Edited News | UNICEF , OCHA
YEMEN: Severe funding gaps for humanitarian aid as cases of Covid-19 are on the rise
UN Humanitarian agencies warned that aid projects face closure due to a severe lack of funding as Covid-19 spreads in war-torn Yemen.
“As of today, UNICEF’s $479 million appeal to sustain essential basic services for children is just 38 per cent funded”, said Marixie Mercado, spokesperson for UNICEF speaking today to a virtual press conference at the United Nations in Geneva. “The most critical and immediate funding gap is for emergency - water, sanitation and hygiene or what we call WASH operations, including for the COVID-19 response”.
At the High-Level Pledging Event for the Humanitarian Crisis in Yemen on June 2nd, 31 international donors announced pledges of a combined US$1.35 billion to meet the humanitarian needs of people affected by the world’s biggest humanitarian crisis. As of today, some 47 per cent ($637 million) of the pledges have been paid.
Of the 8.4 million Yemenis whose access to WASH will be affected because of insufficient funding, a total of 4 million people – nearly half of them children – directly depend on UNICEF.
Unless UNICEF receives U$30 million by the end of June, water, sanitation and hygiene services will start shutting down for these 4 million people in July.
“This means UNICEF will not be able to provide fuel to operate water pumping stations, or de-sludge sewage, or maintain crumbling water and sanitation infrastructure”, UNICEF’s spokesperson said. “It means we will not be able to distribute basic family hygiene kits that include soap, which is so critical for preventing both cholera and COVID in a context where millions don’t have access to handwashing facilities”.
To ensure UNICEF’s WASH services till the end of the year, the organisation requires U$110 million USD.
UNICEF’s spokesperson explained that “the criticality of maintaining safe water, sanitation and hygiene provision cannot be overstated in the context of a running cholera and diarrhea epidemic”. She added that “over 137,000 cases have been recorded since the beginning of the year, nearly a quarter of them among children below 5 years old”.
UNICEF has shipped over 33,000 N95 respirators, 33.000 face shields, and 18,000 gowns for frontline workers. However, this represents only 5 per cent of the Covid-19 supplies UNICEF requires. “Without $48 million immediately, UNICEF will not be able to provide PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) items and operations support to 25,000 frontline workers, including health staff”, UNICEF’s spokesperson said.
According to the World Health Organisation (WHO) between 10 April, when the first case was confirmed, and 11 June, the authorities in Yemen announced 564 confirmed COVID-19 cases including 130 deaths.
Jens Laerke, Spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said that “the case fatality rate is alarming high at more than 24 per cent. So that is, I believe, more than 3 times the average case fatality rate. The highest number of confirmed cases are in Aden, where up till the 6 June there were 130 cases including 5 death followed by Hadramaut were 126 cases, including 48 deaths”.
Reports continue to indicate that many more people are symptomatic and are dying with COVID-19-like symptoms.
Due to the lack in funding of humanitarian aid work, OCHA reported already some of the first consequences for the Yemenis. “We know that eight and a half million people in the north are only receiving food every 2 months now, so rations have been cut in half”, Jens Laerke said.
Aid agencies in Yemen continue to scale up the response, prioritizing suppression of virus transmission through community engagement and public information campaigns and to procure and distribute medical supplies and equipment.
1. Wide shot: exterior, UN Geneva flag alley.
SOUNDBITE (EN) – Marixie Mercado, Spokesperson for UNICEF: “As of today, UNICEF’s $479 million appeal to sustain essential basic services for children is just 38 per cent funded. The most critical and immediate funding gap is for emergency - water, sanitation and hygiene or what we call WASH operations, including for the COVID-19 response”.
2. Medium shot: Flag alley in front of UN Geneva building
3. SOUNDBITE (EN) - Marixie Mercado, Spokesperson for UNICEF: “This means UNICEF will not be able to provide fuel to operate water pumping stations, or de-sludge sewage, or maintain crumbling water and sanitation infrastructure. It means we will not be able to distribute basic family hygiene kits that include soap, which is so critical for preventing both cholera and COVID in a context where millions don’t have access to handwashing facilities”.
4. Medium shot: UN entry, Place des Nations with motorcycle passing by
5. SOUNDBITE (EN) - Marixie Mercado, Spokesperson for UNICEF: “The criticality of maintaining safe water, sanitation and hygiene provision cannot be overstated in the context of a running cholera and diarrhea epidemic. Over 137,000 cases have been recorded since the beginning of the year, nearly a quarter of them among children below 5 years old”.
6. Close up : UN Geneva Palais des Nations
7. SOUNDBITE (EN) – Marixie Mercado, Spokesperson for UNICEF: “Without $48 million immediately, UNICEF will not be able to provide PPE (Personal Protective Equipment) items and operations support to 25,000 frontline workers, including health staff”.
8. Medium shot: UN flag alley
SOUNDBITE (EN) – Jens Laerke, Spokesperson for the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA): “The case fatality rate is alarming high at more than 24 per cent. So that is, I believe, more than 3 times the average case fatality rate. The highest number of confirmed cases are in Aden, where up till the 6 June, there were 130 cases including 5 death followed by Hadramaut, where 126 cases, including 48 deaths”.
10. Wide shot: UN flag
12. Medium shot: UN flag in front of UN Palais
1
1
1
Edited News | UNOG
“State of Silence”: Diego Luna brings the fight to protect the press to the UN in Geneva
Mexican actor, producer and director Diego Luna has brought his fight to protect journalists all the way to the United Nations, in Geneva. Together with documentary director Santiago Masa, he is putting a spotlight on the silencing of investigative journalism in his country, and on the incredibly high price that many journalist have to pay in pursuit of truth.
1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG
“Today marks the grim milestone of 1,000 days since the Russian Federation launched its full-scale armed attack on Ukraine. Our Office has verified that at least 12,162 civilians have been killed since 24 February 2022, among them 659 children. At least another 26,919 civilians have been injured,” UN Human Rights spokesperson Jeremy Laurance told the bi-weekly press briefing in Geneva.
1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR , UNOG
With COP29 in Baku now in its second - and final - week, UN Human Rights Chief Volker Türk has reiterated his call for urgent human rights-based climate action.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNIFIL , UNICEF , WHO
Lebanon: Increased violence along Blue Line and ‘horrific new normal’ for children
In southern Lebanon, peacekeepers have witnessed “shocking” destruction of villages along the Blue Line and ever-deeper Israeli ground incursions, while the situation of children across the country is becoming increasingly desperate, the UN said on Tuesday.
2
1
2
Press Conferences , Edited News | UNRWA
The head of the UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, confirmed on Monday that a large convoy of humanitarian aid was looted inside Gaza at the weekend, amid a near-total a breakdown in law and order and harassment of the agency’s staff by Israeli soldiers.
1
1
1
Edited News | OCHA
In the nearly 1,000 days since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine, thousands of civilians have been killed, the country’s energy infrastructure is on the brink and drones terrify communities on the front line, the UN’s top aid official in the country said on Friday.
2
1
2
Press Conferences , Edited News | OHCHR
Mexican actor, producer and director Diego Luna took a break from the big screen on Thursday to highlight the dangers faced by journalists in his country and beyond, condemning murders of reporters everywhere as “a scandal”.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNRWA
Gaza: ‘People are losing hope’ as aid access is refused to north, warns UNRWA
Besieged northern Gaza is a place of dead bodies lying in the streets and hospitals running out of blood packs – a situation that’s “nothing short of catastrophic”, the UN agency for Palestinian refugees (UNRWA) said on Tuesday.
1
1
1
Edited News | OHCHR
UN Human Rights Spokesperson Jeremy Laurence & Ajith Sunghay, Head of UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, on Gaza
1
1
1
Edited News | UNHCR
Sudan’s displaced have endured “unimaginable suffering” in their search for shelter from the country’s ongoing war, UN humanitarians warned on Friday.
1
1
1
Edited News | WHO
‘Exceptional achievement’: Humanitarians reach over 105,000 with polio vaccine in north Gaza
Despite ongoing attacks and access challenges, humanitarians have managed to inoculate over 105,000 children in north Gaza with the second and final dose of the oral polio vaccine, the UN World Health Organization (WHO) said on Tuesday.
1
1
1
Edited News | UNRWA
UN aid teams prepared to enter northern Gaza at the weekend to resume a mass polio vaccination campaign, the UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, said on Friday.