National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) Distributes Relief Materials to Windstorm/Flood Disaster Affected Persons in Abia State

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

The National Emergency Management Agency (NEMA), on Friday 4th August, 2023 commenced the distribution of relief materials to persons affected by windstorm and flood disasters in Abia communities.

The Director General of NEMA, Mustapha Habib Ahmed represented by Ag. Head, NEMA Owerri Operations Office, Mr Nnaji Ifeanyi presented the relief materials.

The Ag. Head said during the flag-off in Umuahia, said that the disasters occurred in communities of five LGA’s; Umuahia North, Ikwuano, Arochukwu, Ohafia and Bende.

He stated that a joint team of assessors from NEMA and Abia SEMA carried out an on-the-spot assessment of the damage to determine need analysis of the affected persons. According to him, the problems with disasters are enormous and aftermaths of it are sorrow, isolation, grief, anguish, hunger and colossal loss of lives and poperty.

Presenting the items to the State Government, Nnaji acknowledged that the affected communities and persons were traumatised psychologically, thereby reducing their participation and contribution to national development.

“You should please note that the relief materials provided to you today are not to pay you back for all that were destroyed by the disaster, but only to cushion the effect of the unfortunate incident”.

Receiving the Relif materials on behalf of the Secretary to the State Government, Prof. Kenneth Kalu, the Executive Secretary of SEMA, Dr Sunday Jackson, thanked the Federal Government for approving the relief assistance to the affected persons. He said that it would cushion the effect of the disasters that had ravaged so many homes and displaced so many persons.

Jackson also appreciated the synergy between SEMA and NEMA Owerri office under the leadership of Nnaji. He assured that the relief materials would be transparently and jointly distributed to affected persons by officials of NEMA, SEMA and representative of the community and other relevant stakeholders.

South Africa: President Ramaphosa to attend Netball World Cup 2023 Final

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

President Cyril Ramaphosa will attend the final match of the Netball World Cup 2023 and deliver brief remarks at the Closing Ceremony of the competition in Cape Town on Sunday, 06 August 2023.

South Africa has been the first African host of this global tournament which has been staged at the Cape Town International Convention Centre.

President Ramaphosa has commended South Africa’s national team, the Spar Proteas, on their gallant progress through the pool stage of the tournament.

President Ramaphosa said: “As the host nation, we have been honoured to welcome players and supporters from all over the globe and we look forward to an exciting final and the successful conclusion of the tournament.

“Of course we encourage our guests to extend their stay and be inspired in new ways by the many amazing experiences South Africa has to offer.”

Muna Mohamed Abdi: Helping Include Marginalised Communities in Kismayo

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

Somali society can sometimes be characterized by clan-based divisions, inequalities and exclusions.

In these situations, the country’s marginalized groups face discrimination and struggle to exercise their rights to participate in economic, social, cultural and political processes. This marginalization leads to unfair and discriminatory distribution of resources, and it can be difficult for young Somalis from some of these marginalized groups to achieve their full potential in life.

Muna Mohamed Abdi is one young Somali from a marginalized group who is making strides in this respect.

With the support of her family and much hard work, the Jubaland resident has been able to progress, achieving things which many marginalized youth cannot due to the aforementioned challenges.

Born in 1998 in Kismayo, the largest city in the southern Federal Member State of Jubaland, Ms. Abdi was the second child in a family of five children. In her community, education for young girls and women was rare, but she was fortunate in that her parents were keen to have her educated and made this a priority throughout her upbringing. 

She attended Kismayo’s Fanole Primary and Secondary School from 2008 to 2018, after which she continued her studies with a business administration degree at Plasma University, complemented by training as a teacher at the Jubaland Teachers Training College. She graduated from the latter in September 2022.

But her experiences growing up impacted her in a way that had her thinking beyond her own career path.

“Sometimes it felt as though we did not belong anywhere, we were excluded from most activities and nowhere felt like home,” Ms. Abdi says.

These feelings prompted her – as one of the few educated women in her immediate community – to embark on a second career of sorts. She became an advocate for marginalised communities in Kismayo, encouraging greater social inclusion and participation in Somali culture, and an end to discrimination and exclusion. 

“Marginalised communities are always excluded from political participation, employment, access to opportunities, and even justice – I could not sit back and watch the status quo continue. I had to speak out and question the deeply entrenched social hierarchy and structural inequalities,” Ms. Abdi says.

“No one is going to tell you what you deserve unless you step up and fight for it,” she adds. “We have to ask, knock on doors, and fight for it. Otherwise, we will continue to be marginalised.”

Volunteer work

Ms. Abdi’s determination to break down barriers and fight exclusion led her to becoming a volunteer as she believed this would be a suitable path to help raise wider awareness of the role and contributions made by Somalia’s marginalized communities. The reasoning here was that small and frequent inclusive initiatives at the local level lay the foundation for bigger activities to bridge existing gaps between advantaged and marginalised communities.

In 2021, while pursuing her university education, the 25-year-old activist volunteered with Jubaland’s Ministry of Youth and Sports, where she was part of the team that oversaw the planning and organising of a series of capacity-building workshops for youth from marginalised communities. The workshops were part of the Ministry’s efforts to bring about social integration and narrow the gap of marginalisation through teaching life skills and supporting socio-economic activities for local youth.

“Young, educated people from these communities like me need to volunteer to stand up for these people and raise awareness so that they can speak up and come out of the dark rooms that they are inadvertently forced into,” Ms. Abdi says.

Ms. Abdi’s volunteering expanded to other areas. As a member of the local Fahan Youth Group, she took part in beach clean-up activities in Kismayo.

“This initiative showed the public that we need to take action to improve our environment, but it was also an opportunity for the marginalised to take part – the marginalised are excluded even from community activities, so this was a change,” she says.

Ms. Abdi’s enthusiasm and determination have been noted and praised locally.

“Because she fights for a just society, free from prejudice and tribalism, she was one of five people chosen by the Ministry of Youth and youth groups to represent Jubaland as peace champions in Kismayo,” says the team leader of the Fahan Youth Group, Bashir Hirsi Ali.

“We have high expectations for her continued success in breaking barriers and fostering unity among communities,” he continues. “She will have our unwavering support.”

New job, same cause

At the start of 2022, Ms. Abdi started working with the Jubaland Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources as a data collector. She was eventually promoted to a secretarial position in the ministry.

While some may have focused on their own career path, the 25-year-old also saw her workplace through the prism of marginalized communities. She began to encourage marginalized youth to make the most of opportunities in the Federal Member State’s maritime sector.

“I noted that there are marine resources that can help alleviate the joblessness that youth from marginalised communities face, and I wanted to change that. These youth can benefit as much as their advantaged or privileged counterparts,” Ms. Abdi says.

With an extensive coastline of around 3,300 kilometres and positioned at a strategic location on critical global shipping lanes, Somalia’s maritime sector, with its abundant aquatic resources, is regarded as having enormous economic potential.

Including the maritime sector, Ms. Abdi sees opportunities in the growing economy of the country and urges all Somali youth to seize opportunities, especially in the maritime sector, describing it as a much better option than leaving the country on ‘tahriib’ – as Somalis call the often-dangerous journeys using people smugglers to reach foreign shores – for a better life abroad.

“They just need to be encouraged to do so, which I continue to do, and now we are seeing an increase in the number of youth from marginalised communities willing to take up opportunities here in Kismayo,” she says.

Ms. Abdi highlights the connection between marginalisation and poverty with various examples.

“While it is often seen as shameful for a raped woman to report the case to the police, it is worse for women from marginalised communities because their cases tend to be ignored,” says Ms. Abdi.

“Young shoe shiners [in Kismayo] from marginalised communities tragically find themselves excluded from educational opportunities,” she continues. “This is the devastating impact of marginalisation, as it perpetuates a cycle of poverty and denies vulnerable children the chance to access formal education.”

In her eyes, the way forward is clear.

“This is a status quo that needs to change – it is us who can speak up to voice the concerns of these people and advocate for their plights to be addressed,” Ms. Abdi says. “Unless there are systemic changes to address the existing marginalisation in the country, the potential of many young generations will be wasted.”

“I believe that everyone deserves to have a voice and to participate in the decisions that affect their lives,” she adds, “and I will continue to advocate and raise awareness on this and encourage my community to play an active role in public spheres. Change must happen.”

UN support

In Somalia, the United Nations supports efforts to create deeper public understanding on the rights of minorities and marginalized communities in Somalia and to encourage governments and civil society organisations to advocate for their rights.

In Ms. Abdi’s home Federal Member State of Jubaland, this support includes a mapping exercise of such groups with the aim of helping humanitarian organisations better target those in need of aid; and supporting civil society organisations representing minorities to promote human rights and enhance their engagement with government authorities, journalists, youths, and women groups.

The support also includes assisting the Federal Government of Somalia with a programme to build resilience among almost 25,000 disadvantaged and marginalized households. Funded by the Government of Germany, this ongoing 50 million euro programme aims to improve access to education, health, hygiene and nutrition for children and adolescents and enhance food security among disadvantaged households.

The third phase of the programme began in 2021, managed by the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the World Food Programme (WFP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), and implemented by various federal ministries, the Jubaland Government, district and local authorities, and non-governmental organizations.

Zimbabwe: Authorities must promptly investigate the death of opposition party activist

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

Responding to news of the death of Tinashe Chitsunge, an opposition Citizens Coalition for Change (CCC) activist in Harare on Thursday, allegedly at the hands of ruling ZANU-PF supporters, Khanyo Farisè, Amnesty International’s Deputy Director for Southern Africa, said:

“The fatal attack on Tinashe Chitsunge, a CCC activist, paints a grim picture of the human rights environment in Zimbabwe ahead of general elections scheduled for 23 August 2023. Such callous acts of violence, which have repeatedly marred Zimbabwe’s political landscape, gravely threaten the rights to freedom of expression, association, and peaceful assembly.

The fatal attack on Tinashe Chitsunge, a CCC activist, paints a grim picture of the human rights environment in Zimbabwe ahead of general elections scheduled for 23 August 2023.

Khanyo Farisè, Deputy Regional Director, Southern Africa

“Authorities must take all necessary steps to prevent acts of politically motivated violence and refrain from issuing inflammatory statements that could incite similar attacks or deter people from freely exercising their human rights and expressing support to political parties of their choice.

“Authorities must ensure a peaceful environment before, during and after the elections by fully respecting, protecting, promoting and fulfilling the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, association and expression.

“We call on Zimbabwe’s authorities to promptly launch a thorough, independent, impartial, transparent and effective investigation into Tinashe Chitsunge’s death and ensure that suspected perpetrators are brought to justice. Authorities must ensure access to justice and effective remedies for Tinashe Chitsunge and his family.”

Authorities must ensure access to justice and effective remedies for Tinashe Chitsunge and his family.”

Khanyo Farisè

A warm winter for women and girls displaced by Tropical Cyclone Freddy

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

As dark clouds rolled over Ng’omba village in Mulanje, Daliso Simon gathered her harvest in a rush, as she didn’t want to get caught in the impending storm. All week, her village had been battered by strong winds and heavy rains induced by the devastating Tropical Cyclone Freddy.

“I couldn’t go out, as it was raining heavily,” said Ms. Simon, who is seven months pregnant. “When I saw a bit of sunshine, I went into my garden to collect some fresh maize. But as soon as I did, the weather changed again.”

Incessant rains in Mulanje district had already caused damages to infrastructure in many communities. In Ng’omba village, the majority of the mud-built houses were starting to develop cracks, and many had lost their roofs in high winds.

More destruction as cyclone descends

Ms. Simon’s house had withstood these difficult conditions so far – but not for long. That evening, strong winds ripped off her roof and let in sheets of water that flooded the house, forcing her to run for shelter.  

She grabbed a few belongings and strapped her two-year-old baby on her back.

“I had seen many houses in the village collapsing and didn’t want to wait for that to happen before I moved to safety,” she said.

Drenched and cold, she joined hundreds of others from her village who sought refuge at a nearby school.

“When I reached the school, my body was pain,” she said. “I needed a place to rest but the classrooms were overcrowded. I sat in a corner and someone was kind enough to give me a dry blanket.”

Mulanje is one 15 districts devastated by Tropical Cyclone Freddy. The disaster displaced more than 130,000 people, who took refuge in 128 camps spread across the district. Almost all of the camps have since been decommissioned and people have gone back to their communities to rebuild.

“When I returned back home, I found my house completely destroyed,” she said. “My husband had to put together a makeshift structure of plastic sheets as our new home.”

In Malawi, the winter season starts in June, and Mulanje can get very cold. With many of the displaced people having lost all of their household goods, the approaching winter presented another challenge, especially for pregnant women like Ms. Simon.

A warm winter for cyclone survivors

With generous support from the Republic of Korea, she and many other women and girls in Mulanje and Phalombe have been able to keep warm this winter. The Republic of Korea supported UNFPA with the provision of 3,800 dignity kits for winter and 650 torches, which were distributed to pregnant women and adolescent girls in the two districts.  

This support, together with UNFPA’s ongoing Freddy response in Mulanje and Phalombe, ensured that adolescent girls and young women gained access to life-saving sexual and reproductive health services and commodities. The support also helped mitigate the risks of public health and protection issues, especially gender-based violence.

“I am very grateful for having received this kit,” said Ms. Simon, who recently recovered from pneumonia due continuous exposure to the cold weather. “It will help me in many ways, particularly the blanket, as it will keep me warm during the winter.”

Blue Peace Financing Initiative: Validation of Gambia River Basin Development Organization’s (OMVG) Integrated Development Master Plan (IDMP)

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

The Gambia River Basin Development Organization (OMVG) adopts an Integrated Development Master Plan (IDMP). This defines the strategic orientations and development priorities of the four (4) member countries (Gambia, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, and Senegal) for the next twenty years. The validation of this Master Plan is an unprecedented moment in the existence of OMVG as a regional organization. It has been the subject of several consultations and negotiations. It is also a crucial step and a major success in the implementation of the Blue Peace Financing Initiative.

Genesis of the initiative

The vision of the Blue Peace Financing Initiative is to create new ways for non-sovereign regional entities managing natural resources, such as river basin organizations, to access financial markets for investments in cross-border and multi-sectoral water cooperation. Preliminary exchanges with key financial stakeholders, including potential investors, have confirmed that the market has a strong appetite and interest in an innovative financing instrument such as the Blue Peace Bond.

This initiative has been launched since December 2019 with the signing by the President of the OMVG Council of Ministers of a resolution announcing OMVG’s partnership with Blue Peace partners – including the Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC), UNCDF and other institutions – on the exploration of innovative financing mechanisms including the Blue Peace financing initiative, to implement projects under its Master Plan (PDDI). A formal memorandum of understanding between OMVG and UNCDF was signed in the first half of 2020.

UNCDF, together with the SDC and the OMVG have seized the unique opportunity offered by the 9th World Water Forum (the world’s largest event on water) to officially launch the Blue Peace Financing Initiative. This initiative is a concrete action following a specific recommendation of the Global High-Level Panel on Water and Peace on the creation of innovative financing mechanisms. The vision is to promote access to capital for non-sovereign entities by using water as an entry point for multi-stakeholder cooperation frameworks and transform them into investment platforms, which will lead to more sustainable economies and peaceful societies.

As a well-established River Basin Organization (RBO) with a legal framework that provides the necessary authority to raise and manage funds, OMVG is the first RBO to implement such an innovative financing mechanism and has proven to be ready to try new ways of financing. Through a technical assistance process, OMVG has been supported in the development of its master and joint investment plans.

We are a strong institution with a long-standing history and strong political will and support from member states, but we are still facing challenges when it comes to mobilizing funds. We thank UNCDF and SDC for accompanying us on exploring innovative financing mechanisms, including the Blue Peace Financing Initiative, to implement projects in the context of our masterplan. This is really the way forward to build financial independence whereby we can implement projects without getting indebted.” said OMVG High Commissioner Mr. Lansana Fofana.

This masterplan is an important milestone for the Blue Peace Financing Initiative and is the result of an inclusive negotiation process between 4 countries and other relevant stakeholders as well as over 2 years of capacity building and Technical Assistance provided to OMVG by UNCDF. The projects identified in this masterplan provide the potential for direct and indirect impact to up to 6 Mio people in terms of providing access to water-related services, such as drinking water, energy, irrigation for agriculture and food security, WASH etc.

A multi-phase development of the OMVG Master Plan

Since the beginning of the project, 28 stakeholders’ meetings including regional consultations have been held to review the inception report, the diagnostic report, discuss the sectoral development plans, build integrated development scenarios, and finalize the masterplan.

In December 2021, the diagnostic report for the OMVG Master Plan, which presented the main cross-border challenges and development opportunities associated with the OMVG zone’s natural resources and sectoral economic uses, was validated (Phase 1). In June 2022, the six sector master plans were presented and validated (Phase 2). Sectors with the greatest potential and priority for the joint investment plan (portfolio) were identified, including energy, agriculture, drinking water and sanitation, shipping, forestry and municipal infrastructure. The final and third phase of the IDMP development, which aims to define possible development scenarios for the OMVG area, model these scenarios for comparison based on hydrological, environmental, social and economic indicators, and then define the IDMP (phase 3), was launched in July 2022 at a regional workshop in Banjul.

With the support of UNCDF, OMVG held a regional consultation workshop to validate the IDMP and the Joint Investment Plan from July 17 to 19, 2023 in Conakry. The aim was to present the Master Plan and its Joint Investment Plan: its strategic vision, its architecture, the action program, and the constitution of the Joint Investment Plan. The workshop enabled OMVG stakeholders to formulate recommendations and contributions to be incorporated into the final version of the Master Plan, and to have the validation by the member states.

The Potential Impact of the OMVG Master Plan

During the workshop in Conakry, the OMVG Integrated Development Master Plan was finalized and validated by the four countries, laying the foundation for a Joint Investment Plan (portfolio) that will be financed through the issuance of a Blue Peace Bond.

Over 180 projects (energy, agriculture, environment, river transport) have been identified through a rigorous process, resulting in a robust portfolio of selected projects proposed to the OMVG. The financing mechanism and the portfolio of projects were also presented to and endorsed by the OMVG Council of Ministers, as well as high ranked government officials from the Ministries of Finance of OMVG member states, underscoring the broad support for this ambitious initiative. Overall, this represents an important step in the effort to promote cross-border collaboration in the region for common and sustainable development.

The OMVG Masterplan will have the potential for a direct or indirect positive impact on up to 6 million people who live in the OMVG Master Plan space, which covers about 100 000 km2. The impact will be created a.o. through the development potential of 305 navigable water, 50000 ha of agro forestry lands, more than 2000 GwH of clean energy (hydro dams) and 2000 ha of national parcs.

The implementation of this Master Plan, initiated by the OMVG High Commission, will have a positive impact on the improvement of the living conditions of the populations of the basin areas through its programs and projects which will allow, among others, the realization of various infrastructures and development actions. I would therefore like to express my deep gratitude to the Swiss Agency for Cooperation and Development and UNCDF, for their support to the implementation of this ambitious Master Plan“, expressed Mr. Aly Seydouba Soumah, Minister of Energy, Hydraulics and Hydrocarbons of the Republic of Guinea.

UNCDF is proud to accompany this process and will continue working with its partners towards unlocking public and private capital for better access to water-related services and to transform transboundary water cooperation frameworks into investment platforms through innovative blended finance mechanisms and financing instruments, such as Blue Peace Bonds.

Nurturing future generations through breastfeeding

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

WFP) and its partners, which are providing critical assistance to breastfeeding mothers.

On the occasion of World Breastfeeding Week, Christine explained how she is helping other nursing mothers through a UN-supported programme in the Rhino Camp.

“I feel like the proudest mother in the world when I breastfeed him,” said Christine, from South Sudan. “I know that breastfeeding him will help him grow into a strong and healthy and intelligent boy. He is my future.”

Each morning, inside her small house, she gets herself and young son ready for the day. With 12-month-old Alvin snuggled into a wrap tied across her back, she makes her way to the local health centre just a few minutes’ walk from her house. There she is greeted by a small group of women, most of whom have tiny babies in their arms or on their backs.

Christine comes here each day, where she earns a small income as a community worker, mentoring other breastfeeding mothers. She is here to help give her son the best start at life and to help other women do the same.

Lifeline in fragile settings

Breastfeeding is always important, but in fragile settings like this, it’s a lifeline. It not only provides all the nutrients a baby needs for the first six months of life, it’s also free of charge and almost always available.

In 2016, when Christine was a 25-year-old college student and aspiring teacher, rebels attacked her hometown of Yei, in South Sudan. She and her family fled into the bush, but shortly afterwards, her father was killed while looking for medicine for a sick family member. Fearing for their lives, Christine and her family fled to Uganda, eventually settling in Rhino Camp.

Her husband has since returned to South Sudan, but Christine has stayed on. In South Sudan, two thirds of the population are facing crisis levels of hunger, the highest number ever, and there is no sign of the situation improving soon.

She has found some stability in Uganda, for herself and her son. She said she was happy with the life she is building there.

Cash for breastfeeding mothers

Last year, while heavily pregnant, Christine became one of 13,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women from both refugee and host communities to receive Nutricash.

Part of the Swedish-funded Child Sensitive Social Protection Programme, under which the World Food Programme (WFP) collaborates with the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and the Government of Uganda, the project provides each woman with $13 to help meet food and nutrition needs and $4 that is put into savings.

Christine has used some of her savings to plant avocado trees and cassava. She plans to go back to school one day and become a teacher. She hopes her savings will make this a reality. Other women use the money to buy goats and pay for school fees.

Breaking cycles of poverty

“By supporting breastfeeding mothers, through cash and nutrition assistance and counselling, we are breaking a vicious poverty cycle and giving the opportunity to these mothers to send their kids to school, to invest in their small business and in the near future, to become fully self-reliant,” said Abdirahman Meygag, WFP’s country director in Uganda.

After receiving nutrition training from WFP’s partner, Save the Children, Christine started supporting women to breastfeed.

“Some women, especially younger mothers, are often scared to breastfeed,” she explained. “Often, they don’t know how to place their babies, and they want to give up because it’s too painful. They have a lot of chores that cause stress, and they don’t produce enough breastmilk.” 

Knowledge is power

Breastfeeding is one of the simplest, smartest, and most cost-effective ways of ensuring that children survive and thrive. Breastfeeding has broad benefits, and can help to prevent infant death and childhood illness.

Each week, Christine and members of the Joy Care Group come together for friendship, to share information on breastfeeding and to support and comfort each other.

The women gather under the shade of a tree, holding their babies in their laps as they share their struggles, worries and fears. From time to time, they breastfeed their young babies.

Group member Jemma said knowledge is key.

“I know my child is going to be well and not only my child, but everyone’s child in the group,” she said. “Because we have the knowledge and since we are coming together, every week we learn more.”

Learn more about how the UN supports women and their children during World Breastfeeding Week and throughout the year here.

Nearly 14 million children in Sudan need humanitarian support: United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF)

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

Two senior UN humanitarian officials have called for more funding and less bureaucratic impediments to support civilians affected by the war in Sudan, including roughly 14 million children.

Ted Chaiban of the UN children’s agency, UNICEF, and Edem Wosornu with the UN humanitarian affairs office, OCHA, briefed journalists on their recent mission to the country and Chad, one of several neighbouring nations hosting some 900,000 people who fled the violence.

Fighting between the Sudanese Army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) recently passed the 100-day mark. Overall, 24 million people across the country require aid.

Dreading another Darfur

Mr. Chaiban, UNICEF’s Deputy Executive Director for Humanitarian Action and Supply Operations, expressed hope that ongoing talks in Saudi Arabia will lead to a cessation of hostilities. He said the conflict is threatening the lives and futures of children and young people, who make up over 70 per cent of Sudan’s population.  

“I saw the total of the atrocities committed against children and women during the darkest days of the Darfur conflict 18 years ago. Both Edem and I were there. And I think we’re deeply concerned that we could be looking at a repetition of these terrible days,” he warned.

In Sudan, children are being killed, injured, abducted, and even recruited into armed groups. They have fallen victim to ethnic- and gender-based violence, while the schools and hospitals they depend on are being damaged, destroyed and looted.

Mr. Chaiban said nearly 14 million children desperately need humanitarian relief – a number that is equivalent to all the boys and girls in Colombia, France, Germany or Thailand.  Some 1.7 million have been driven from their homes, adding to the nearly two million who were already uprooted before the crisis. 

Impossible choices

“Parents are making the impossible choice of deciding whether to stay or leave, and leave everything behind they have known,” he said.  “And those children who are on the move, both within Sudan and neighbouring countries, are vulnerable to hunger, disease, violence and separation from their families.”

Furthermore, three million under-fives in Sudan are malnourished, with 700,000 at risk of severe acute malnutrition and mortality. Some 1.7 million children could miss out on critical vaccinations, raising the risk of disease outbreaks. 

“In White Nile State we currently have what is usually a lethal combination, which is acute watery diarrhea, measles and malnutrition in the same place, and that needs to absolutely be contained because otherwise the consequences are severe,” he said.

‘The world needs to wake up’

This week, UN agencies reported that more than 20 million people across Sudan now face severe hunger and six million are on the brink of famine. Nearly four million people alone have fled their homes to seek safety, including across the border into Chad, South Sudan, the Central African Republic, Ethiopia and Egypt.

Of those who remain, scores have been flocking to Port Sudan, the city on the Red Sea where the UN established a hub shortly after the fighting broke out. The arrivals are being hosted by family and friends who can barely meet their own needs as rents skyrocket and civil servants go unpaid, said Ms. Wosornu, Director of OCHA’s Operations and Advocacy Division.

She met with women in Port Sudan and the nearby town of Sinkat, “and their stories keep me awake at night.” These women spoke about seeing their homes “obliterated in one minute”, or difficulties in accessing lifesaving medicine such as insulin.

“We are receiving credible reports of all sorts of horrors and the world needs to wake up and hear this,” she said.

Delivering aid to millions

Ms. Wosornu pointed to “the good news amidst all this gloom”, as the UN and 93 humanitarian partners have been delivering aid wherever they can.

“We have been able to get to hard-to-reach areas,” she said.  “We’re able to move trucks from Port Sudan to Darfur, and this is through de-confliction, talking to the parties to the conflict, allowing us to move goods as we could.”

OCHA has facilitated the movement of some 780 trucks carrying 35,000 metric tons of relief supplies since fighting broke out in mid-April.  “Each of these movements requires extensive painstaking negotiations to ensure that we don’t get more deaths of civilians or the 18 aid workers that have been killed so far,” she said.

People just want peace

Between April and June, humanitarians reached at least 2.5 million people.  However, their target is 18 million, underscoring the need for greater financial support and fewer bureaucratic impediments. A $2.6 billion appeal for Sudan is just a quarter funded, or $625 million. UNICEF alone urgently needs $400 million to continue operations over the next 100 days.

“Overall, I think the message is that we can’t accept the toll that this war is taking on Sudan’s children, their families and the future,” said Mr. Chaiban.

He added that their message to the warring parties is also clear: stop fighting and commit to a durable cessation of hostilities, protect civilians, prevent grave violations against children, and ensure humanitarians can safely reach people in need.

“There are talks in Jeddah underway; there are other negotiating processes that we hope and urge can make urgent progress in this regard,” he said.

Ms. Wosornu underlined the need for unhindered and unconditional humanitarian access. “Everyone I spoke to, some people said ‘I don’t want food. I don’t want water. I just want peace. I want to go home.’  So, this is the message to parties to the conflict as well.”

Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Family Day 2023 at Voile d’or Beach, Dakar

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

On 29 July 2023, as part of the celebration of the 56th Anniversary of the founding of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) on 8 August 2023, the Royal Thai Embassy in Dakar, in collaboration with the ASEAN Embassies to the Republic of Senegal (Indonesia and Malaysia), organised the ASEAN Family Day 2023 at Voile d’or Beach, Dakar.

The activity aims to raise awareness on ASEAN, promote ASEAN culture, as well as strengthen friendship and enhance relations among the ASEAN Embassies in Dakar and the ASEAN community members in Senegal. More than 60 people attended the event, including Ambassadors, diplomats and staff of ASEAN Embassies, and Thai, Indonesian and Malaysian communities in Senegal and their families.

Kenya: Call for bids for provision of pest control services

Source: Africa Press Organisation – English

On behalf of the Secretary of State for the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, the British High Commission (BHC) in Nairobi are seeking the Provision of Pest Control Services. We are therefore looking for a supplier that has the relevant professional skills, experience, technical resources and financial capability to provide comprehensive Pest Control Services.

Full details on the requirements, including instructions for interested bidders and registration are available via the FCDO’s e-Procurement portal, which requires registration. Registering is quick, easy, free and is the only way in which one is able to review the tender documents.

Competent and financially stable suppliers are invited to access the invitation to tender documents by following these steps:

Contact Nairobiprocurement@fcdo.gov.uk for any queries. Kindly note that the enquiries should be in English.

Deadlines

Please note that the invitation to tender documents should be completed and uploaded on the BRAVOSolution e-Procurement Portal by 1500h EAT on 22 August 2023.