Saturday, 25 February 2017

Victims of forgotten crisis

 Victims of forgotten crisis: As donors today pledged more than $670 million in emergency aid, we look at the plight of children - particularly the very young - who are a...

Victims of forgotten crisis

As donors today pledged more than $670 million in emergency aid, we look at the plight of children - particularly the very young - who are are at risk of illness and death in this famine-hit area.
It's been called the "forgotten crisis". While the Syria and Yemen conflicts have been grabbing global headlines, the growing humanitarian problem in the Lake Chad region of Africa has almost gone under the radar.

Huge numbers of people could die of hunger in Nigeria, Niger, Chad and Cameroon unless urgent action is taken.
And children - particularly the very young - are bearing the brunt of the crisis.
About 500,000 under-fives are suffering from severe acute malnutrition - the most extreme and visibly obvious form. It is a major cause of death in this age group.
Today donors pledged more than $670 million in emergency aid for people threatened by famine in the Lake Chad region. A special humanitarian conference in Oslo, Norway, said the money was aimed at helping more than 10 million people.
Famine began last year in the northeast of Nigeria, where the government is fighting Boko Haram and millions of people have been forced from their homes. That - combined with Lake Chad drying up due to climate change - has caused a massive and complex humanitarian problem.
"This is a crisis of forgotten children," said Kathryn Taetzsch, the Lake Chad Basin response director for the charity World Vision. "Not only have children been forced to endure atrocities of enormous proportions but many are also suffering the effects of hunger and illnesses."
For months, Theirworld has been calling for a humanitarian response that includes safe spaces for the youngest children caught up in the crisis and safe, quality education for all children.
Theirworld's #5for5 campaign on early childhood development has also been driving home the message that nurturing care in emergencies - including the provision of safe spaces and nutrition - is vital for children under five.
Vulnerable babies and young children caught up in conflicts and crises can suffer from psychological trauma, toxic stress and poor brain development unless their needs are prioritised in humanitarian response plans.
"In all types of emergencies, babies and young children are especially vulnerable, with the highest rates of illness and death of any age group," says a new briefing published by Theirworld.

Monday, 23 January 2017

Self-reporting

AVICOONMEDIA: Self-reporting: The World Humanitarian Summit was a multi-stakeholder, collective effort to better serve people in crisis. Its success hinged on the full...

Self-reporting

The World Humanitarian Summit was a multi-stakeholder, collective effort to better serve people in crisis. Its success hinged on the full participation and commitment of thousands of stakeholders and institutions. Maintaining momentum on the Summit’s outcomes and measuring collective progress will, similarly, be a multi-stakeholder undertaking.
Through the Agenda for Humanity Platform for Action, Commitments and Transformation (PACT) all stakeholders who made commitments are invited to self-report on progress once a year until their commitments are implemented. Annual self-reporting in the PACT is a critical opportunity to communicate with others and make visible how your country or organization are taking forward commitments made at the Summit, confronting challenges, and working to promote positive change. It is a place to share your experience, triumphs, results, and what you’re learning.
In order to make the self-reporting useful for analysis, it is organized according to the 24 transformations in the Agenda for Humanity. In the reporting form, each of your commitments will be listed under the transformation to which it is most aligned in the Agenda. The information provided through the self-reporting will be publically available on the PACT to promote transparency and facilitate collaboration between stakeholders. It will also form the basis of the annual synthesis report to be prepared by OCHA (expected release September). The annual synthesis report will highlight trends in progress, achievements and gaps that need more attention.

Thursday, 5 January 2017

AVICOONMEDIA: Nigeria, The Widows' house

AVICOONMEDIA: Nigeria, The Widows' house:   Residents of a so-called widows' house in Banki, Borno State, north-east Nigeria, sit with their children. In Banki, many women wh...