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Sierra Leone: Tzu Chi Volunteers Arrive in Sierra Leone with Hope for Flood Survivors

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Source: Buddhist Tzu Chi Foundation
Country: Sierra Leone

In solidarity with the people of Sierra Leone, the Buddhist Tzu Chi Foundation volunteers and staff from Taiwan, United States, France, and Spain arrived in Sierra Leone on September 16, 2017. The visiting team is in Sierra Leone to boost its ongoing hot meal program for flood survivors, assess long-term needs and submit report to Dharma Master Cheng Yen and Tzu Chi Taiwan to develop sustainable relief support for survivors. The Tzu Chi volunteers are very excited to be in Sierra Leone and happy to provide support to those in need. The Tzu chi team include USA Charity Department staff, media team, and Tzu Chi Hospital/Tzu Chi University physicians/professors. While volunteers will be busy providing compassionate support to flood survivors in four affected communities; the media team hopes to capture stories of affected persons; while the charity staff will assess long-term needs; and the medical team focus on establishing partnership with 34 Military Hospital for research development and capacity building. As usual, Healey International Relief Foundation staff, headed by its executive director will join Tzu Chi volunteers in Sierra Leone.

Tzu Chi USA Executive Vice President, Debra Boudreaux, who will oversee all activities, heads the Tzu Chi team in Sierra Leone. Even though all staff and volunteers will be working together to provide relief support to flood and landslide survivors, each team will focus on specific projects to evaluate, monitor, or develop new initiatives with new partners. The Charity Department will coordinate the feeding of flood survivors and distribution to the same beneficiaries and other vulnerable persons and assess long-term needs. The media team will capture stories of those affected by the devastating August 14 disaster and other Tzu Chi related activities. The medical team, comprising of physicians from Tzu Chi Hospital and professors from Tzu Chi University, will focus on establishing partnership with 34 Military Hospital and the Ministry of Health and Sanitation for research development projects and capacity building to help strengthen Sierra Leone’s healthcare.

The main goal of the visit is to provide relief support, transform the lives of the people of Sierra Leone, by supporting ongoing projects and develop new sustainable initiatives. Tzu Chi volunteers and staff will visit and interact with affected persons in Cline Town, Lumley, Regent, and the Hill Station relocation shelters. The visit is from September 16-23. Tzu Chi Foundation seeks to collaborate with like-minded organizations, groups, and individuals to address the needs of less privileged Sierra Leoneans. This is the second time Tzu Chi volunteers and staff visit Sierra Leone as a group.


Kenya: Kenya: Kakuma New Arrival Registration Trends 2017 (as of 17 Sep 2017)

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Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Country: Angola, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Iran (Islamic Republic of), Kenya, Nigeria, Pakistan, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Yemen, Zimbabwe

World: Assistance to refugees, returnees and displaced persons in Africa - Report of the Secretary-General (A/72/354) [EN/AR]

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Source: UN General Assembly
Country: Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Sudan, Togo, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, World, Yemen, Zimbabwe

Summary

The present report is submitted pursuant to General Assembly resolution 71/173. It updates information contained in the report of the Secretary-General submitted to the Assembly at its seventy-first session (A/71/354) and covers the period from 1 July 2016 to 30 June 2017. The report has been coordinated by the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees and includes information provided by the International Organization for Migration, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, the United Nations Children’s Fund, the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, the United Nations Population Fund, the World Food Programme and the World Health Organization. It also includes information drawn from reports by the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre.

I. Introduction

1. Africa was affected by multiple crises over the past year, which saw the number of people displaced by conflict and persecution grow steadily. Instability and insecurity in Burundi, the Central African Republic and South Sudan and parts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Nigeria and Somalia triggered significant population movements within and across borders. Numerous situations remained unresolved across the continent, with millions of refugees and internally displaced persons lingering in protracted situations.

2. By the end of 2016, the number of refugees and internally displaced persons in Africa had risen from 4.4 million to more than 5 million, and from 10.7 million to more than 11 million, respectively. In addition, the region hosted 450,000 asylum seekers and an estimated 1 million stateless persons. The majority of refugees received protection in neighbouring countries, many of which faced increasing economic hardship. Chad, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, the Sudan and Uganda were the African countries hosting the largest number of refugees, with the refugee population in Uganda nearly doubling during the period.

3. Food insecurity and the risk of famine, particularly in East Africa and the Horn of Africa, called for major relief efforts. In parts of northern Nigeria, Somalia and South Sudan, some 20 million people were affected by a combination of prolonged conflict and drought that fuelled food insecurity. As a result of funding shortfalls, nine refugee operations in Africa experienced cuts to food rations, with negative consequences for approximately 2 million refugees.

4. Mixed movements of refugees and migrants remained a challenge in many regions of Africa, including across the Sahara towards North Africa, from the Great Lakes and Horn of Africa towards Southern Africa, and across the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden to Yemen, and presented serious protection risks and difficulties for receiving countries.

5. Against this complex background, Africa is expected to benefit from a number of new initiatives to galvanize national, regional and international responses from Member States, regional organizations, international and national non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and development actors. This includes the commitments made at the World Humanitarian Summit (such as the Grand Bargain) in May 2016; the high-level summit of the General Assembly to address large movements of refugees and migrants in September 2016, which led to the adoption of the New York Declaration for Refugees and Migrants; and the leaders’ summit on refugees that followed; as well as a number of important regional endeavours. Those initiatives are expected to lead to a more predictable and comprehensive approach, as well as additional resourcing, to address the humanitarian needs and foster solutions to displacement.

World: Aide aux réfugiés, aux rapatriés et aux déplacés d’Afrique - Rapport du Secrétaire général (A/72/354)

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Source: UN General Assembly
Country: Angola, Benin, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Kenya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, South Sudan, Sudan, Togo, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, World, Yemen, Zimbabwe

Résumé

Le présent rapport est soumis en application de la résolution 71/173 de l’Assemblée générale. Il actualise les informations contenues dans le rapport présenté par le Secrétaire général à l’Assemblée à sa soixante et onzième session (A/71/354) et couvre la période allant du 1er juillet 2016 au 30 juin 2017. Il a été élaboré sous la coordination du Haut-Commissariat des Nations Unies pour les réfugiés et se fonde sur les informations reçues de l’Organisation internationale pour les migrations, du Bureau de la coordination des affaires humanitaires, du Haut - Commissariat des Nations Unies aux droits de l’homme, du Fonds des Nations Unies pour l’enfance, du Programme des Nations Unies pour le développement, de l’Entité des Nations Unies pour l’égalité des sexes et l’autonomisation des femmes, du Fonds des Nations Unies pour la population, du Programme alimentaire mondial et de l’Organisation mondiale de la Santé, ainsi que sur des rapports de l’Observatoire des situations de déplacement interne.

I. Introduction

1. L’Afrique a connu des crises multiples au cours de l’année écoulée, qui a été marquée par une augmentation soutenue du nombre de personnes déplacées par des conflits et des persécutions. L’instabilité et l’insécurité au Burundi, en République centrafricaine, au Soudan du Sud et dans certaines régions du Nigéria, de la République démocratique du Congo et de la Somalie ont provoqué d’importants mouvements de population dans les pays et au travers des frontières. De nombreuses situations ne sont toujours pas réglées sur l’ensemble du continent, où des millions de réfugiés et de personnes déplacées sont condamnés à voir leurs conditions de vie perdurer.

2. À la fin de 2016, le nombre de réfugiés et de personnes déplacées en Afrique était passé, respectivement, de 4,4 millions à plus de 5 millions et de 10,7 millions à plus de 11 millions. En outre, la région comptait 450 000 demandeurs d’asile et environ un million d’apatrides. La majorité des réfugiés bénéficiaient d’une protection dans les pays voisins, qui, pour nombre d’entre eux, connaissaient des difficultés économiques croissantes. L’Éthiopie, le Kenya, l’Ouganda, la République démocratique du Congo, le Soudan et le Tchad étaient les pays africains abritant le plus de réfugiés. La population de réfugiés a presque doublé en Ouganda pendant la période.

3. Face à l’insécurité alimentaire et au risque de famine, en particulier en Afrique de l’Est et dans la Corne de l’Afrique, il a fallu déployer d’importants efforts de secours. Dans certaines régions du nord du Nigéria, de la Somalie et du Soudan du Sud, quelque 20 millions de personnes souffraient des effets conjugués de conflits prolongés et de la sécheresse, qui avaient aggravé l’insécurité alimentaire. Le manque de fonds avait contraint neuf opérations d’aide aux réfugiés en Afrique à diminuer les rations alimentaires, avec des conséquences négatives pour près de 2 millions de réfugiés.

4. De nombreuses régions ont continué de devoir faire face à des flux mixtes de réfugiés et de migrants, notamment à travers le Sahara vers l’Afrique du Nord, de la région des Grands Lacs et de la Corne de l’Afrique vers l’Afrique australe, et à travers la mer Rouge et le Golfe d’Aden vers le Yémen, ce qui engendrait de graves risques et difficultés pour les pays d’accueil cherchant à assurer une protection.

5. Dans une situation aussi complexe, l’Afrique devrait ressentir les effets positifs de plusieurs initiatives nouvelles visant à susciter des interventions nationales, régionales et internationales de la part des États Membres, des organisations régionales, des organisations non gouvernementales internationales et nationales ainsi que des acteurs du dévelo ppement. On citera notamment les engagements pris (sous le nom de « Grand compromis ») lors du Sommet mondial de l’action humanitaire en mai 2016, de la réunion plénière de haut niveau de l’Assemblée générale sur la gestion des déplacements massifs de réfu giés et de migrants, qui s’est tenue en septembre 2016 et a conduit à l’adoption de la Déclaration de New York pour les réfugiés et les migrants, et le Sommet des dirigeants sur les réfugiés qui y a fait suite ainsi que plusieurs importantes activités régionales. Ces initiatives devraient favoriser une approche plus prévisible et globale ainsi que la mobilisation de ressources supplémentaires pour répondre aux besoins humanitaires et trouver des solutions au problème des déplacements.

World: Mixed Migration in West Africa Data: Routes and Vulnerabilities of People on the move - Extended Summary

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Source: Regional Mixed Migration Secretariat
Country: Algeria, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Italy, Liberia, Libya, Mali, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Tunisia, World

Introduction

The present text is an extended summary of a report produced by the Regional Mixed Migration Secretariat West Africa. The report examines mixed migration within, from and to West Africa and aims to gather available knowledge concerning people moving in mixed flows with the principal aim of identifying vulnerable groups and assessing their specific protection needs.

The report focuses specifically on mixed migration, a concept that emerged in the 1990s as a recognition that the existing protection regimes, founded on the basic distinction between refugees as defined by the refugee convention, and others, often summarily categorized as migrants, are inadequate to guarantee the protection of the rights of many people on the move in diverse contexts.2 Mixed migration thus reflects the realization that many people on the move, be they people fleeing violence or persecution, victims of trafficking, children or others, and regardless of the reasons compelling them to move, are vulnerable.

The current report begins by identifying and assessing the available data on mixed migration before developing an overview of the general regional migration context in West Afirca, focusing on specific routes and the factors that influence the conditions of movement. It argues that these factors expose people on the move to specific risks, exploiting existing and creating new vulnerabilities. The report then identifies certain vulnerable groups of people on the move and classifies them according to their specific vulnerabilities, with attention to the important overlap between the identified categories. The identification of certain groups and their vulnerabilities aims to serve as a basis for identifying current gaps in the protection of people in mixed migration movements within and from West Africa, and to inform more effective protection-based programming in the wider region.

The report closes by identifying knowledge gaps and outlining the potential areas for further research to improve the capacity of relevant stakeholders to develop relevant protection frameworks for people on the move, in and beyond the region.

Nigeria: WHO AFRO Outbreaks and Other Emergencies, Week 37: 9 – 15 September 2017 (Data as reported by 17:00; 15 September 2017)

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Source: World Health Organization
Country: Angola, Burundi, Cabo Verde, Cameroon, Chad, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Kenya, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Sao Tome and Principe, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania

Overview

This weekly bulletin focuses on selected acute public health emergencies occurring in the WHO African Region. The WHO Health Emergencies Programme is currently monitoring 48 events in the region. This week’s edition covers key new and ongoing events, including:

• Plague in Madagascar

• Undiagnosed acute jaundice syndrome in Ethiopia

• Humanitarian crisis in Nigeria

• Humanitarian crisis in Ethiopia

• Humanitarian crisis in South Sudan

• Hepatitis E in Chad

• Malaria in Burundi

• Cholera in Kenya.

For each of these events, a brief description followed by public health measures implemented and an interpretation of the situation is provided.

A table is provided at the end of the bulletin with information on all new and ongoing public health events currently being monitored in the region, as well as events that have recently been closed.
Major challenges include:

• Delayed, suboptimal or obstructed laboratory investigations impacting the timely identification of the cause of some outbreaks, and in turn hindering interventions

• Inaccessibility of communities affected by various emergencies inhibiting health and other humanitarian interventions

Italy: North Africa Mixed Migration Hub - Survey Snapshot - Italy | July 2017

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Source: Mixed Migration Hub
Country: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Congo, Côte d'Ivoire, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Italy, Liberia, Libya, Mali, Morocco, Nepal, Nigeria, Pakistan, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, Togo, World

ABOUT

  • MHub is undertaking field surveys with migrants, refugees and asylum seekers along key migratory routes to build up a body of data over time and to map country and regional level mixed migration trends.
  • This snapshot presents early survey findings of the profiles, intentions and experiences of those moving in mixed migration flows who have recently arrived in Italy in the last year.
  • Though these findings cannot be considered statistically representative of the migration population, they do provide key insights into the migration process.

KEY FINDINGS

This snapshot forms part of a wider, ongoing data gathering project with respondents who have recently transited through North Africa on their way to Europe. To date, data has been gathered from 593 respondents in Italy with respondents coming from countries such Nigeria (25.6%), Eritrea (12.0%), Gambia (10.1%), Cote d'Ivoire (8.1%), Bangladesh (7.8%), Mali (6.6%), Senegal (6.4%), Ghana (4.9%), Guinea (3.4%), Pakistan (3.2%), Cameroon (2.2%), Togo (1.5%), Ethiopia (1.4%), Sudan (1.4%), and (cumulatively 5.7%) Somalia, Syria, Central African Republic, Burkina Faso, Egypt, Sierra Leone, Morocco, Libya, Nepal, Congo, Liberia, Guinea Bissau, Afghanistan, Guinea Conakry.

Findings in this snapshot are based on interviews with 35 interlocutors in Rome. 12 respondents came from Nigeria, 8 from Eritrea, 4 from Sudan, 4 from Syria, 2 from Egypt, and 1 from each of Gambia, Senegal, Mali, Guinea, and Libya. 3 of the respondents were female and 32 were male.

INTENTIONS

  • 6 respondents (17.1%) reported Italy as their initial destination of choice. Of those who did not have Italy as their initial destination, 28.6% had other EU countries as their initial planned destination while 8 (22.9%) had chosen Libya as their first destination and 1 each had selected Sub-Saharan and other North African countries as their planned destination. 9 respondents (25.7%) reported not having any planned destination at the outset of their journey. After arrival in Italy, 19 respondents (54.3%) stated their intention to stay in Italy while 16 expressed their decision to continue their journey onwards. Of those who expressed the intention to leave Italy, all respondents planned to go to other European countries.
  • 12 respondents reported war to be the driver of their journey, 6 respondents listed military service being the main driver, 5 respondents reported economic reasons, 3 listed family problems, and 2 reported escaping persecution. 7 respondents declined to answer the question.

JOURNEY

  • All respondents reached Italy via the Central Mediterranean route. The majority of respondents (88%) transited through Libya while the rest (12%) reached Italy from Egypt. Respondents departing from both countries reported using the services of a smuggler for the last segment of their journey to Italy.
  • 23 respondents (65%) left their countries of origin alone while 12 respondents (34%) reported making the journey with someone else. 27 respondents (79%) reported getting information regarding different aspects of the journey by talking with other migrants, smugglers, humanitarian organizations, friends or family, and others while 16 (47%) reported relying on information they received from others via social media. 4 respondents (12%) reported not seeking any information regarding their respective journeys.

RISK AND ABUSES

  • The majority of respondents reported experiencing and/or witnessing various abuses. 18 respondents (53%) reported witnessing deaths. 19 respondents (56%) reported experiencing and/or witnessing other in detention. For those who were detained, 4 respondents reported a detention period of less than 19 days, 6 reported a period between 20 and 150 days, and 7 reported a period between 180 and 480 days. 14 respondents (41%) reported being and/or witnessing others being forced into labour; 24 (71%) were and/or experienced others being subjected to physical abuse; 10 (33%) experienced and/or witnessed document destruction; and 15 (44%) experienced and/or witnessed robberies.

QUOTES FROM RESPONDENTS

I asked my friends who were in Libya about the journey. They told that it was not easy. But I did not trust them at all
-Male respondent from Gambia in Rome on 04/07/2017

This journey is a suicide mission. I thank God that I am still alive
-Male respondent from Nigeria in Rome on May 2017

I would have preferred to die in my country, rather than making that sea journey
-Male respondent from Egypt in Rome on 31/07/2017

Sierra Leone: Humanitarian emergency response in Sierra Leone due to floods and landslide - Gender Alert: August 2017

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Source: Inter-Agency Standing Committee
Country: Sierra Leone

TAKING INTO ACCOUNT THE DIFFERENT NEEDS OF WOMEN, MEN, GIRLS, BOYS MAKES HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE MORE EFFECTIVE AND ACCOUNTABLE TO ALL AFFECTED POPULATIONS.

On August 14, torrential rains led to a series of unprecedented and significant floods and mudslides in several areas of Freetown, the capital city of Sierra Leone. The worst hit epicentres were: Regent, Kaningo, Kamayama, Dwazark, Culvert. According to the Disaster Coordination and Coordination of the Government of Sierra Leone, the Office of National Security (ONS) estimates that more than 5,900 people have been affected by this natural disaster with more than 3,000 people having lost their homes.

An unknown number of people died with several bodies still missing/unaccounted for--having been buried under the mudslide. Approximately 400 bodies of the dead were retrieved. The Government, the UN system through the United Nations Resident Coordinator (UNRC) as well as other international actors, including International and National NonGovernmental Organizations (INGOS/NNGOS), are responding to this emergency humanitarian disaster. A deployment of a UN OCHA and UN Disaster Assessment and Coordination (UNDAC) team is on the ground to support the ongoing actions that include incident multi-sectoral assessments, coordination, service delivery and incidence reporting efforts. UNODC has set up a joint team composed of forensics, scientific police and a specialized rescue expert unit to support with recovery and identification of bodies.

Although registration and validation of survivors by age and sex is still on-going, concrete data disaggregated is not yet available even for lives lost. It is however, now a well established fact that in any natural disaster such as in this floods and mudslides or indeed in situations of armed conflict; women and girls are at a heightened risk for several reasons including the following:

  • Women are more likely to be front-line responders and health facility service delivery personnel as nurses and other care-giving medical personnel

  • Norms and customs dictate that women and girls play the role of caretakers for ill/incapacitated family members. This means that women have taken on additional responsibilities as host families when taking on and integrating surviving family members of neighbors/people not related to them but who belong to the community.

  • Pre-crisis gender norms, entrenched gender-related stereotypes, and gendered power dynamics are often reflected and amplified in humanitarian contexts, affecting women’s and girl’s access to life-saving information and much-needed humanitarian services, as well as impacting their right to participate in decision-making processes to ensure their rights and needs are addressed.

  • According to un-validated estimates, thousands of families have been left homeless and the temporary housing situations (shelters, schools or vacant buildings) which are used temporarily provide little or no protection from sexual and gender-based violence particularly for women and girls when seeking services/support for their own families particularly those widowed or separated, or unaccompanied and separated girls, by such natural disasters/emergency crisis.

The impact of the mudslide and flooding goes beyond the immediate mortality. The destruction is having a significant impact on the livelihoods of those who survived or those who have lost loved ones; houses, other personal properties and production materials. This includes women who are engaged in small-scale farming or petty trading in such enterprises as stone-mining, fishing or petty trading all of which have been damaged by the present emergency. The disruption of the social cohesion mechanisms and system have dire consequences to survivors and displaced women, men, boys and girls. Provisions of host families/neighbors are also stretched to unbearable limits.

With several schools utilized as shelters, as well as the potential for orphaned children or widowed families, women and girls will likely find themselves exposed to a heightened risk of GBV and sexual exploitation and abuse. This is in a context where GBV and sexual exploitation rates are already high and police resources are stretched thin due to the many protection and logistical tasks arising as a result of the emergency. The Multi-Sectoral Gender Impact Study Report carried out in Sierra Leone by UN Women/Statistics Sierra Leone and the MSWGCA provided ample examples of the additional vulnerabilities faced by women and girls during the Ebola Virus Disease Outbreak and Crisis in Sierra Leone.


Sierra Leone: Sierra Leone: Landslide and Floods Recovery Bulletin # 2, 19 September 2017

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Source: UN Development Programme, UN Country Team in Sierra Leone
Country: Sierra Leone

This weekly update is produced by UNDP in collaboration with the UN Resident Coordinator’s Office in Sierra Leone, liaising with the Office of National Security and development partners.

Situation overview  

Following emergency response to the landslide and floods in and around Freetown on 14 August 2017, the UN system in Sierra Leone is now supporting national recovery.  

Under national leadership and drawing on a number of assessments, including the recentlycompleted Damage and Loss Assessment, the Risk Management and Recovery Action Plan is currently being developed and is scheduled for completion in October 2017.  

In the meantime, UN agencies and humanitarian organizations continue to address the urgent needs of those affected. For the purpose of information and coordination, these efforts are detailed here.

Recovery efforts

HEALTH

UNICEF

• Provided technical input to the completion of trainings for personnel involved in the Oral Cholera Vaccination campaign including 61 national and zonal supervisors, 225 district supervisors and 30 independent monitors. Training for 2,901 vaccinators and other team members will be completed on 14 September.

• Supported the development of the vaccine distribution plan. The distribution of the vaccine from the central level to the peripheral health units is scheduled for 14 September.

UNFPA

• Facilitated the transportation of 27 affected pregnant women from Old School Camp,
Mothemeh Camp, Juba Barracks, Don Bosco and Pentagon to the Planned Parenthood Association of Sierra Leone Sexual Reproductive Health Clinic for comprehensive antenatal checks, including full laboratory investigations and ultrasound scanning. Information sessions were held on the importance of antenatal care, adequate diet, and prevention of malaria, tetanus complications and danger signs during pregnancy. All of the clients received the full complement of antenatal services and those who had medical conditions/illnesses were seen and treated (bringing the total reached to 110 women). Out of 27 pregnant women, there was one woman with hypertension and another suspected small gestational age.

• Distributed 25 mama and baby kits (locally known as mama en pikin packs) to pregnant women in the communities of Pentagon and Juba. The mama and baby kits contain essential items including nappies, baby clothes, sanitary pads, wrappers, washing powder and other baby products (bringing the total to 80 women reached).

World Vision International Sierra Leone (WVISL)

• Distributed NFIs under protection, WASH and Health pillars: Blankets - 2,898; Mattresses (4' x 4') - 2,548; Bed sheet - 2,282; Table spoon - 4,297; Aluminum cooking pots - 806 sets;
Drinking cup - 3,948; Plate - 4,697; Sola lamps - 700; Tarpaulin (large size) - 700; Rubber bucket for toilet- 830; Kitchen knives - 700; Aluminum big serving spoon - 350; Rice cooking/serving spoon - 350; Veronica Bucket - 1,099; Water purification (P&G) sachets - 65,940; Cloth for sieving water - 1,099 yds.; ORS- 8,300 pkts.; Sanitary pad - 700 pkts, Jerry can (empty 5 gallon)

  • 350; Toilet bag - 1,099; Toilet soap (6 in pack)2,049pkts; Laundry soap - 4,998 cake; Tooth brush -3,948; Tooth paste - 4,697 tubes Children's chamber - 1,099; Exercise book (80 pages)

  • 3,745; Pen - 1,498; Pencils - 1,498 and Popo back/back pack - 749. Also payment of burial teams.

• 1,099 households, 5,474 persons – 1,403 females, 1,401 males, and 2,670 children.

World: Secretary-General calls for taskforce on natural disasters

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Source: Commonwealth Secretariat
Country: Antigua and Barbuda, Bahamas, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Sierra Leone, United States of America, World

Commonwealth Secretary-General Patricia Scotland is convening a group of specialists from across the Commonwealth to examine how to “coordinate, create and shape a task force” to assist with mobilising international assistance to provide protection and assistance with recovery from the impact of violent storms and similar emergencies.

In a statement submitted to the UN High-level Meeting on Hurricane Irma at the United Nations General Assembly in New York, the Secretary-General spoke of the value of Commonwealth solidarity and support for vulnerable countries affected by such extreme weather events.

Secretary-General Scotland said that intergovernmental cooperation through organisations such as the Commonwealth and United Nations helped with cohesive contingency planning.

She said, “Our work includes assisting with financial flows, with debt management, and with access to funds through our Commonwealth Climate Finance Access Hub. The Commonwealth carries forward vital work to advance integration and cooperation within the Caribbean region and to strengthen links with the wider international community. This means the needs of vulnerable nations and communities such as those affected by Hurricane Irma are addressed.

“I am currently convening a group of specialists from across the Commonwealth to examine how we can respond even better as a Commonwealth family to coordinate the responses that are so urgently needed. I hope that together we will be able to coordinate, create and shape a task force. So by the time we are called upon again to respond, we will have a cohesive contingency plan, with access to humanitarian and financial resources that can be rapidly mobilised, to protect, save and give succour to all who are in need of help and support.”

This afternoon the Secretary-General expressed solidarity with Dominica, which was battered by Hurricane Maria last night. The country is still recuperating from the brutal attack of storm Erica, which wiped out 90 percent of its GDP two years ago.

She said, “It is with a heavy heart that I pick up my pen to once again write words of comfort, support and condolences to a country ravished by the unrestrained rage of nature. This time it is Dominica, the land of my birth.

“In my ear, I hear the echo of Prime Minister Roosevelt Skerrit’s words – “mind boggling” … “devastating”. As his own roof was ripped off, he expressed his greatest fears and the fact that he was "at the complete mercy of the hurricane". My relatives, my close friends and my Commonwealth family have been widely affected by the brutality of the recent hurricanes in the Caribbean, so for me, this is a personal tragedy.

“It is only a matter of days since I started working to rally Commonwealth and other international relief for those affected by the trail of destruction left by Hurricane Irma in Antigua and Barbuda, St Kitts and Nevis, The Bahamas, several British Overseas Territories, the Dominican Republic and the USA. Shortly before that I was mourning the death of the hundreds who perished in the deadly mudslide in Sierra Leone.

“Now I am saying to the government and the people of Dominica that we are in this together. Your pain is my pain, your worry is my worry, and the Commonwealth family is right there beside you. I stand by the pledge of allegiance to Dominica I have made time and again, and the promise ‘to work diligently and to help build a prosperous and peaceful Nation’.”

Sierra Leone: Struggling to cope one month on from devastating Sierra Leone landslide

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Source: Trócaire
Country: Sierra Leone

David O'Hare

David O’Hare reports from Freetown in Sierra Leone where hundreds lost their lives in a massive landslide on 14 August.

I wake up on my first morning in Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone, to the sound of torrential rain outside.

I know that this sound must strike fear in people from Matome on the outskirts of Freetown. There was torrential rain right through the night and into the early morning of Monday 14 August when disaster struck their community.

The steep hill on which their houses were built collapsed under the weight of the rain.

The eye witnesses I spoke to describe hearing a loud rumble and seeing the earth and rocks “rushing down the slope like water”. One woman told me “It was like the end of the world”.

One month on I am looking at that same hill and there is nothing left of the houses. They were either destroyed by huge rocks tearing through them or completely buried by the tonnes of mud that came down the hill.

Hundreds of people lost their lives in a matter of minutes. Many were in bed as the disaster struck before 7am.

The official estimate puts the number of dead at 500 which includes 122 children, but local people fear that many hundreds more bodies lie buried in the mud and will never be recovered.

The survivors count themselves lucky to be alive but they have faced incredibly difficult challenges since the disaster and continue to face these every day.

One father I met told me of his family’s miraculous escape.

He had left the house early to check on his brother who lived further down the valley as the rain was so bad: “The hill came down in two stages very close together,” he told me.

“The first slide woke my wife and she grabbed our four children and ran. My wife and children turned left when they got outside and ran for the trees. Our neighbours turned right. The second slide wiped them out. My family was lucky to make it. My youngest daughter, who is only five years old, was injured by the falling debris – that’s how close it was.”

The family have lost everything but at least they are alive.

Many other families are still in mourning for lost loved ones.

I met Fatu Kanu (50) who lost her husband in the landslide. She had been visiting her sick mother in the country and her three children were staying with relatives.

Her house was completely destroyed and her husband killed. The first she heard of it was when she received a call from a friend.

“My husband’s body hasn’t been recovered and I don’t think it ever will be,” she says.

“I think about him every day. I don’t know what the future holds. We have lost everything and I am worried for my children.”

The family are currently staying at one of the emergency camps set up by the government in the area where the disaster struck. Facilities are very basic. Fatu tells me it is cold and with many families staying together in large tents there is no privacy.

The needs of the 7,300 survivors, both physical and psychological, are enormous.

Trócaire has been responding at the scene of the disaster with food, hygiene kits and psycho-social support.

This support has been a lifeline for many as they struggle to come to terms with their grief.

Other help that is being rolled out includes school kits – schoolbags, books, pens and other items that have been lost – so that children can return to school and support for people as they try to earn a living and get back to some kind of normality.

It will be a long road to recovery for the people of Matome and 14 August 2017 is a date that will never be forgotten here.

World: Early Moments Matter for Every Child

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Source: UN Children's Fund
Country: World, Algeria, Australia, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belarus, Belize, Bhutan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brunei Darussalam, Bulgaria, Cuba, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Dominica, France, Gambia, Grenada, Hungary, Italy, Kenya, Latvia, Liberia, Luxembourg, Malawi, Malaysia, Mali, Micronesia (Federated States of), Myanmar, Namibia, Oman, Pakistan, Portugal, Romania, Russian Federation, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, San Marino, Sierra Leone, Singapore, South Africa, Swaziland, Sweden, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Ukraine, United States of America, Yemen, Zambia

Only 15 countries worldwide have three essential national policies that support families with young children – UNICEF

New report says around 85 million children under five live in 32 countries that do not offer families two years of free pre-primary education; paid breastfeeding breaks for new mothers for the first six months; and adequate paid parental leave – three critical policies to support children’s early brain development

NEW YORK, 21 September 2017 – Only 15 countries worldwide have three basic national policies that help guarantee the time and resources parents need to support their young children’s healthy brain development, UNICEF said today in a new report. Worse, 32 countries – home to one in eight of the world’s children under five – have none of these policies in place.

According to the report, Early Moments Matter for Every Child, two years of free pre-primary education, paid breastfeeding breaks during the first six months of a child’s life, and six months of paid maternity leave as well as four weeks of paid paternity leave help lay a critical foundation for optimal early childhood development. These policies help parents better protect their children and provide them with better nutrition, play and early learning experiences in the crucial first years of life when the brain grows at a rate never to be repeated.

The report notes that Cuba, France, Portugal, Russia and Sweden are among the countries that guarantee all three policies. However, 85 million children under five are growing up in 32 countries without any of the three critical policies in place. Surprisingly, 40 per cent of these children live in just two countries – Bangladesh and the United States.

“What’s the most important thing children have? It’s their brains. But we are not caring for children’s brains the way we care for their bodies – especially in early childhood, when the science shows that children’s brains and children’s futures are rapidly being shaped,” said UNICEF Executive Director Anthony Lake. “We need to do more to give parents and caregivers of young children the support they need during this most critical period of brain development.” 

The report also highlights that millions of children under five years old are spending their formative years in unsafe, unstimulating environments:

  • Around 75 million children under-five live in areas affected by conflict, increasing their risk of toxic stress, which can inhibit brain cell connections in early childhood;
  • Globally, poor nutrition, unhealthy environments and disease have left 155 million children under five stunted, which robs their bodies and brains from developing to their full potential;
  • A quarter of all children between the ages of 2 and 4 years old in 64 countries do not take part in activities essential for brain development such as playing, reading and singing;
  • Around 300 million children globally live in areas where the air is toxic, which emerging research shows can damage children’s developing brains.

Failure to protect and provide the most disadvantaged children with early development opportunities undermines potential growth of whole societies and economies, the report warns, citing one study that revealed that children from poor households who experience play and early learning at a young age earned an average of 25 per cent more as adults than those who did not.

“If we don’t invest now in the most vulnerable children and families, we will continue to perpetuate intergenerational cycles of disadvantage and inequality. Life by life, missed opportunity by missed opportunity, we are increasing the gap between the haves and the have-nots and undermining our long-term strength and stability,” said Lake.

On average, governments worldwide spend less than 2 per cent of their education budgets on early childhood programmes. Yet, the report highlights that investment in children’s early years today yields significant economic gains in the future. Every US$1 invested in programmes that support breastfeeding generates US$35 in return; and every US$1 invested in early childhood care and education for the most disadvantaged children can yield a return of up to US$17.

The report calls for governments and the private sector to support basic national policies to support early childhood development, including by:

  • Investing in and expanding early childhood development services in homes, schools, communities and health clinics – prioritising the most vulnerable children;
  • Making family-friendly policies, including two years of free pre-primary education, paid parental leave and paid breastfeeding breaks, a national priority;
  • Giving working parents the time and resources needed to support their young children’s brain development;
  • Collecting and disaggregating data on early childhood development and tracking progress in reaching the most vulnerable children and families.

“Policies that support early childhood development are a critical investment in the brains of our children, and thus in the citizens and workforce of tomorrow – and literally the future of the world,” said Lake.

Note to Editors:

Variables in this analysis were provided to UNICEF by the WORLD Policy Analysis Center at the University of California, Los Angeles. Population figures come from 2017 UNPD. The variables include: two years of free pre-primary education; paid breastfeeding breaks for new mothers for the first six months; and six months paid maternity leave and four weeks paid paternity leave.

Countries with all three policies include: Belarus, Bulgaria, Cuba, France, Hungary, Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, Portugal, Romania, the Russian Federation, San Marino, Sweden, Turkmenistan, and Ukraine.

Countries with none of the three policies include: Algeria, Australia, Bangladesh, Barbados, Belize, Bhutan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brunei, Dominica, The Gambia, Grenada, Kenya, Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, Liberia, Malawi, Malaysia, Federated States of Micronesia, Myanmar, Namibia, Oman, Sierra Leone, Singapore, South Africa, St Kitts and Nevis, St Lucia, Swaziland, Tonga, Trinidad and Tobago, Uganda, the United States, Yemen and Zambia.

The report will be launched at a high-level event, supported by UNICEF partner H&M Foundation which also funded the report, between 11:00am-12:30pm at The Every Woman Every Child Hub, North Lawn, United Nations, New York City during the 72nd Session of the United Nations General Assembly.

About UNICEF

UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the world’s most disadvantaged children. Across 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone. For more information about UNICEF and its work for children visit www.unicef.org.

For photo and video content please visit here.

Follow UNICEF on Twitter and Facebook

For more information, a copy of the report, or interviews, please contact:

Georgina Thompson, UNICEF New York, Mobile: + 1 917 238 1559gthompson@unicef.org

World: Global Hunger Index (1992, 2000, 2008 and 2016) [EN/DE]

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Source: International Food Policy Research Institute
Country: Afghanistan, Angola, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Central African Republic, Chad, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Haiti, India, Lao People's Democratic Republic (the), Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mozambique, Myanmar, Niger, Pakistan, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Timor-Leste, World, Yemen, Zambia, Zimbabwe

The Global Hunger Index (GHI) is designed to comprehensively measure and track hunger globally and by country and region. Calculated each year by the International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI), the GHI highlights successes and failures in hunger reduction and provides insights into the drivers of hunger. By raising awareness and understanding of regional and country differences in hunger, the GHI aims to trigger actions to reduce hunger.

World: Crop Prospects and Food Situation, No. 3 September 2017

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Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Country: Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Haiti, Iraq, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Swaziland, Syrian Arab Republic, Uganda, World, Yemen, Zimbabwe

Conflicts drag down food security amid growing global food output

FAO report notes rebounding harvests in most low-income food-deficit countries

21 September 2017, Rome-- Robust harvests in Latin America and rebounding agricultural conditions in Southern Africa are on course to improve the global food supply situation, but ongoing civil conflicts and climate-related shocks are affecting progress towards hunger reduction, according to the new edition of FAO's Crop Prospects and Food Situation report.

Hurricanes in the Caribbean and floods in West Africa are likely to hamper local farm outputs, but broader food production trends are positive, buoyed by expectations of record cereal outputs in several countries.

Some 37 countries, 28 of which are in Africa, require external assistance for food, according to the quarterly report.

The countries - Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Haiti, Iraq, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Swaziland, Syria, Uganda, Yemen and Zimbabwe - are unchanged from June.

Conflict continues to intensely impact agriculture and food security in Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq, northern Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, and often have further effects - due to displaced persons and increased civil insecurity - elsewhere. Weather shocks in 2017, including droughts, have also compounded the impacts in some countries, notably Somalia and southern Ethiopia.

Rebounding from El Niño

Global cereal production is forecast to reach a record level in 2017, pegged at 2 611 million tonnes.

While this is due to major gains in Argentina and Brazil, also of note is the expected rise in aggregate output in Africa by more than 10 percent this year, led by increasing maize harvests in Southern Africa, where farmers were hit hard last year by the El Nino weather phenomenon, and wheat output in North African countries.

Aggregate cereal production in Low-Income Food-Deficit Countries (LIFDCs) is also expected to rise by 2.2 percent this year, curbing import needs, according to FAO's new estimates.

Sierra Leone: Mitigating health risks in the wake of disaster

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Source: World Health Organization
Country: Sierra Leone

FREETOWN, September 21 2017 --- On the morning of 14th August 2017, people in Sierra Leone awoke to tragic news. Following torrential rains, landslides had devastated communities in and around the country’s capital, Freetown. The landslide started in the Regent area, high on the slopes in the eastern part of the city, but flash floods, mudslides and boulders then cascaded down the mountainside, eviscerating everything in their way. It was a tragedy of immense proportions. Overall, 502 bodies, and 139 body parts have since been extricated from the rubble, while about 500 people remain unaccounted for. Close to 6,000 people were displaced and many survivors are currently living in camps and temporary shelters, where over-crowding remains a concern.

The health sector responds

With support from partners like WHO and UK Aid, the National Emergency Operations Centre at Sierra Leone’s Ministry of Health and Sanitation was immediately activated. Hospitals were mobilized to provide urgent trauma care and teams were assembled to safely bury the dead. Clinicians as well as mobile clinics were deployed to support essential healthcare provision within the affected areas, while mental health nurses walked camp-to-camp, door-to-door, providing vital psychosocial support.

Infection Prevention and Control (IPC) was a further concern, with burial and search and rescue teams trawling through floodwaters to retrieve survivors and bodies. Trainings were quickly provided to support the correct use of protective gear, safe burials and decontamination of the mortuary at Connaught Hospital. Together with the Ministry, WHO also supported psychosocial care and training for staff and volunteers who had been working on the frontline of the response.

Preventing outbreaks of infectious diseases

Beyond emergency care, however, it was essential to take action to mitigate risks of outbreaks of infectious diseases. Assessments done in the days following the disaster showed significant damage to water and sanitation systems. This increased risks of diarrhoeal diseases in affected areas, while malaria remained an ongoing threat. To this end, the Ministry of Health and partners continue to monitor trends of particular diseases and to conduct enhanced surveillance in affected communities.

“Cholera was a particular concern, given that the country has experienced severe outbreaks in the past,” says Robert Musoke, Emergency Preparedness Lead at WHO Sierra Leone. “It was critical to ensure Sierra Leone was not only actively preventing but also preparing for any potential outbreak, and doing everything possible to protect vulnerable and displaced communities from such health risks.”

Accordingly, hands-on support and refresher trainings were quickly provided to hundreds of healthcare workers so that they could know how to detect, report and treat cholera and other outbreak-prone diseases, alongside procurement and distributions of additional diagnostic and treatment supplies. Using existing platforms, communities and camp residents were also engaged on disease prevention, including handwashing, food hygiene, and the need to treat all water before consumption.

Meanwhile oral cholera vaccines (OCV) were quickly deployed to the affected areas, with support from Gavi, the Vaccines Alliance WHO, UNICEF, the UK Government, MSF and hundreds of health workers and volunteers. After a successful application to the International Coordinating Group, the vaccines were received in country and campaign implementation began all within three weeks, aiming to reach 500,000 people across 25 high risks communities in the Western Area Urban and Western Area Rural districts to offer valuable additional protection against the disease.

Sustaining emergency preparedness for greater health security

While the country looks towards recovery, the tragedy reiterated the clear and profound need to sustain strong capacity for disaster risk reduction.

“The health sector response to the floods and landslide has been strong, quick and collaborative but when it comes to emergency preparedness, we must always push to do more,” adds Musoke. “Disasters often strike with little warning but some can be prevented. Efforts to mitigate the effects of environmental degradation, waste disposal practices, planning of housing and prediction of weather patterns require strengthening. All the various tiers of the health system, from communities right up to national and district coordination structures, must also be ready to work together to mitigate and respond to emergencies when they occur.”

Through its new Health Emergencies programme, WHO’s response to the floods and landslides event has been supported by the UK Government (UK Aid), Gavi, CDC, the International Federation of the Red Cross and other health partners. The Organization has provided support in a wide range of areas from case management to IPC, community engagement, mental health, surveillance, laboratory capacity strengthening and more.

For Additional Information or to Request Interviews, Please contact: KEENAN, Laurakeenanl@who.int


World: Une production alimentaire mondiale en hausse malgré les conflits et les chocs climatiques qui compromettent la sécurité alimentaire

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Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Country: Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Haiti, Iraq, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Swaziland, Syrian Arab Republic, Uganda, World, Yemen, Zimbabwe

Le rapport de la FAO souligne la hausse des récoltes dans les pays aux plus faibles revenus et plus importants déficits vivriers

21 septembre 2017, Rome - Selon la dernière édition du rapport de la FAO sur les Perspectives de récolte et la situation alimentaire, des récoltes importantes en Amérique latine et de meilleures conditions agricoles en Afrique australe sont sur le point d'avoir un effet positif sur l'approvisionnement alimentaire mondial, mais les conflits civils en cours et les chocs climatiques compromettent les efforts visant à réduire les souffrances liées à la faim.

Les ouragans survenus dans les Caraïbes et les inondations en Afrique de l'Ouest auront vraisemblablement pour conséquence d'entraver la production des fermes locales, cependant les tendances pour la production alimentaire sont plutôt positives, grâce notamment à des prévisions de productions céréalières record dans plusieurs pays.

Selon le rapport trimestriel, près de 37 pays, dont 28 en Afrique, ont besoin d'une aide alimentaire externe.

Les pays - l'Afghanistan, le Burkina Faso, le Burundi, le Cameroun, la République centrafricaine, le Tchad, le Congo, la République populaire démocratique de Corée, la République démocratique du Congo, Djibouti, l'Erythrée, l'Ethiopie, la Guinée, Haïti, l'Irak, le Kenya, le Lesotho, le Libéria, la Libye, Madagascar, le Malawi, le Mali, la Mauritanie, le Mozambique, la Birmanie, le Niger, le Nigéria, le Pakistan, la Sierra Leone, la Somalie, le Soudan du Sud, le Soudan, le Swaziland, la Syrie, l'Ouganda, le Yémen et le Zimbabwe - restent inchangés depuis juin.

Les conflits continuent d'avoir un impact sévère sur l'agriculture et la sécurité alimentaire en République centrafricaine, en République démocratique du Congo, en Irak, dans le Nord du Nigéria, en Somalie, au Soudan du Sud, en Syrie et au Yémen, avec souvent d'autres répercussions - en raison des déplacements de population et de l'insécurité civile en hausse - ailleurs. En 2017, les chocs climatiques, notamment les sécheresses, ont amplifié les impacts dans certains pays, comme en Somalie et dans le Sud de l'Ethiopie.

Rebondir après El Niño

La production céréalière mondiale devrait atteindre un niveau record en 2017, avec 2 611 millions de tonnes. Des gains majeurs sont également attendus en Argentine et au Brésil, tandis qu'une hausse de la production mondialeest attendue en Afrique et devrait être supérieure à 10 pour cent. Cette hausse s'explique par l'augmentation des récoltes de maïs en Afrique australe, où les agriculteurs ont été durement touchés l'année dernière par le phénomène climatique El Niño, ainsi qu'une augmentation de la production de blé dans les pays nord-africains.

Selon les nouvelles estimations de la FAO, la production céréalière mondiale dans les pays à faibles revenus et à déficit vivrier (PFRDV) devrait également augmenter de 2,2 pour cent cette année, contribuant ainsi à réduire les besoins en importations.

World: Los conflictos y los impactos climáticos lastran la seguridad alimentaria a pesar de la creciente producción mundial de alimentos

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Source: Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
Country: Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Congo, Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Guinea, Haiti, Iraq, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Libya, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Swaziland, Syrian Arab Republic, Uganda, World, Yemen, Zimbabwe

El informe de la FAO indica un repunte de las cosechas en la mayoría de los países de bajos ingresos con déficit de alimentos

21 de septiembre de 2017, Roma - Las abundantes cosechas en América Latina y la recuperación de la producción agrícola en África austral van camino de mejorar la situación mundial de suministro de alimentos, pero los persistentes conflictos civiles y los impactos climáticos dificultan el avance hacia la reducción del hambre, según advierte una nueva edición del informe de la FAO Perspectivas de cosechas y situación alimentaria.

Los huracanes en el Caribe y las inundaciones en África occidental pueden mermar los rendimientos agrícolas a nivel local, pero las tendencias generales de la producción alimentaria son positivas, impulsadas por las expectativas de una producción récord de cereales en varios países.

Alrededor de 37 países -28 de ellos situados en África- requieren ayuda alimentaria externa, según el informe trimestral de la FAO. Son los mismos que aparecen en la edición anterior del mes de junio: Afganistán, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Camerún, Chad, Djibouti, Eritrea, Etiopía, Guinea, Haití, Iraq, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, República Popular Democrática de Corea, Malawi, Mali, Mauritania, Mozambique, Myanmar, Níger, Nigeria, Pakistán, Sierra Leona, Somalia, Sudán del Sur, Sudán, Swazilandia, Siria, Uganda, Yemen y Zimbabwe.

Los conflictos continúan afectando profundamente a la agricultura y la seguridad alimentaria en la República Centroafricana, la República Democrática del Congo, Iraq, el norte de Nigeria, Somalia, Sudán del Sur, Siria y Yemen, y con frecuencia conllevan otras consecuencias, debido a los desplazamientos de población y la mayor inseguridad civil. Los eventos meteorológicos extremos en 2017, incluidas las sequías, también han agravado su impacto en algunos países, en especial en Somalia y el sur de Etiopía.

Recuperación tras El Niño

Se prevé que la producción mundial de cereales alcance un nivel récord en 2017, con cerca de 2 611 millones de toneladas. Si bien ello obedece a los notables avances en Argentina y Brasil, también cabe destacar el aumento previsto este año de más del 10 por ciento en la producción total en África, liderado por mayores cosechas de maíz en el sur de África, donde los agricultores fueron duramente golpeados el pasado año por el fenómeno climático El Niño- y por el incremento de la producción de trigo en los países de África del norte.

Sierra Leone: Sierra Leone: Flood and landslide Situation Report No. 9, 14 September 2017

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Source: UN Children's Fund
Country: Sierra Leone

Highlights

UNICEF and partners continue their efforts to support the recovery of victims in this second phase of the response.

The registration of affected households for the operationalization of the humanitarian cash transfer programme funded by UK Aid, is now underway in collaboration with various partners (the National Commission for Social Action, the Anti-Corruption Commission of Sierra Leone, Restless Development, Airtel, the World Food Programme (WFP), the Red Cross, as well as religious leaders). As of 14 September, 776 households have been enrolled in the humanitarian cash transfer programme.

In the meantime, UNICEF is continuing to support the affected communities (at the temporary displacement centres in Regent, Kaningo and Pentagon and those that have been relocated to the Old Skool and Juba barracks shelters) through supply of WASH services, as well as supporting affected children, including provision of psychosocial support, identification of child protection concern and referral to support. In addition, UNICEF is supporting the Ministry of Education, Science and Technology (MEST) to setup temporary learning spaces (TLS) at the shelters to ensure that affected children continue their learning.

Cameroon: USAID Administrator Green Announces PMI Launch and Expansion in West and Central Africa

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Source: US Agency for International Development
Country: Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Niger, Sierra Leone

Today, United States Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Mark Green announced that the U.S. President's Malaria Initiative (PMI), led by USAID and implemented together with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), will launch new country programs in Cameroon, Cote d'Ivoire, Niger, and Sierra Leone, and expand its existing program in Burkina Faso.

With the addition of five new focus countries in West and Central Africa, PMI will have programs in 24 countries in sub-Saharan Africa, where malaria remains a significant public health problem. This is in addition to PMI's two bilateral programs and targeted support in the Greater Mekong Subregion in Asia, aimed at combating antimalarial drug resistance.PMI's country expansion will benefit almost 90 million additional people at risk of malaria. The U.S. Government will now contribute to ensuring the availability of effective malaria prevention and control interventions to approximately 332 million people at risk across the west-to-central African corridor from Senegal to Cameroon. While launching and expanding PMI, the U.S. Government remains committed to partnering with existing PMI focus countries to accelerate progress in malaria control and continue the momentum towards elimination.

Together with partner countries, under national malaria control program leadership, and in collaboration with malaria stakeholders, PMI scales up a comprehensive, integrated package of life-saving interventions in communities. This includes both prevention (insecticide-treated mosquito nets, intermittent preventive treatment of pregnant women, seasonal malaria chemoprevention, and indoor residual spraying) and treatment interventions (malaria diagnosis and treatment with artemisinin-based combination therapies). PMI support builds overall country capacity and strengthens health systems while improving malaria prevention and treatment services. PMI support includes strengthening supply chain logistics, malaria case surveillance, and monitoring and evaluation of impact.

More than 480 million people at risk of malaria have benefitted from PMI programs. In Fiscal Year 2016, PMI protected over 16 million people by spraying homes, distributed more than 42 million long-lasting insecticide-treated bed nets, and provided 57 million treatments of life-saving drugs and 63 million rapid diagnostic tests.

Office of Press Relations
Telephone: +1.202.712.4320 | Email: press@usaid.gov

World: Global Weather Hazards Summary: September 22 - 28, 2017

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Source: Famine Early Warning System Network
Country: Benin, Burkina Faso, Costa Rica, Côte d'Ivoire, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Ethiopia, Guatemala, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Haiti, Honduras, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Mali, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Tajikistan, Togo, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, World

River flooding and above-average rainfall continue in Nigeria and Sudan

Africa Weather Hazards

  1. Since early August, above-average seasonal rainfall caused flooding in some areas. With well above-average moisture conditions, additional rain in September may trigger flooding in parts of Senegal,
    The Gambia, Guinea-Bissau, Guinea, and Sierra Leone.

  2. Recent heavy rains have caused the Benue River in Nigeria to overflow its banks. Reports indicate that 100,000 people may have been displaced by flooding. Continued rainfall will keep rivers high.

  3. Heavy rainfall triggered flooding in Sudan during the last week. Both the Blue and White Nile rivers are effected, and a dam has reportedly broken along the White Nile.
    Although rainfall is expected to decrease throughout the region in early September, saturated ground conditions sustain the risk for additional flooding.

  4. Heavy rains along the Kenyan coast over the last 24 hours have caused flash flooding. Rainfall is expected to continue through early next week.

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