing using their energy so their nutritional status is a bit low," says Joel Makii, a nutrition adviser in South Sudan with CARE International. "Men, they don't engage in a lot of manual jobs, they just sit and chat."

With few jobs available, but children to feed, women each day walk up to an hour to forests where they cut logs before transporting the loads on their heads. When sold, the wood is worth enough to buy a kilo or so of flour.

Most men refuse to help in the endeavour because it is seen as women's work.

"In our culture men cannot collect firewood," says Mary, a nursing mother of three whose left bicep measures less than 21 cm around, an indicator of severe malnourishment. "The men will not share the work, even if I'm not feeling well."

Mary says on days she is too weak to cut wood, she begs from neighbours.

Even when there is enough food, pregnant South Sudanese women may not be able to access the nutrition they need.

Each month since January, pregnant and lactating women in Fashoda whose middle upper arms measure less than 23 cm around have received an additional 7.5 kg of an enriched corn-soy blend from World Vision.

The extra food appears to have contributed to declines in malnutrition among mothers in the area, but it may take months for the women to fully recover.

The supplement doesn't address more unpredictable needs of a pregnancy. Angelina, in her third trimester, says lately she's craved potatoes and tomatoes with no recourse. Mothers often give the corn-soy blend to their children.

"We try to discourage them from sharing," says Dorothy Matyatya, World Vision's head nutritionist in Fashoda. "You know women being women they would want to share everything with their children."

Food handouts also address only one side of the malnutrition equation.

"It's not just about food," says Kaburu, the nurse at ICRC's ante-natal clinic. Kaburu says pregnant women need deworming pills in case there are parasites which divert nutrition from the mother. They need Vitamin A too, and to fight anaemia, iron supplements and mosquito nets which prevent malaria.

With only one hospital in Fashoda distributing all these supplements, not all women get what they need. Malnourished women may not know to seek medicine when their immediate concern is food, yet the nutrition program doesn't always refer them to the ante-natal clinic.

"Unless you have a [medical] problem you don't get medical care," Kaburu says.

A potential longer term solution to malnourishment among pregnant and lactating women is better family planning, but men often control such decisions, and contraception is rare and even scorned in deeply religious South Sudan.

"If she's your wife, she's your wife," said a local male chief, emphasizing the possessive. "A man cannot wait."

Angelina, who became pregnant after South Sudan's conflict began, said she'd rather have waited for a more stable time to have a child.

"If I could choose I wouldn't have become pregnant during a war," she says.

Mokgosi from WFP says her organization attempts to work with men to improve nutrition access for women, but the process is slow.

Men at times react with hostility at suggestions to change entrenched customs, she says. South Sudan’s low levels of development exacerbates the challenge.

“When you explain to an educated person that if you don’t feed your wife she’ll have teeth rotting [due to lack of nutrients], you’re talking to someone who understands what calcium is and what iron is,” she says. “But if you are talking to someone who says, ‘my mother and father used to say all the invited guests must eat first before the mother,’ these are barriers that are related to education, to poverty.”

jp/am

South Sudan: South Sudan's Kiir shrugs off UN threat of sanctions

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Source: Reuters - AlertNet
Country: South Sudan

By Denis Dumo

JUBA, March 18 (Reuters) - South Sudan President Salva Kiir on Wednesday dismissed the threat of U.N. sanctions after the Security Council passed a resolution this month that set up a framework for introducing punitive measures.

Kiir also told South Sudanese at a rally in Juba that the government was ready to continue fighting rebels if they preferred war, comments likely to frustrate African mediators and Western powers trying to end more than a year of conflict.

read the full article here

Sudan: Sudan Common Humanitarian Fund | CHF - 2014 highlights and 2015 response

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Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Country: South Sudan, Sudan

2014 Highlights

Trusted by donors | Donor contributions to the Sudan CHF (US$57.6 million) were up by 5 per cent ($2.8 million) compared to 2013, accounting for some 10.8 per cent of Sudan Strategic Response Plan funding.

Allocations year-round | More than $55 million was allocated through two Standard Allocation rounds (April, December) and on a rolling basis through the CHF Reserve.

Emergency-focus | Some $37 million or two thirds (67 per cent) of 2014 funds were allocated for humanitarian response in Darfur; $10 million went to South Kordofan, West Kordofan and Blue Nile combined; and the rest to the other areas of Sudan with pressing humanitarian needs.

Diversity of partnerships | The CHF funding was received by 9 UN agencies (53.4 per cent), 28 international NGOs (33.5 per cent) and 22 national NGOs (13.1 per cent).

Coordinated and prioritized | More than two thirds of the CHF funds were allocated directly to the implementing partners through a coordinated and diligently prioritized Standard Allocation process in support of the urgent humanitarian programming across nine humanitarian sectors.

Cost-effective and predictive | The CHF funded the bulk procurement of urgent humanitarian supplies (core pipelines) early in 2014 to ensure a timely response to sudden onset needs early in the year and to secure inputs for NGOs that sometimes face challenges with import procedures.

Accountable and secure | The CHF continued to build on its accountability systems and improve what is probably the most robust and reliable monitoring system in Sudan, with 87 percent monitoring coverage for standard allocation projects.

Timely and rapid | Through the CHF reserve window ($5 million), the Humanitarian Coordinator, in consultation with the CHF Advisory Group, retained the capacity to respond and allocate funds rapidly, sometimes within days of new needs being identified.

Reaching the most vulnerable | For the first time in many years, the CHF was able to support projects in Darfur’s hard-to-access Jebal Marra and to provide assistance to vulnerable communities in remote areas (for example in Eastern Sudan).

South Sudan: Jur River County authorities receive police post, water project from UNMISS

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Source: UN Mission in South Sudan
Country: South Sudan

17 March 2015 - Continuing efforts to support peacebuilding in Western Bahr El-Ghazal State, UNMISS handed over a police post and potable water project to authorities in Jur River County today.

Speaking at the hand-over ceremony of the projects, UNMISS State Coordinator Winnie Babihuga said their construction signified the peace and security prevailing in the state.

“These two projects signify the importance of building peace and maintaining peace within the community,” said Ms. Babihuga. “When there is peace, development projects move forward.”

The police post and potable water project, worth $50,000 and $90,000 respectively, were built using funding from the mission’s Quick Impact Projects (QIPs).

Representing Governor Rizik Zachariah Hassan, State Minister of Agriculture Michael Madut urged the community to properly use the water project so that it would be able to serve them for a long period.

The clean water project, which was implemented by UN Habitat, is expected to benefit over 1000 people in the community.

“The new police station will enable the police to bring services closer to the people,” said Mr. Madut. “If someone has a problem, (he or she) should come and report.”

The UNMISS Kenyan Battalion constructed the police post which is comprised of five offices and three detention cells.

The State Police Commissioner Major General Abraham Mauyauat Akot promised to furnish the police station with the necessary facilities soon.

“In order to effectively and efficiently discharge their duties and responsibilities, the police need a police station equipped with enough offices and detention cells, ” he said. “This facility will surely build the confidence of citizens and ensure better peace and security in the community.”

UNMISS Relief, Reintegration and Protection Officer Bernald Brima thanked the local community for their cooperation during the construction of the projects.

He noted that the choice of projects to implement in the county was based on priorities identified by local communities.

“UNMISS decided to build police stations in three counties of the state because that was the (need the community identified,” he said.

Last week, the mission handed over a police station, also built using QIPs funding, in Wau County.

Central African Republic: Briefing on Africa Trip, Security Council Says Peace Still Fragile, Democratic Elections Essential for Stability in Central African Republic, Burundi

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Source: UN Security Council
Country: Burundi, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Libya, Mali, Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan

SC/11821

7407th Meeting* (AM)
SECURITY COUNCIL
MEETINGS COVERAGE

During a mission to Africa last week, the Security Council held wide-ranging exchanges with key stakeholders in the peace processes in the Central African Republic and Burundi, witnessing progress and challenges on the ground, and discussed ways of bolstering the partnership between the United Nations and the African Union to ensure broader stability and development in the continent.

Briefing the 15-member Council on the first leg of the visit, François Delattre, the representative of France and mission co-leader, said the team spent two days in the Central African Republic holding discussions with political leaders and other stakeholders in the capital, Bangui, as well as in the countryside of Bria in the east.

“While the situation remains precarious on the humanitarian front, the country has made progress in stabilizing the security situation,” Mr. Delattre said. The desire expressed by political leaders to complete the transition process successfully was encouraging. The Council urged the Government to “spare no effort” in that regard, by continuing broad-based consultations and conducting free and fair elections. The overall situation was “fragile”, but the political trend was “positive”, he said, adding that the international community’s support must be commensurate with the significant challenges there.

In Burundi, the Council held “far-reaching exchanges” with the country’s President and leading ministers, civil society representatives, religious authorities and United Nations agencies. The Council noted that Burundi had made significant progress by overcoming challenges left behind from the conflict, but that peace remained tenuous. During the exchanges, the Council stressed the importance of holding credible, free and democratic elections to ensure durable peace and stability. All parties must abide by the letter and spirit of the Arusha Agreement, which remained the “compass”, and preserve cohesion within Burundi’s society by avoiding divisive debates, he added.

Representatives of political parties and civil society also voiced their concern to the Council over limits to freedom of expression and assembly and freedom of the judiciary, Mr. Delattre said, and stressed that all should put country above and make peace the priority of their actions. He described the meetings in that country as “extremely edifying and useful”.

Between the country visits, the Council mission stopped in Addis Ababa on 12 March for the ninth joint annual meeting with the African Union Peace and Security Council. Briefing on that segment, Ismael Abraão Gaspar Martins, the representative of Angola and mission co-leader, said the agenda was aimed at enhancing partnership between the two organizations on matters relating to peace security in Africa, and on strengthening conflict prevention and peacebuilding management tools.

The session provided an occasion to exchange views on the Great Lakes region, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Central African Republic, Mali and the Sahel, Libya, Somalia, South Sudan, Darfur, the fight against Boko Haram and the strategic partnership between the African Union and the United Nations.

On the Great Lakes region, the joint meeting expressed the importance of all signatories adhering to all aspects of the Peace and Security Agreement Framework for the Democratic Republic of the Congo and the region. Members expressed grave concern about the humanitarian situation in the Central African Republic and underscored the importance of bringing to justice perpetrators of war crimes and crimes against humanity, and putting an end to the culture of impunity there.

Speakers also took note of the concept letter on operations of a multinational task force to fight Boko Haram and the need for appropriate action in that regard.

Welcoming the ongoing negotiations on Mali and the Sahel, the joint session expressed concern at the grave violations of human rights committed by armed groups in Libya. On Darfur, the joint meeting expressed concern at the humanitarian and security situation, while, on South Sudan, it stressed the importance of imposing sanctions on those undermining peace. The two councils noted the positive developments and partnership in Somalia in the fight against Al-Shabaab during the “crucial and decisive” period ahead of elections next year.

The joint meeting looked forward to the recommendations of the High-Level Independent Panel on Peacekeeping Operations and highlighted the importance of continued dialogue between the two councils on addressing common challenges. A joint communiqué was being drafted and finalized, Mr. Gaspar Martins said, and underscored the need to improve preparations for and coordination on such meetings in the future.

The meeting began at 10:08 a.m. and ended at 10:28 a.m.


  • The 7406th Meeting was closed.

For information media. Not an official record.


World: Japan supplementary funds target peace, stability, crisis response in Africa

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Source: UN Development Programme
Country: Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Guinea, Japan, Liberia, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, World

New York - The Government of Japan has contributed USD 26.5 million towards the work of the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Africa, focusing on preventing and responding to crises.

The funding will support a number of UNDP projects across the region, including helping to stop Ebola and boosting recovery efforts, restoring stability and livelihoods along the borders of the Sahel region, and enhancing resilience and preparedness in countries affected by instability such as South Sudan and Cameroon, which is hosting large numbers of refugees from the Central African Republic and Nigeria.

“Africa is progressing but that road isn’t without its setbacks,” said the Director of UNDP in Africa, Abdoulaye Mar Dieye. “The key is to make sure the areas that remain fragile, or those that are threatened with instability, can quickly get back on their feet and build a more sustainable development process”.

Japan is a key strategic partner for UNDP in Africa through the Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD). TICAD has played a critical role in raising global awareness on African development since 1993 and continues to promote sustainable development, inclusive and resilient societies, and the promotion of peace, stability, and human security across the continent.

Contact Information

In New York: Nicolas Douillet nicolas.douillet@undp.org

In Tokyo: Toshiya Nishigori toshiya.nishigori@undp.org

Ethiopia: US Deputy Assistant Secretary Appreciates Ethiopia for Hosting Refugees

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Source: Government of Ethiopia
Country: Eritrea, Ethiopia, Somalia, South Sudan, United States of America

Addis Ababa March 18/2015 The commitment of Ethiopia to accommodate refugees is highly appreciable, Deputy Assistant Secretary of US Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration said.

Deputy Assistant SecretaryCatherine A. Wiesner, officials and international organization representatives yesterday inaugurated a new refugee camp that can accommodate 50,000 refugees in Gambella Regional State as the Leitchuor camp is exposed to floods.

Realizing the immensity of the problem of handling such a huge number of refugees, the US government had last year provided over 134 million USD for the purpose, the Deputy Assistant Secretary stated.

Additional one million USD is deposited for refugees in new camps this year, she said, adding that her government will continue supporting Ethiopia.

United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) County Representative, Valentine Tapsoba said on his part the Ethiopian people and government have a good cultural value of hosting refugees.

Ethiopia is the leading Africa country in hosting refugees he said, and thanked the government for opening the new refugee camp.

Refugees and Returnees Affairs Administration Deputy Director, Ayalew Aweke said the refugees are moved to a new camp because Leitchuor camp has been exposed to floods.

The new camp can accommodate over 50,000 refugees, he added.

Ethiopia is hosting over 670,000 refugees from South Sudan, Eritrea and Somalia and other neighboring countries in the 24 refugee camps across the country, it was learned.

Yemen: Mixed Migration in Horn of Africa and Yemen, February 2015

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Source: Regional Mixed Migration Secretariat
Country: Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Saudi Arabia, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Yemen

Kenya: Kenya: Registered refugees and asylum-seekers (as of 01 March 2015)

Sudan: Sudan: Humanitarian Bulletin Issue 11 | 9 - 15 March 2015

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Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
Country: South Sudan, Sudan

HIGHLIGHTS

  • HAC in South Kordofan says that about 14,500 people have fled their homes and sought shelter in Al Abassiya, Abu Jubaiha and Tajmala towns over the past five days.

  • Some 900 people flee their homes in Bau locality, Blue Nile State due to conflict, aid agencies report.

  • Up to 5,000 new refugees from South Sudan have arrived in Sudan, with their total number reaching almost 127,000 people.

  • Close to 1,800 suspected cases of measles have been reported from 12 states in Sudan, including 800 confirmed cases and 11 deaths, according to MoH, WHO and UNICEF.

FIGURES

Displaced people in Sudan 3.1 million

IDPs in Darfur(to date) 2.5 million

GAM burden 2 million

Refugees in Sudan (excluding S.Sudanese)(UNHCR) 168,000

South Sudanese refugees in Sudan - since 15 Dec 2013 (UNHCR) 126,814

FUNDING

1.04 billion requested in 2015 (US$)

4% reported funding

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