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Mali: UNOWAS Magazine N6 - June 2018

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Source: UN Office for West Africa and the Sahel
Country: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo

This sixth issue of UNOWAS Magazine is a special edition devoted to the regional colloquium on “Challenges and prospects of political reforms in West Africa in 2015-2017,” which was organized by UNOWAS in Abidjan, Cote d’Ivoire, from 26 to 27 March 2018.

Political reforms is an important theme, which concerns all sub-regional countries. The ongoing political reforms in the region made it pertinent for UNOWAS to organize a platform, where various experts could share their analyses and proposals with an aim to assist the governments and all political actors involved in successfully implementing their respective political reform processes.

The objectives of the two-day colloquium were to: identify and analyze the main reasons which led many West African countries to initiate political reforms from 2015 to 2017; highlight mechanisms and processes, which led to the success or failure of political reforms; consider the background history of and changes in the relevant provisions, the main political aspects, similarities and differences between the various countries concerned; and identifying the scope, challenges, and prospects of political reforms in the sub-region.

To achieve its objectives, the Abidjan colloquium was structured around three opening papers and eighteen thematic papers divided into six sections. Opening papers addressed the following themes: “Generation and types of political reforms in West Africa”, “Political reforms and governance”, and “ECOWAS instruments for building peace and promoting democracy and good governance in West Africa.” As for thematic conferences, they addressed two key themes - Theme 1: “Context, mechanisms, and causes of political reforms» and Theme 2: “Content, implementation, and impacts of political reforms”.

After reviewing the reform processes initiated in West Africa in 2015-2017, recommendations were made for more legitimate and more relevant future political reforms in the sub-region. The recommendations included the establishment of a sub-regional platform on political reforms and good governance.

The sub-regional colloquium on «Challenges and prospects of political reforms in West Africa in 2015-2017” was attended by 72 participants, including: representatives of 15 out of 16 West African countries (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cote d’Ivoire, The Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, and Togo); representatives of regional and international organizations (UNOWAS, ECOWAS, IDEA, OSIWA, UNOCA, UNDP); and representatives of civil society organizations, women’s and young people’s groups (Réseau Ouest Africain des jeunes Femmes Leaders-ROAJELF, Fondation Cléopatre d’Afrique, Je m’engage, Muslim Student’s Society of Nigeria).

We are hoping that this special edition will make you “relive the colloquium and its debates” and allow you to understand the ongoing political reform processes, including how best to improve governance in the sub-region.


Mali: West Africa Price Bulletin, June 2018

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Source: Famine Early Warning System Network
Country: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo

The Famine Early Warning Systems Network (FEWS NET) monitors trends in staple food prices in countries vulnerable to food insecurity. For each FEWS NET country and region, the Price Bulletin provides a set of charts showing monthly prices in the current marketing year in selected urban centers and allowing users to compare current trends with both five-year average prices, indicative of seasonal trends, and prices in the previous year.

West Africa can be divided into three agro-ecological zones or three different trade basins (West Basin, Central Basin and East Basin). Both important for understanding market behavior and dynamics.

The three major agro-ecological zones are the Sahelian, the Sudanese and the Coastal zones where production and consumption can be easily classified. (1) In the Sahelian zone, millet is the principal cereal cultivated and consumed particularly in rural areas and increasingly, when accessible, in urban areas. Exceptions include Cape Verde where maize and rice are most important, Mauritania where sorghum and maize are staples, and Senegal with rice. The principal substitutes in the Sahel are sorghum, rice, and cassava flour (Gari), the latter two in times of shortage. (2) In the Sudanese zone (southern Chad, central Nigeria, Benin, Ghana, Togo, Côte d'Ivoire, southern Burkina Faso, Mali, Senegal, Guinea Bissau, Serra Leone, Liberia) maize and sorghum constitute the principal cereals consumed by the majority of the population. They are followed by rice and tubers, particularly cassava and yam. (3) In the Coastal zone, with two rainy seasons, yam and maize constitute the most important food products. They are supplemented by cowpea, which is a significant source of protein.

The three trade basins are known as the West, Central, and East basins. In addition to the north to south movement of particular commodities, certain cereals flow horizontally. (1) The West basin refers to Mauritania, Senegal, western Mali, Sierra Leone, Guinea, Liberia, and The Gambia where rice is most heavily traded. (2) The Central basin consists of Côte d'Ivoire, central and eastern Mali, Burkina Faso, Ghana, and Togo where maize is commonly traded. (3) The East basin refers to Niger, Nigeria, Chad, and Benin where millet is traded most frequently. These three trade basins are shown on the map above.

Mali: Afrique de l’Ouest Bulletin Mensuel des Prix, juin 2018

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Source: Famine Early Warning System Network
Country: Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo

Le Réseau de systèmes d’alerte précoce contre la famine (FEWS NET) surveille les tendances des prix des aliments de base dans les pays vulnérables à l'insécurité alimentaire. Pour chaque pays et chaque région couvert par FEWS NET, le Bulletin des prix fournit un ensemble de graphiques indiquant les prix mensuels de l’année commerciale en cours pour certains centres urbains, et permettant à l’utilisateur de comparer les tendances actuelles à la fois aux moyennes quinquennales, qui indiquent les tendances saisonnières, et aux prix de l'année précédente.

L'Afrique de l’Ouest peut être divisée en trois zones agro-écologiques ou en trois bassins commerciaux (bassins de l’ouest, bassin du centre, bassin de l’est). Les deux sont importants pour l'interprétation du comportement et de la dynamique du marché.

Les trois principales zones agro-écologiques incluent la zone Sahélienne, la zone Soudanaise et la zone Côtière où la production et la consommation peuvent être facilement classifiées. (1) Dans la zone Sahélienne, le mil constitue le principal produit alimentaire cultivé et consommé en particulier dans les zones rurales et de plus en plus par certaines populations qui y ont accès en milieux urbains. Des exceptions sont faites pour le Cap Vert où le maïs et le riz sont les produits les plus importants, la Mauritanie où le blé et le sorgho et le Sénégal où le riz constituent des aliments de base. Les principaux produits de substitution dans le Sahel sont le sorgho, le riz, et la farine de manioc (Gari), avec les deux derniers en période de crise. (2) Dans la zone Soudanienne (le sud du Tchad, le centre du Nigéria, du Bénin, du Ghana, du Togo, de la Côte d'Ivoire, le sud du Burkina Faso, du Mali, du Sénégal, la Guinée Bissau, la Serra Leone, le Libéria) le maïs et le sorgho constituent les principales céréales consommées par la majorité de la population. Suivent après le riz et les tubercules particulièrement le manioc et l’igname. (3) Dans la zone côtière, avec deux saisons de pluie, l’igname et le maïs constituent les principaux produits alimentaires. Ils sont complétés par le niébé, qui est une source très significative de protéines.

Les trois bassins commerciaux sont simplement connus sous les noms de bassin Ouest, Centre, et Est. En plus du mouvement du sud vers le nord des produits, les flux de certaines céréales se font aussi horizontalement. (1) Le bassin Ouest comprend la Mauritanie, le Sénégal, l’ouest du Mali, la Sierra Leone, la Guinée, le Libéria, et la Gambie où le riz est le plus commercialisé. (2) Le bassin central se compose de la Côte d'Ivoire, le centre et l’est du Mali, le Burkina Faso, le Ghana, et le Togo où le maïs est généralement commercialisé. (3) Le bassin Est se rapporte au Niger, Nigéria, Tchad, et Bénin où le millet est le plus fréquemment commercialisé. Ces trois bassins commerciaux sont distingués sur la carte ci-dessus.

World: WHO AFRO Outbreaks and Other Emergencies, Week 26: 23 - 29 June 2018 (Data as reported by 17:00; 29 June 2018)

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Source: World Health Organization
Country: Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Sao Tome and Principe, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, South Africa, South Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, World, Zambia, Zimbabwe

This Weekly Bulletin focuses on selected acute public health emergencies occurring in the WHO African Region. The WHO Health Emergencies Programme is currently monitoring 57 events in the region. This week’s edition covers key ongoing events, including:

  • Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
  • Rift Valley fever in Kenya
  • Cholera in Angola
  • Cholera in Tanzania
  • Humanitarian crisis in Democratic Republic of the Congo.

  • 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 issues and challenges include:

  • The Ministry of Health and WHO continue to closely monitor the outbreak of Ebola virus disease (EVD) in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. On 27 June 2018, all the people who were exposed to the last confirmed EVD case-patient completed their mandatory 21-day follow up without developing symptoms. This is an important milestone.

The countdown to the end of the EVD outbreak, therefore, began on 12 June 2018 when the last confirmed case-patient was discharged from the Ebola treatment centre (ETU) in Bikoro. The response is now focused on intensive surveillance, including active case finding and investigation of suspected cases and alerts. In spite of this progress, there is a need to continue with intense response until the outbreak is finally controlled.

  • The complex humanitarian crisis in the Democratic Republic of the Congo remains dire. There are many ongoing health emergencies in the country, with serious public health and socioeconomic implications.

Notably, in week 24 alone, there were 634 cholera cases with 34 deaths and 536 cases of measles.

While the global attention is focused on containing the EVD outbreak, we should not lose sight of the many and much deeper public health issues in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Proportionate resources need to be provided to these health emergencies on account of their consequences on the people of the Democratic Republic of the Congo and humanity.

Sierra Leone: A Force for Good? Restrictions on peaceful assembly and impunity for excessive use of force by the Sierra Leone police

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Source: Amnesty International
Country: Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone: New government must prioritize ending police crackdowns on peaceful protesters

The new government of Sierra Leone must start fulfilling its promises to improve the human rights situation in the country by lifting restrictions on peaceful demonstrations and ending entrenched impunity for police killings of protesters, Amnesty International said in a new report published today.

A Force for Good? Restrictions on peaceful assembly and impunity for excessive use of force by the Sierra Leone police documents how, over the past decade, peaceful anti-government protests have repeatedly been refused permission or violently dispersed with unlawful killings by police going unpunished.

“The authorities must ensure and promote the right of individuals to peacefully assemble without fear for their safety. Sierra Leone’s new government has a key opportunity to implement reforms that would help the police manage demonstrations effectively and safely, restore the public’s trust in the security forces and live up to the police’s own motto – A Force for Good,” said Solomon Sogbandi, Director of Amnesty International Sierra Leone.

“For 10 years, police in Sierra Leone have literally been getting away with murder as peaceful protesters and bystanders have lost their lives, or been seriously injured, with no one held to account. If the new authorities are as serious as they say about upholding human rights, they should start by repealing repressive laws restricting peaceful assembly and addressing entrenched impunity for police abuses.”

Since coming to power in April 2018, President Maada Bio has made commitments to reform the security sector and protect human rights in a country where impunity for police abuses is deeply entrenched.

Over the past 10 years, police have frequently used excessive force to disperse spontaneous protests, with at least nine protesters killed and more than 80 injured. Amnesty International’s report also found that more than 80 protesters had their properties looted or were arbitrarily arrested.

No police officer has been held criminally responsible for any case documented by Amnesty International, despite recommendations made by two Commissions of Inquiry and the Independent Police Complaints Board. In most cases, police officers accused of wrongdoing have merely been transferred to a different department. In one case, Amnesty International found that the police officer suspected of giving the command to shoot had been promoted. In another case, a police officer suspected of being responsible avoided disciplinary action despite being recommended for dismissal in a 2009 Commission of Inquiry.

Repressive laws restricting peaceful assembly have also been used to prosecute protesters, 39 of whom were on trial for their involvement in assemblies in 2015 and 2016. However, on 20 June this year, a court acquitted 16 of those arrested in 2015 after more than 50 court appearances.

Many of the protesters targeted have been young. In March 2017, a young boy was shot dead and two students injured when police opened fire on students protesting the closure of their university in the southern province of Bo. One of the students still has a bullet in his heart but cannot access specialist medical treatment which is only available outside Sierra Leone.

In August 2016, two schoolboys were shot dead and four young men injured when police opened fire on a protest against the removal of a planned youth village.

“I felt that they had killed me that day,” the mother of one of the boys killed told Amnesty International. One of the young men was shot in the back and can no longer work because of his injuries. However, there are no clear guidelines for awarding compensation to victims or their families.

A student who was shot and injured during a student protest in Bo on 23 March 2017 told Amnesty International:

“Seeking justice in this country is like looking for a needle in a haystack, especially when it is against the government.”

Amnesty International is calling on the new Sierra Leonean government to overhaul a repressive legal framework that is out of step with the country’s obligations under international human rights law. The Sierra Leone People’s Party has claimed for years whilst in opposition that it was a victim of repressive laws and policing and now has a chance to effect change whilst in government.

The authorities must ensure that victims and their families enjoy the right to an effective remedy, including adequate compensation, and guarantee of non-repetition. The authorities should set up a mechanism for compensating victims of police abuses and address the chronic lack of funds, training and hierarchical accountability within the police force.

The organization is also calling for the Independent Police Complaints Board, set up in 2015 as an external body to oversee the police, to obtain more resources and enforcement powers.

“The Sierra Leone government needs to send a strong signal that police abuses will not be tolerated anymore,” said Sabrina Mahtani, Amnesty International’s West Africa researcher.

“President Bio has made many positive statements about strengthening human rights, but any reform of the criminal justice system must go together with a strong commitment to achieve accountability and redress for past abuses.”

Background

The report builds upon research Amnesty International has conducted into the human rights situation in Sierra Leone for over a decade.

For this report, the organization interviewed 105 people including victims, eyewitnesses, lawyers, civil society activists, protesters and families whose loved ones where killed during protests between June 2017 and May 2018. Amnesty International also interviewed several police officers across the country, including the former and current Inspector General of Police.

Despite repeated attempts, the organization was unable to meet with the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP). It wrote to the DPP in November 2017 and again in April 2018 requesting information but has not received a response as at the time of the publication of this report. Amnesty International also wrote to the Inspector General of Police in April 2018 requesting further information and received a reply in May 2018 that further information would be sent. However, the organization is yet to receive any further information.

World: Special Report: Destination Europe; Desperation

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Source: IRIN
Country: France, Gambia, Guinea, Libya, Niger, Sierra Leone, World

Nearly dying in the Sahara doesn’t deter some migrants from trying again and again to reach Europe

As the EU sets new policies and makes deals with African nations to deter hundreds of thousands of migrants from seeking new lives on the continent, what does it mean for sub-Saharan Africans following dreams northwards and the countries they transit through? From returnees in Sierra Leone and refugees resettled in France to smugglers in Niger and migrants in detention centres in Libya, IRIN explores their choices and challenges in this multi-part special report, Destination Europe.

Read more on IRIN

World: New Walled Order: How barriers to basic services turn migration into a humanitarian crisis

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Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies
Country: Afghanistan, Algeria, Bangladesh, Cameroon, Côte d'Ivoire, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Greece, Guinea, Iraq, Italy, Mali, Morocco, Nigeria, Pakistan, Sierra Leone, Somalia, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Tunisia, Turkey, World

Our Message

While there is room for disagreement about migration policy, the humanitarian imperative means that we must never needlessly sacrifice the survival and dignity of any vulnerable people, including migrants.

Around the world, migrants, especially irregular migrants, increasingly face barriers to accessing essential services that are indispensable to their survival and basic dignity, such as health care, shelter, food and legal assistance. There are a range of factors that prevent this access, including outright exclusions but also more indirect factors, such as fears of arrest, detention and deportation, prohibitively high service costs, and language issues.

Some claim that limiting access to essential services are justified by an interest in removing the “pull factor” for migration or ensuring law and order. Some states have sought to discourage, and even criminalize humanitarian service provision. Such restrictions violate migrants’ human rights. Migration can be managed more effectively when we do not compromise the safety and dignity of vulnerable people. States and humanitarian actors should be working together to ensure access to essential services for all vulnerable migrants.

The Global Compact on Migration is an opportunity to ensure that all people migrating, regardless of their status, have access to the humanitarian assistance they need. States can adopt a range of measures to achieve this, including building “firewalls” between immigration enforcement and public services.

Executive Summary

Migrants often have considerable challenges in accessing the assistance they need, in particular those deemed “irregular”. In some circumstances, they are not eligible for state-provided services that can be of life-or-death importance (such as emergency medical care). This can be due to laws that restrict access based on immigration status, where services are unaffordable and migrants are not eligible for state subsidies provided to citizens, or where policies in place require fulfilling impossible pre-requisite criteria for services, such as providing a national ID card or other form of identification which migrants may have trouble obtaining.

There are also many informal barriers preventing migrants from accessing the services they need. This can include a lack of information about their rights and entitlements, as well as language and costs barriers. Irregular migrants may fear approaching service providers to access assistance or report abuse due to the possibility of arrest or deportation. Access to assistance is further limited when there are restrictions placed on the provision of humanitarian assistance by humanitarian actors, whereby humanitarian activities benefitting irregular migrants are discouraged and in some circumstances even criminalized.

States laws, policies and practices can have the effect either of creating or reducing the barriers preventing migrants from accessing assistance. States must ensure that lack of legal status does not become a barrier to the basic protection of life and dignity. The process to develop a Global Compact on Safe, Orderly and Regular Migration (the Migration Compact) offers a unique opportunity for states to agree together to meet the basic humanitarian needs of all migrants, irrespective of status. The following recommendations are therefore very relevant to the deliberations of the Migration Compact, but they are primarily offered with domestic application in mind.

States have a sovereign right to control their borders, subject to their obligations under international law. However, minimum standards in terms of meeting basic humanitarian needs must nonetheless be upheld to ensure that legal status does not become a barrier to the basic protection of life and dignity. Any work towards a Migration Compact needs to further this goal of meeting the basic humanitarian needs of all migrants and not lower the bar on the protection and assistance owed to and provided to migrants in vulnerable situations.

World: Special feature: Humanitarian Exchange Magazine No. 72 - Mental health and psychosocial support in humanitarian crises

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Source: ODI - Humanitarian Practice Network
Country: Afghanistan, Central African Republic, Haiti, Iraq, Lebanon, Nepal, occupied Palestinian territory, Sierra Leone, Syrian Arab Republic, World

by M. Claire Greene, Samuel L. Likindikoki, Jessie K. K. Mbwambo and Wietse A. Tol July 2018

If you are consumed by worries, can you focus on your work? If you are overpowered by anger because of what they did to you, can you manage the challenges of life in a refugee camp? If you are too sad to get out of bed in the morning, do you have the energy to breastfeed? If you do not sleep because of nightmares, can you be an attentive caregiver? Such questions challenge us to look beyond the material and physical needs in humanitarian settings, and raise the importance of the mental health and psychosocial wellbeing of people affected by humanitarian emergencies. Research has shown that mental health and psychosocial wellbeing are important factors in successful programming in economic development and livelihoods, child development and education, protection and human rights, nutrition and, ultimately, individual and collective recovery from conflict and disaster. With regard to health, this can be summed up under the slogan ‘no health without mental health’.+ In this paper we describe opportunities for integrating mental health and psychosocial programming into humanitarian response, and discuss strategies for overcoming the challenges associated with introducing multi-sectoral interventions into existing systems.

Read the full issue


World: Market Support Interventions in Humanitarian Contexts – a Tip Sheet

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Source: US Agency for International Development, Cash Learning Partnership
Country: Nepal, occupied Palestinian territory, Philippines, Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, World

PURPOSE

Define what market support programming in humanitarian contexts is and what it can look like in practice.

Enable humanitarian practitioners to consider market support interventions from the outset by highlighting the potential benefits of market support programming alongside or independently of other programme activities.

INTENDED AUDIENCE

Technical specialists across sectors Project/programme managers Donors Business development specialists Proposal writers

SCOPE OF THE TIP SHEET

Market support focusing on supply/availability – providing direct support to market actors, or other entities that make up a market system, to restore or build sufficient supply of goods and services to cater for the basic needs of the catchment population.

Market support focusing on demand/access – providing temporary support to market actors, or other entities in a market system, so that users can adequately access goods, services or incomes needed to meet needs in a crisis.

WHERE THE TIPS CAME FROM

Primary and secondary data collation (27 documents and interviews with 14 humanitarian practitioners)
Based on existing standards including the Minimum Economic Recovery Standards (MERS), Minimum Standards for Market Analysis (MISMA) and CaLP’s Cash Transfer Programming (CTP) Programme Quality Toolbox N.B. Market support is an emerging approach, gaps in practice, evidence and tips still exist and they have been highlighted throughout. This tip sheet will be periodically updated as knowledge, skills and practice in the area of market support progress. The most comprehensive review of evidence around market support intervention can be found here.

World: Global Overview | 2017 - Based on incidents identified by Insecurity Insight using the Security in Numbers Database (SiND)

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Source: Insecurity Insight
Country: Bangladesh, Central African Republic, China, China - Hong Kong (Special Administrative Region), Colombia, Ethiopia, Greece, Haiti, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Israel, Lebanon, Mexico, Moldova, Myanmar, Nicaragua, Nigeria, occupied Palestinian territory, Poland, Sierra Leone, South Africa, South Sudan, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, Turkey, World, Yemen, Zimbabwe

This overview document presents security incidents that affected aid delivery in 2017. The report is based on incidents identified by Insecurity Insight's monitoring of open sources and reported by Aid in Danger partner agencies using the Security in Numbers Database (SiND) in 2017. It presents analysis of 2,152 NGO-related security incidents for which details were shared or made public. The total number of reported incidents below reflects the willingness of agencies to share information. It is neither a complete count, nor representative.

Sierra Leone: DFID Sierra Leone Profile: July 2018

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Source: Department for International Development
Country: Sierra Leone, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland

The Department for International Development (DFID) leads the UK’s global efforts to end extreme poverty, deliver the Global Goals for Sustainable Development (SDGs) and tackle a wide range of global development challenges. The UK’s focus and international leadership on economic development is a vital part of Global Britain - harnessing the potential of new trade relationships, creating jobs and channelling investment to the world’s poorest countries. Throughout history, sustained, job-creating growth has played the greatest role in lifting huge numbers of people out of grinding poverty. This is what developing countries want and is what the international system needs to help deliver. Whilst there is an urgent need for traditional aid in many parts of the world, ultimately economic development is how we will achieve the Global Goals and help countries move beyond the need for aid.

Contribution to the Global Goals and other government commitments (achieved as at March 2018)

  • 463 thousand children supported to gain a decent education

  • 590 thousand people with sustainable access to clean water and/or sanitation

  • 565 thousand children under 5, women and adolescent girls reached through nutrition related interventions

  • 128 thousand additional women and girls using modern methods of family planning

Headline deliverables

  • Tackling global health threats: The UK led the international response when the Ebola outbreak overwhelmed Sierra Leone. By deploying 2,000 military personnel, NHS staff and civil servants we helped end the epidemic, saved thousands of lives in Sierra Leone, and stopped Ebola from spreading to the UK. With our help, Sierra Leone is now ready to contain future outbreaks before they grow into epidemics, protecting people in the UK as well as in Sierra Leone. That includes training community health workers so they can spot potential new cases, helping set up rapid response teams across the country, and working with Public Health England to establish three laboratories.

  • Basic services: Our assistance helps poor people access vital services: health, education and water. DFID support is strengthening the health system to reduce the very high number of women and young children who die each year. We are training midwives, providing lifesaving medicines, and upgrading health facilities with better water, sanitation and electricity. We have built classrooms and are helping teachers to deliver a decent education with new lesson plans. We are expanding access to clean water and sanitation to around 700,000 people for whom it is not currently within reach.

  • Economic development: We are helping businesses to create more jobs, including by investing in electricity and roads. Economic growth will enable the government to raise more of its own tax, so Sierra Leone can fund more of its own development, reducing its reliance on UK aid.

Kenya: Kenya: Kakuma New Arrival Registration Trends 2018 (as of 1 June 2018)

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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, Pakistan, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Yemen, Zimbabwe

Kenya: Kenya: Kakuma New Arrival Registration Trends 2018 (as of 1 July 2018)

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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, Pakistan, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, Yemen, Zimbabwe

World: The Role of Trade Laws and Policies on Disaster Resilience, Disaster Response and Disaster Recovery

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Source: International Federation of Red Cross And Red Crescent Societies
Country: Bangladesh, Guinea, Indonesia, Liberia, Myanmar, Philippines, Sierra Leone, World

By Isabelle Granger

“How can policy and trade help disasters? What can the World Trade Organization do to support disasters?”

These were the first questions posed by Roberto Azevêdo, Director General of the World Trade Organization, in his opening remarks at the WTO Natural Disaster and Trade Symposium that took place on 26 April 2018, as WTO is launching a research project to better understand the nexus between disaster relief and commercial trade, in collaboration with Australia, IFRC, and ISDR, among other partners.

“The Trade Facilitation Agreement can provide an enabling environment for members to respond to future crisis” commented DG Azevêdo.

WTO member states have an important — and as yet untapped — opportunity to use existing global trade frameworks to support timely response and recovery operations after disasters. Indeed, trade facilitation, and the creative use of the WTO Trade Facilitation Agreement of 2014, could transform disaster relief operations.

“Strengthening regulation, policy and infrastructure before disasters can increase the resilience of countries, stated Ambassador Frances Lisson, Permanent Representative of Australia to the World Trade Organization. “WTO member states are encouraged to support this initiative”.

“Trade is a main driver for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals and eradicating poverty” explained Ms. Kirsi Madi, Deputy Special Representative of the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction. “The mapping [for this project] will provide the evidence to explain the impact of trade on disasters. Disasters have an impact on social, health and education expenditure, and low and medium income countries are at risk to lose most if not all of their development. Disasters undermine competitivity… when businesses leave, they may never return” she added.

Customs and entry issues are among the top challenges affecting international disaster responders. In practice, this means difficulties or delays in obtaining customs clearance or exemptions from duties, difficulties in accessing information on customs, and delays or restrictions in the entry of relief personnel. The challenges also impact regular trade processes in emergency situations, which can have significant impacts on local markets and the economy of the affected state.

There are well-documented examples, like the 500 containers of emergency relief items stuck in the Jakarta and Medan ports in 2005, a full year after the Tsunami. Perishable items rotted, medicines expired, and emergency relief items like clothes, tents, blankets and surgical equipment, which were essential at the start of the relief effort, were redundant by the time they were cleared.

Similarly, in September 2014 (with over 3,000 people already dead from Ebola and 6,000 confirmed cases), relief actors faced lengthy import and clearance procedures at Lungi airport in Sierra Leone. Some shipping containers of medical supplies waited up to two months in the port of Freetown.

Another example can be found in the response to the ongoing Rohingya crisis in Myanmar and Bangladesh, where heavy customs procedures caused delays in the delivery of relief materials for up to 30 days – and some vehicles blocked for up to 3 months.

“In these examples, the lack of capacity to access relief items is related to trade processes” stated Elhadj As Sy, Secretary General of the IFRC at the WTO Natural and Trade Symposium.

At the same time, many disaster-affected countries have found themselves deluged with well-intentioned but poorly informed “assistance” that they did not really need and which hindered the response. For example, in the Philippines after Typhoon Haiyan in 2013, containers and aircrafts filled with clothing and medications ended up staying for weeks at the airport. Medicines, were particularly difficult to handle, especially those requiring the respect of cold chain protocols during their transportation, which were extremely difficult to maintain considering the logistical challenges at the time.

In regard to the Trade Facilitation Agreement, while it does not specifically refer to disasters, the Agreement requires member states to review and upgrade their procedures for facilitating the entry of goods in general. This represents an opportunity for countries – in advance of the next disaster – to ensure that states are ready to facilitate and manage customs issues that might impact regular trade processes, based on global experience.

Disasters and health emergencies can have huge impacts on regular trade processes, as was witnessed during the West Africa Ebola outbreak. Many states shut down trade ties with the affected countries, against the strong recommendations of the WHO, African Union Executive Council and even the UN Security Council. This caused a major blow to their already struggling economies.

“Ebola killed 11,000 people in Sierra Leone. The first measures that were taken when the disease was declared… flights were cancelled, markets were closed, borders were closed, people were not allowed to trade. It had an impact on the incomes and affected people… on the nutritional status of pregnant women, babies, access to medical services, and underlying problems were exacerbated, and it increased the mortality in these countries. Access to markets were delayed and income generation was negatively affected” highlighted Elhadj As Sy, Secretary General of the IFRC, while speaking at the event.

The World Bank put the overall damage of the Ebola crisis at $2.8 billion ($600 million for Guinea, $300 million for Liberia, and $1.9 billion for Sierra Leone), and made it clear that the negative economic impact has far outlasted the appalling epidemiological and social impact of losing 11,000 people. They pointed to the fact that the shock was worsened by the large decline in the world price of iron ore and other commodities, and – specifically for Sierra Leone – by corporate governance issues in mining.

Likewise, during the 2009 influenza epidemic, trading partners around the world imposed trade and travel restrictions to Mexico, again despite advice to the contrary from the WHO.

The extremely dangerous message this sends is that being open about emerging diseases (as required by the International Health Regulations) will subject states to a disproportionate and economically damaging response, without recourse. As states must be thinking about the safety of their citizens, no one can hide behind borders hermetically from contagious disease. This issue is a collective one, and it is one where trade policy may play a role.

Likewise, export restrictions or export taxes on foodstuffs have played an inhibiting role in major food insecurity crises in recent years. While impacting mainly African countries, trade restrictions were employed by states in other parts of the world. While there were a mix of motives for the restrictions, in some cases, they began out of concern for domestic food security, surely a valid concern. Again, however, all are potentially impacted by international food prices and some way of balancing domestic and global impacts, when a humanitarian crisis is already playing out or on the horizon, should be part of our system.

These are undoubtedly complex problems that require careful thinking to resolve. This is why the IFRC is collaborating with the WTO in the research project on trade and disasters launched at the WTO Natural Disaster and Trade Symposium. The research seeks to shed light on the connections between trade and natural disasters, not just in terms of challenges but also how the relevant legal frameworks and policies can have a positive impact on the issues at hand. This will provide a basis for these two sectors to come together to address common issues of concern, and ensure that disaster affected communities can recover and get back on their feet as soon as possible.

Sierra Leone: Sierra Leone Country Impact Report

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Source: The Global Fund
Country: Sierra Leone

Sierra Leone had made hard-fought gains in public health, including improving maternal care and reducing child mortality caused by malaria, when the Ebola virus outbreak erupted in 2014. The disease, which killed nearly 4,000 people, overwhelmed the country’s health systems, interrupting prevention and treatment for HIV, tuberculosis and malaria, and increasing the number of deaths from these diseases.

Global Fund investments are supporting the country’s Health System Recovery Plan to rebuild resilient and sustainable systems for health, with a focus on training and deploying health workers, improving procurement and supply chains and implementing a more effective community approach to fight HIV, TB and malaria. Between 2016 and 2018, the Global Fund will invest US$103 million to strengthen health systems and fight the three diseases in Sierra Leone.


Nigeria: UNHCR West Africa: 2018 Funding Update (as of 3 July 2018)

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Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Country: Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d'Ivoire, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo

World: Destination Europe: Desperation

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Source: IRIN
Country: France, Gambia, Guinea, Libya, Niger, Sierra Leone, World

Nearly dying in the Sahara doesn’t deter some migrants from trying again and again to reach Europe

As the EU sets new policies and makes deals with African nations to deter hundreds of thousands of migrants from seeking new lives on the continent, what does it mean for sub-Saharan Africans following dreams northwards and the countries they transit through? From returnees in Sierra Leone and refugees resettled in France to smugglers in Niger and migrants in detention centres in Libya, IRIN explores their choices and challenges in this multi-part special report, Destination Europe.

Read more on IRIN

Sierra Leone: Regaining old glories

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Source: UN Development Programme
Country: Sierra Leone

Regaining old glories Sierra Leone rebuilds its climate services from the ashes of war using new technologies to provide early warnings for vulnerable communities

By Climate Adaptation UNDP

Back in 1929, Sierra Leone served as the headquarters of the British West African Meteorological Services. With independence, the Sierra Leone Meteorological Department was formed. It was one of the most advanced meteorological departments in West Africa, with advanced capacity in weather data collection, analysis and service provision.

There were meteorological stations all over the country. People knew what weather was coming their way, knew when to plant their crops and when to harvest, and decision makers had a long-standing meteorological record they could use to make smart long-term investments.

Then came the Civil War in 1991. Lasting for over two decades, the conflict displaced some 2 million people and cost thousands of lives. It also left Sierra Leone’s weather monitoring and forecasting infrastructure in shambles. Nearly every piece of monitoring equipment was destroyed or stolen during the war. Many of the most capable people that had worked at the Met Department lost their lives or were severely impacted by the conflict.

See the full photo-story on Medium

World: Global Weather Hazards Summary - July 13 - 19, 2018

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Source: Famine Early Warning System Network
Country: Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Chad, Costa Rica, Côte d'Ivoire, Dominican Republic, El Salvador, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, Guinea, Haiti, Honduras, Kazakhstan, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia, Mali, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Turkmenistan, Uganda, Uzbekistan, World, Yemen

Rainfall continues in the Sahel, no weather hazards reported over Africa

Africa Overview

Rainfall continues over the Sahel

Last week, many places in West and Central Africa received moderate to locally heavy rainfall. Weekly rainfall totals exceeded 75 mm in southwestern Senegal and Mali, parts of northern Guinea-Conakry, local areas in Nigeria, and southern and eastern Chad. The heaviest rainfall registered in southwestern Mali and southeastern and eastern Chad. Very heavy rainfall was also recorded over the Darfur region of Sudan (Figure 1). Western Senegal, much of Liberia, eastern Burkina Faso, northern Ghana, and northeastern Nigeria continued to receive light rainfall.

Another week of moderate rainfall was observed over Cote d’Ivoire and southern Ghana. In general, rainfall amounts remained average to above-average over much of the Gulf of Guinea countries, except for small areas in Senegal, Liberia, eastern Burkina Faso, and northeastern Nigeria. In general, 30-day rainfall totals remained above average over many places in the Sahel region (Figure 2). Analysis of the anomalous number of rain days since the beginning of June also suggests favorable conditions throughout West Africa, with only a few areas in Burkina Faso and Senegal registering a few rain days below normal.

During the next week, potentially heavy rainfall is forecast across the western Sahel, with weekly rainfall accumulations (>75 mm) expected over Guinea-Conakry, Sierra Leone, southern Mali, and farther east over already the Darfur region of Sudan. More seasonable rainfall is expected throughout the Gulf of Guinea countries. Heavy rains expected in western Sudan may pose threats for flooding Eastern Sudan and Ethiopia remain wet

Another week of heavy rainfall sustained moisture surpluses across eastern Sudan and western Ethiopia. Weekly rainfall totals exceeded 100 mm over the far eastern Sudan and in western Tigray, Benishangul-Gumuz and Amhara regions of Ethiopia (Figure 1). Light rainfall was also recorded throughout parts of Yemen, South Sudan, Uganda and Kenya. Normal rainfall prevailed across Sudan Eritrea and northern Ethiopia, while rainfall totals remained below-normal across southern South Sudan, southern Ethiopia, northeastern DRC and portions of the Lake Victoria region (Figure 2). While average to above-average rain has benefited agricultural activities over areas of Sudan and western Ethiopia, consistent rain could also pose threats for flooding and water-borne disease outbreaks over some areas.

During the next week, moderate to heavy rainfall is expected over western Ethiopia and parts of Eritrea.

World: WHO AFRO Outbreaks and Other Emergencies, Week 27: 30 June - 06 July 2018 (Data as reported by 17:00; 06 June 2018)

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Source: World Health Organization
Country: Angola, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Guinea, Kenya, Liberia, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritania, Mauritius, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Sao Tome and Principe, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, South Africa, South Sudan, Uganda, United Republic of Tanzania, World, Zambia, Zimbabwe

The WHO Health Emergencies Programme is currently monitoring 57 events in the region. This week’s edition covers key ongoing events, including:

Rift Valley fever in Uganda
Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Lassa fever in Liberia
Humanitarian crisis in South Sudan
Humanitarian crisis in north-east Nigeria.

  • 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 issues and challenges include:

  • The Ebola virus disease (EVD) outbreak in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has largely been contained, with the last confirmed case notified on 6 June 2018 and all contacts completing 21-day follow-up on 27 June 2018. The 12 June 2018 marked the start of the countdown towards the end of the EVD outbreak. While a small risk of resurgence and flare-ups remain, adequate measures are in place to rapidly detect and contain such events. In the meantime, there is a need to maintain implementation of all key response interventions until the outbreak is ultimately controlled.

  • Rift Valley fever (RVF) cases have simultaneously been confirmed in two districts in the western region of Uganda, with further investigation of another case in third district going on. The outbreak in Uganda is occurring at a time when Kenya is having a large RVF outbreak and Rwanda is experiencing an epizootic, with suspected human cases. This is indicative of the wider extent of the disease in the subregion. Risk modelling carried out by FAO in May 2018 showed suitability for vector amplification in several countries in East Africa, which are currently experiencing heavy rains. These RVF outbreaks in the subregion have the potential to cause serious public health consequences and huge economic loses if not addressed appropriately and effectively.

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