Bi-weekly press briefing - 19 December 2023
/
1:03:44
/
MP4
/
3.7 GB

Press Conferences

Bi-weekly press briefing - 19 December 2023

ANNOUNCEMENT

WMO - Clare Nullis: New SG Celeste Saulo starting on 1 January.

TOPICS  

  • UNICEF - James Elder: From attacks to malnutrition and no water, why Gaza is the most dangerous place on earth for a child 
  • OCHA -  Jens Laerke: Update on the humanitarian situation in Sudan following increase in fighting in Aj Jazirah State 
  • UNHCRWilliam Spindler: Displacement crisis deepens in Sudan as fighting spreads   

Gaza “Most Dangerous Place on Earth for a Child”

James Elder for United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said the Gaza Strip remained the most dangerous place in the world to be a child. Day after day, that brutal reality was reinforced.

Over the past 48 hours, the largest remaining fully functional hospital in Gaza, Al-Nasr in Khan Younis, had been shelled twice. It not only sheltered a large number of children who had brutal wounds of war, but also hundreds of women and children from across the Gaza Strip who were simply seeking safety.

Mr. Elder told of a 13-year-old girl called Dounia who had survived when her house in Khan Younis was completely destroyed, killing her mother, father and two brothers. She was badly injured and had her leg amputated. Somehow, Dounia had not lost hope. She told UNICEF, “I feel injustice. When I grew up, I'll become a lawyer so I can enjoy my rights and the rights of all children.” Dounia was one of those killed in the hospital shelling on Sunday, the day after she shared her story of hope.

“Where could children and families go?” Mr. Elder asked. They were not safe in hospitals or shelters, and certainly not safe in so-called “safe zones”. These zones could not be humanitarian when they were unilaterally declared. In addition, under international law, during evacuations, sufficient resources needed to be provided for survival, including medical facilities, food and water. Authorities had not even mentioned providing such resources.

Under the current besieged conditions, adequate supplies for such zones were impossible. They were tiny patches of barren land, street corners in neighbourhoods or half-built buildings with no water, no facilities, no shelter from the cold and now the rain and certainly no sanitation.

Currently in Gaza, there was a toilet for around every 700 people. If authorities were to relocate people from shelters to the so-called safe zones, tens of thousands of people would need to resort to buckets or open defecation. Without water, sanitation or shelter, the so-called safe zones had become zones of disease. There were over 100,000 diarrhoea cases in children, and 150,000 civilians had acute respiratory illnesses. Both these numbers were gross undercounts of the woeful reality. Malnutrition was also soaring in Gaza's children, so diarrheal and other diseases were now deadly. More than 130,000 of Gaza's most vulnerable children, new-borns up to two years of age, were not receiving the critical life-saving breastfeeding or age-appropriate complementary feeding that they absolutely required.

Without sufficient safe water, food and sanitation that only a humanitarian ceasefire could bring, child deaths due to disease could well surpass those already killed in bombardments. Parents were painfully aware that hospitals were not an option for their sick children, as they were being hit and were utterly overwhelmed with children and citizens with ghastly wounds of war. One parent of a critically sick little child told Mr. Elder, “Our situation is pure misery. I'm overwhelmed. My son is very sick. All we have is hope. I don't know if we will make it through this. Please tell the world.”

The delivery of aid was a matter of life and death for children in Gaza and the conditions to provide that aid were simply not being met. An immediate and long-lasting humanitarian ceasefire was the only way to end the killing and injuring of children and ensure the urgent delivery of desperately needed life-saving aid, so that we would not see thousands of children die from disease.

In response to questions, Mr. Elder said some trucks had delivered a tiny fraction of what was required in the north. The chaos that had been brought from the skies led to chaos on the ground, with competition over scarce resources. In the south, there were so many people on the move that it was very difficult to navigate trucks through the streets. Around four-fifths of children were eating insufficient amounts of food, which put them in the category of malnutrition.

There had been a large amount of work done by various humanitarian organizations to send in aid trucks. Before the conflict, 500 trucks a day had entered Gaza. If 100 trucks a day were currently entering Gaza, one-fifth of the population would be on its knees.

The authorities had said that the south would not endure the ferocious attacks seen in the north, but such attacks had occurred, with the only difference being that there was one million more civilians being told to flee. It had also been said with all sincerity that precision in attacks was a priority, but last week proof had emerged of the massive use of dumb bombs. Without sufficient food, water, medicines and shelter, many more Palestinian children would be killed because of wilful neglect and deathly disregard. Senior officials had said that their focus was on creating damage, not accuracy, and on eliminating everything. Those statements were the only ones that had proven to be sincere.

Ambulances had been hit in aerial bombardments. There had been delays that had led to the deaths of people. One bus with severely injured children had taken three days to move through various checkpoints.

Mr. Elder said he felt guilt about having to leave Gaza. He was furious that those with power shrugged at the humanitarian nightmares unleashed on a million children; that children who were recovering from amputations were killed in hospitals; that more children would face further injuries in the coming days; that of all the senseless attacks, the only admittance of “dumb” was the use of dumb bombs; that devastating disease did not get enough attention; that Christmas would likely bring an increase in savage attacks as the world would be busy with other issues; that the little boy of a friend he had made was now worryingly sick and they have only hope and dirty water; that around 7,000 children had been killed and they were becoming statistics, not stories; that hypocrisy was crushing empathy; and that he was unable to do more.

Around 1,000 children had lost one or more of their lower limbs as of two weeks ago. The sheer number of children with amputations was shocking. Children with amputations were often outside waiting rooms in hospitals in the north, as their conditions, while horrific, were deemed to be stable. Families had moved several times with no respite to mourn lost loved ones, impacting their psychological resolve. There was no way to get out of the conflict zone. Every single child in Gaza had endured 10 weeks of hell, and not one of them could escape.

Answering other questions, Alessandra Vellucci, Director of the United Nations Information Service in Geneva, said that the Security Council was scheduled to discuss the situation in the Middle East today at around 4 p.m. Geneva time, but there were multiple items on its agenda. She recalled the Secretary-General’s call for an immediate humanitarian ceasefire. The Secretary-General’s exceptional use of article 99 of the United Nations Charter demonstrated his concern about the situation. After the use of article 99, the Secretary-General and his staff had been in continuous dialogue with all parties able to help implement a ceasefire and improve humanitarian access.

The United Nations was doing what it could in terms of humanitarian support, and it needed more access. Colleagues were doing impossible things, and they were doing them now. United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) colleagues were working under incredible strain on the ground. Political discussions were ongoing between member States at the Security Council.

Margaret Harris for the World Health Organization (WHO) said that obstruction of ambulances and health care workers’ activities were defined as attacks on healthcare. The neutrality of healthcare needed to be respected. Sick persons, regardless of their affiliation, needed access to healthcare.

There were only eight of 36 hospitals in Gaza that were currently functioning, and they were barely functioning. WHO colleagues who had visited hospitals in Gaza had told of being afraid of stepping on people on the floor in emergency wards, and that when they were not stepping on people, they were stepping on blood. People on the floor in severe agony were not asking for pain relief, they were asking for water. It was unconscionable that the world was allowing this to continue.

WHO had a team doing limb reconstruction in Gaza, but one of its members had been killed in an airstrike.

Doctors, nurses and paramedic staff were desperately working to help people in need. Supplies needed to be delivered safely and at an appropriate volume. Roads that large trucks could travel on were limited. Women in labour were arriving at maternity hospitals on foot or being carried by donkeys. Vast numbers of people needed healthcare supplies, but very little was coming across the border and even less was making it to hospitals due to infrastructure damage.

WHO was very concerned about the welfare of medical doctors who were reportedly arrested. Only about 30 per cent of health care workers in Gaza were now available to work. At least 200 doctors had been killed and even more nurses. Many health care workers simply could not get to places where they could work.

Currently, there were only 11 doctors and nurses and 70 volunteers working at Al-Shifa Hospital, but there were tens of thousands of people sheltering there, including over 1,000 patients. There were many more patients than staff could provide care for. Staff had, however, managed to provide life-saving kidney dialyses for people in need, in spite of the dire circumstances.

 

Displacement Crisis Deepens in Sudan as Fighting Spreads

Jens Laerke for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said OCHA was alarmed by the ongoing fighting in Wad Medani in Al Jazirah state of Sudan, which started on Friday, 15 December and had continued, with airstrikes and shootings still being reported late yesterday.

Eight months into the war, this development dramatically affected the humanitarian situation in this south-eastern town of 700,000 people, and OCHA’s ability to respond there and in the wider region.

Preliminary information from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) field teams in Al Jazirah indicated that at least 250,000 people had fled Al Jazirah state, many in panic and with no other option than fleeing on foot.

Wad Medani was considered a place of refuge for nearly half a million people who fled violence and bloodshed elsewhere in the country earlier in the war.

Since April, Wad Medani had operated as a key humanitarian hub, but aid organizations had been forced to temporarily suspend operations because of the fighting and relocate to neighbouring states.

Local authorities had announced a state of emergency and introduced a nightly curfew in Wad Medani. A similar curfew was introduced in neighbouring Gedaref, Sennar and White Nile states.

All humanitarian field missions within and from Al Jazirah state had been suspended until further notice. If the fighting continued, aid distribution to two million people - about a third of the population of the state - would be compromised. The fighting needed to stop so OCHA could restart its programmes for people in acute need.

National health authorities had also relocated outside Al Jazirah state and were working remotely to coordinate emergency health response.

This put further strain on the health system in the middle of a cholera outbreak in Al Jazirah and neighbouring states.

Health care was already stretched to the limit. 70 per cent of hospitals were out of function in conflict-affected states, while facilities in non-conflict-affected states were overwhelmed by the influx of displaced people.

For context, almost 25 million people required humanitarian assistance in Sudan. The UN and partners had reached five million people with some form of assistance this year, including food, health support, shelter supplies and protection services.

Major response challenges in Sudan were a lack of access due to insecurity and bureaucratic impediments. The humanitarian community was engaging continuously with the conflict parties to address this. Funding for the response was also a challenge: the humanitarian plan for this year was only 39 per cent funded of the 2.6 billion United States dollars (USD) required.

William Spindler for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, was concerned at the deepening forced displacement crisis in Sudan and neighbouring countries, as hundreds of thousands more people fled from the latest fighting in Sudan’s central Al Jazirah state, southeast of the capital, Khartoum.

UNHCR was also very concerned about reports of an escalation in the conflict in the Darfur region. On 16 December, renewed fighting in El Fasher in north Darfur resulted in civilian casualties, injuries and further displacement, followed by looting of homes and shops and arrests of youth. In Nyala in south Darfur, an aerial attack was reported, causing death, injuries and destruction of civilian homes.

Heavy fighting, including airstrikes and shootings, was reported on the outskirts of Wad Madani, the capital of the Al Jazirah state, on Friday, 15 December. The fighting had now reached the town. After conflict first broke out in Sudan’s capital in April this year, over half a million people, including some 7,000 refugees, fled to Wad Madani from Khartoum.  

With this latest bout of fighting, panic had reportedly spread among the civilian population in Wad Madani and people were seen leaving the town in vehicles and on foot, some for the second time in only a few months. According to IOM, between 250,000 and300,000 people had fled Wad Madani and surrounding areas since the clashes began.  

UNHCR was working to deliver and distribute urgently needed core relief items to the people newly displaced from Al Jazirah to Sennar and Gedaref states. Despite efforts by national and international humanitarian organizations and local actors to provide assistance, the overall humanitarian situation remained dire.

Since the war broke out in April, more than seven million people had fled their homes in Sudan, many of them moving repeatedly to find temporary safety. This repeated displacement showed how devastating this conflict had been for the civilian population.

UNHCR was very worried that if the fighting further escalated and spread to White Nile state, it could significantly impact the work of UNHCR and other humanitarian organizations, which provided critical assistance to over 437,000 South Sudanese refugees and some 433,000 internally displaced Sudanese there. Since the onset of the conflict in April, UNHCR had provided emergency shelter to approximately 42,000 families and core relief items to nearly 12,000 vulnerable families in White Nile state and, in collaboration with United Nations and non-governmental organization partners, had taken measures to mitigate the high risk of a cholera outbreak in displacement sites. However, a spread of the fighting or any new influx could disrupt health and water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) services, resulting in severe consequences.

There were also reports of people on the move towards South Sudan, where the border town of Renk was severely overcrowded and lacking enough aid to meet the needs of the people who had already arrived. Heavy rains had made the roads impassable, hampering the relocation of refugees. UNHCR and partners were doing what they could to prepare, but resources were already severely overstretched.

It continued to strongly appeal to all parties to end the conflict, to respect the safety of civilians in accordance with international law, and to allow humanitarian access so that critical lifesaving aid and services could reach those in need.

UNHCR appreciated the funding received already from many donors, but it was just not enough to meet the needs of the families that were facing unimaginable hardship.

The 2023 Sudan Regional Refugee Response Plan, which called for one billion USD to meet the needs of 1.8 million people in Chad, Central African Republic, Egypt, Ethiopia and South Sudan this year, was only 38 per cent funded.

In response to questions, Mr. Laerke said the situation in Sudan was getting worse. There was little hope for an end to the protracted conflict, which had started as a rivalry between two generals. OCHA was continuing to speak to the conflicting parties, requesting access to those in need.

Much of Darfur was closed off, and OCHA was concerned by what it did not know. There was bureaucratic red tape being put in front of OCHA, which slowed down its operations and made aid stop-start. It was also experiencing issues with getting visas for aid workers. In addition to visas, there were requirements in certain states that caused delays in moving humanitarian personnel. Bureaucratic decisions ended in the death of people, as aid was not getting in in the scale that was needed.

Responding to questions, Mr. Spindler said UNHCR had been doing its best to continue aid operations and reach populations in need throughout the conflict in very difficult circumstances. There were areas of Sudan where operations were ongoing, but with the spreading of the fighting, those areas were decreasing and difficulties were increasing.

James Elder for United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said Sudan had the largest amount of child displacement in the world, with three million children on the move, fleeing the unrelenting, ferocious attacks. Sudan had high malnutrition rates, and the ready-to-use therapeutic food factory was burnt down. 600,000 children were unable to access food, health and other care that they needed. Many children had died because they could not access the care they needed and were severely malnourished. 14 million children needed humanitarian assistance and not a single child was able to access formal education.

Margaret Harris for the World Health Organization (WHO) said WHO was very concerned that there was an active cholera outbreak in Sudan among displaced people, which was made worse by the ongoing fighting causing disruptions to the health response. This was a very bad combination of risk factors. The health system, which had been struggling before the conflict, was hanging in the balance and was dependent on aid. Fighting was only contributing to greater misery.

 

Announcements

Clare Nullis for World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said Professor Petteri Taalas had completed his mandate and would be stepping down as Secretary-General at the end of the year. From 1 January, Professor Celeste Saulo would take office as WMO’s first female Secretary-General and first Secretary-General from South America. WMO would send out a press release in the first week of January on her appointment and likely hold a press conference with her in the second week of January.

Alessandra Vellucci, Director of the United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, said the Palais des Nations would be closed as of tomorrow until Sunday, 7 January. The closure was part of a series of energy-saving measures being implemented since October. Accredited journalists could continue to access the Palais, though the Chemin de fer gate would be closed. Such journalists could work in the heated S2 building but most Palais services, including cafeterias, would not be available. Press briefings held during the period would be in hybrid format.

Teleprompter
Good morning.
Welcome to the press briefing of the Information Service here in Geneva.
Today is Tuesday, 19th, December.
Um, we are going to hear from a few of our colleagues.
And I will also remind you before we we finish
the the rules on the arrangements for the next days.
And I really have a great pleasure to welcome James Elder,
spokesperson for UNICEF.
James, you are going to tell us about
the situation in Gaza. You've been there.
We've all seen, I think your posts.
And we've been really impressed with the work you've done. Thank you very much.
And thank you very much for witnessing on the situation. Please. You have the floor.
Very
thanks.
Good morning, everyone.
The Gaza Strip
remains the most dangerous place in the world to be a child.
Uh, and day after day, that brutal reality is reinforced.
Over the past 48 hours, the largest remaining fully functional hospital
uh, in Gaza has been shelled twice.
Now that hospital Al Nasser in Khan
Younis was a hospital. I was at on a daily basis.
It not only shelters large numbers of Children who have brutal wounds of war.
Ah,
but it also shelters hundreds and hundreds of women and Children
from across the Gaza Strip who are simply seeking safety.
Over the weekend, UNICEF had shared the story of a 13 year old girl called Dina. Uh,
now when Dina's house in
Kunis was completely destroyed,
her mother and her father and her two brothers were killed.
Dina survived, but she was badly injured and had her leg amputated.
Somehow,
um, Dina had not lost hope. She told us about her dreams.
Uh, about being a lawyer. Her quote was, I feel injustice.
When I grow up,
I'll become a lawyer so I can enjoy my rights and the rights of all Children.
Dina was one of those killed in the shelling of NASA hospital on Sunday.
Uh, the day after she shared her story of hope.
So where do Children and families go? They're not safe in hospitals.
They're not safe in shelters,
and they're certainly not safe in so-called safe zones.
So let me just spend a minute explaining why these safe zones are anything but
Parties to the conflict have an obligation to take
all feasible precautions to protect the civilian population.
In
this case,
one of those precautions they've chosen to take is
evacuation or moving to so called safe zones.
Now, as the United Nations said a month ago,
these zones cannot be humanitarian when they're unilaterally declared.
In addition, under international law, when you evacuate people to a place,
you must have sufficient resources. Surv
for survival, medical facilities, food and water
sounds very obvious.
We have not even heard lip service paid to medical facilities, food and water.
So that is that these so called safe zones
are only safe when they're not only free from bombardment,
but when those conditions food, water, medicine
and shelter are met.
However, under the current besieged conditions,
adequate supplies for such zones are impossible.
I I saw this for myself.
They are tiny patches of barren land, or they're street corners in neighbourhoods.
Or they're half built buildings with no water, no facilities,
no shelter from the cold and now the rain
and certainly no sanitation.
Currently in Gaza, there is a a toilet for around every 700 people.
You can imagine the three or four hours that means for an adolescent girl.
One toilet for 700 people
relocate people from these shelters to the so called safe zones.
And we're talking about tens of thousands of
people resorting to buckets or open defecation.
And so, without water, without sanitation nor shelter,
these so called safe zones have become zones of disease.
Diarrhoea cases in Children are now above 100,000
acute respiratory illness in civilians above 100 and 50,000.
Both these numbers will be gross undercounts of the woeful reality.
Malnutrition is also soaring in Gaza's Children.
Therefore, things like diarrheal diseases are now deadly.
Consider this.
More than 100 and 30,000 of um, Gaza's most vulnerable Children, that is,
newborns up to two years of age
are not receiving the critical life saving breastfeeding
or age appropriate complementary feeding that they absolutely require.
So that's our SS scenario without sufficient safe water,
food and sanitation that only a humanitarian ceasefire would bring,
child deaths due to disease could well
surpass those already killed in bombardments.
Now parents are painfully aware that hospitals are
not an option for their sick child,
both because hospitals are, as we've mentioned, being hit
and because hospitals are utterly overwhelmed
with Children and citizens with ghastly wounds of war.
As a parent who I became friends with who sent me a message
just a couple of days ago of a critically sick little child.
Told me quote,
Our situation is pure misery. I'm overwhelmed. My son is very sick.
I told my wife we have to lower expectations. All we have is hope.
I don't know if we will make it through this. Please tell the world
now as we speak, the delivery of aid is a matter of life and death for Children in Gaza.
And the conditions to provide that aid are simply not being met.
An immediate and long lasting humanitarian ceasefire is the
only way to end the killing and injuring of Children
and ensure the urgent delivery of desperately needed life saving aid.
So we do not see thousands of Children die from disease.
Thank you.
Thank you, James. Very, very dire situation.
So I'll start with the questions at S Emma.
Morning, James. I was wondering if you have, um,
any idea of the scope of, uh, the M?
Sorry. The scale of the malnutrition in Gaza among Children at the moment.
And how worried are you about starvation? Um,
and if you could comment about,
um whether you're able to reach people in in the north
at all now and what your concerns are for them.
Thanks a lot.
OK, so
yes. So the the North. Yes, some some trucks have made a a tiny fraction
of what is required.
and it is now a double problem with all aid deliveries, which is both
the quantity being coming in
and the conditions for aid delivery,
both because of rising in security because of pure desperation.
Yeah, you, your mother has not had clean water for two days.
Your five year old has not had clean water for two days. Somebody has clean water.
So the chaos that's been brought from the skies is panning out to chaos on the ground.
And in the South. There's just so many people on the move.
It's literally very difficult to navigate trucks through the streets.
II, I I'll let WFP if I may on starvation, because it's it's their it's their line.
I do know that we've seen a A
very quick survey. Seems like something like 4/5 of Children,
are are eating in insufficient amount of food that would put them in a category of,
you know, increased risk of malnutrition and illness.
I do think there'll be more on that in the coming days.
Yes, indeed. I think we can expect more numbers before the end of the day.
The week
on the situation of
hunger in Gaza. I think there will be new numbers released before the end of the week.
Let me see. Yes. Christian.
Yes. Thank you, James.
So the problem at this point is not the amount that is delivered,
but it's the distribution.
Do I understand that correctly,
Or is there also not enough coming in across the borders?
Absolutely. Both
if we
honestly, I find getting into the numbers of trucks perilous.
But there's been huge work done from, you know, the Egyptian Red Cross,
the Palestinian Red Cross.
UN
R, of course. WHO, UNICEF
WFP. Everyone has.
But it was Christiane before that's the atrocities of the seventh of October.
It was 500 commercial and
aid trucks a day,
and there are part. There have been periods where it's been none to the North.
And so now if it's around 100 it's 1/5 for a population absolutely on its knees.
And I think That's
part of,
um, the great challenge here because we consistently hear language that speaks to,
um that speaks to a sincerity of increasing aid from the
those people who have power.
if I can digress for a second
in 2007 8 when I was in Sri Lanka, you know, I learned a lot in that time,
and so did the United Nations.
We had the independent panel a review review, of course, on failings in
in Sri Lanka.
Uh, there was a quote that was used then by John F Kennedy,
which is sincerity is subject to proof.
II.
I wanna reflect on a few of the things the the
sincere statements we've heard with those who have the power to prevent
carnage of Children.
So we've been told in all sincerity
that the South would not possibly endure the indiscriminate attacks of the North.
Um Then I saw and I spoke to colleagues
with a military background who were in the north,
the south
enduring every bit as ferocious as those attacks.
The only difference being,
of course in the south that they had a million more civilians who'd been told to flee.
We were also told with all sincerity that precision in attacks was a priority.
Then last week, of course,
we were told of the the proof of the massive use of dumb bombs.
And now we're told in all sincerity of these so-called safe zones.
And we are telling you that without a ceasefire without sufficient food, water,
medicines and shelter,
then we will see many more Palestinian Children
killed because of wilful neglect and deathly disregard
to be frank.
The only things I can recall when sincerity and proof went hand in hand,
is when senior senior officials have said things like quote.
Our focus is on creating damage, not accuracy.
Gaza won't return to what it was before. We will eliminate everything.
The sincerity in those statements
has been proven with every additional child killed.
Thank you, James. Is there any other question in the room? I'll go to the platform.
OK, so let's go to Catherine B.
Catherine
Mon
Ali.
Sandra.
Good morning. Uh, James And and, uh, thank you so much for for covering, Uh, that, uh,
that topic with, uh, your expertise.
Um, it's very valuable for for the the press.
Um, Alessandra, I have
question for you and for James.
For you.
Could you tell us precisely at what time will the Security Council meet today
To vote on the second. I mean, the new
resolution.
That's number one.
And, um
also, is there anyone of human rights? Um, connected?
Because, um, I'd like also to, um, ask them a related question to the topic.
Uh, James, could you give us more details? Also, about the fact that, um
um, according a certain witnesses, the Israeli forces
are blocking ambulances,
Uh, in order for them to reach hospitals.
So I'd like to know, um, from the
from human rights. Is that a crime of war?
If it constitutes a crime of war
and if they're monitoring, uh, all of that And what are the decision taken,
uh, towards the parties that are violating
humanitarian law, and particularly, um,
to the crimes against Children.
Thank you.
Thank you, Catherine, For what concerns the Security Council.
It is listed on the live schedule of UN web TV for 4 p.m. Geneva time. But
what I cannot tell you is exactly the time, because they are going to speak.
They've got several items
on their
and the first one is that the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Then there will be two items on the Middle East,
so and then there will be some other items on their agenda. So
I would say connect at 4 p.m. Geneva time,
and then you will have to see when they take up the the item on Palestine.
What I can tell you is that there will be an open briefing,
but it will be followed by close consultation, so it won't be as usual.
It won't be. The whole session will not be
Webcast, but you can listen to the initial part.
Uh, James.
Katherine. Hi. Thanks. I mean, WHO, as you know, have been just stellar in
everything they've done on the ground.
But also, of course, in the in the way that they've been able to share
information and violation, so I would defer to them.
But we know that ambulances have been hit in aerial bombardments.
We know there have been delays that have led to the deaths of people.
Uh, I certainly saw a bus with Children with the most horrific injuries.
It took three days to get through various checkpoints,
but you're specific on the L in the last few days.
And ambulances as they continue to seek to move,
to move patients to wherever, maybe safe, which would be Egypt.
Um, I'd ask you to check with them.
Unfortunately, we don't have anybody from
this morning, but we have Margaret. So Margaret will have
news
on this subject.
Margaret. Thank you. Thank you, Catrin.
Yes. Obstruction of an ambulance.
Obstruction of healthcare personnel preventing healthcare
personnel from doing their job.
All of these things are considered are defined as a tax on health care. Now our job
is to verify those things report on them.
If they It's other agencies that actually then go
to the further step of looking at whether or not
criminality is involved. But
militarization.
Sorry.
Any the critical?
The the critical principle is neutrality of healthcare.
It doesn't matter who you're transporting. If they're injured, they're sick.
They're a patient.
They need care. Doesn't matter what their affiliation is.
Doesn't matter who you think they are.
If they are a sick person, they're an injured person.
They must have access to healthcare. That is the principle
indeed. Let's go
to Lisa. Mister
Schlein.
Uh, thank you. Yes.
Good morning. and good morning, James. It's it's nice to see you.
Uh, I was very moved by much of your reporting from Gaza.
It seemed very personal. And I'm wondering
how you felt when you were told that you had to leave Gaza. How you feel now,
Did you, in a sense, feel, uh, kind of abandon that you were,
in some ways abandoning the Children
that you should remain?
Hm?
Hi, Lisa. It's a very good question. Um, oddly, I was
trying to come to terms with that myself and was scribbling things down yesterday.
and I have been asked that several times what it's
like to be out of Gaza and and essentially,
yes,
the the predominant feeling or the answer I gave
was around the the guilt of having to leave.
I think I could expand on that and say,
because I wrote things down.
Truly, I I'm furious.
I'm furious that those with power shrug as the
humanitarian nightmares un unleashed on a million Children.
I'm furious that Children who are recovering from amputations
in hospitals are then killed in those hospitals.
I'm furious that there are more Children hiding as we speak somewhere.
Um, who will no doubt be hit and have amputations in the coming days.
Um, I'm furious that of all the senseless attacks, the only admittance of dumb
is the use of dumb bombs.
Uh, I'm furious that disease is as well armed as the warring parties, But no,
it gets absolutely no attention.
Um, I'm furious,
as I said that that that that little boy out of a friend I made is now worryingly sick,
and they have only hope and dirty water.
Um, uh,
Lisa,
I'm furious that Christmas is likely going to bring increased savagery
in attacks as the world is distracted with its own,
you know, love and goodwill.
I'm furious that now we're at 56, 7000 Children killed,
and they're becoming statistics.
And not
and and not stories. Um, I'm furious that the, you know,
hypocrisy is crushing empathy, and yeah, to To a degree,
I'm furious at myself for not being able to do more.
And we hear your grades and
and just recall the the the very strong calling for
a humanitarian ceasefire that the Secretary General has been consistently
asking for. And we all
I'll go now to Ui.
Yes. Thank you. Alexandra James. It is a very short question.
Can you please repeat the name of the hospital that was hit two time, Uh, in canyons.
Thank you.
Yes, it's
NASA
hospital.
I
mean,
Doctor Harris will have more details, but it is our NASA hospital, which was
the, um, in terms of capacity, the second largest hospital in the Gaza Strip.
So therefore the largest functioning now,
uh, given what had occurred with Shifa
Margaret
Uh,
yeah, I. I don't really have much more to add except that
we're seeing. We've only got eight of 36 hospitals functioning anyway.
And when we say functioning, it's really barely functioning.
Every hospital that our teams have visited find that
there's massive overcrowding, massive need.
They talk about not even being able to walk in
the emergency areas because for fear of stepping on people
and when they're not stepping on people, they're stepping on blood.
It's a scene that none of my colleagues,
all of whom are people experience with emergencies are are doctors.
They've never seen anything like it. And what I hear in meetings is
I have no words. I've run out of words.
I don't know how to even describe the horror I'm seeing
the people in the hospitals. Yes, they need everything they need.
Medical supplies. But what they ask for first is food and water.
The very basics. They do not have them.
One of my colleagues described people lying on the floor in
severe pain in agony,
but
they weren't asking for
pain relief. They were asking for water
that
it's beyond belief that the world is allowing this to continue.
I can only concur with James.
I haven't been there. But
just what I'm seeing and hearing from my colleagues is something that it's
unconscionable that the world allows this to continue.
Mohammed?
Yes.
Uh, thank you, Alexandra. Uh, my question also, about, uh uh, uh,
human rights, But, uh uh,
I couldn't see anyone, Uh, let my, uh, ask my question.
Uh, According to Israeli media,
most of the Palestinians detained by Israel in Gaza
since October 7 died in a detention centre
near the city of
Brei.
Is the United Nations aware of this situation?
I really called for an international investigation
into this incident. Thank you.
Uh, Mohammed. Thank you. I think really, this is really a question for human rights.
colleagues and maybe you want to send them a message, or I can relay or, uh,
your question, but I don't know if we we don't think any of us could comment on that.
It's really something we will have to ask
our colleagues. Um, let me go to John.
Yes.
Good morning. Uh, nice to see you back, James. And, uh, on behalf of
akanu just to reiterate, uh, in your absence, we awarded you the first OK,
au humanitarian award for field, uh, briefing from an emergency. So,
uh, congrats on that.
And I've got a question, uh, that I've asked many, many times
to Margaret and, uh, Rick Peppercorn and others.
Do we have an initial estimate of how many
Children have had their limbs amputated in this crisis
And, uh, what is happening with, uh, support for prostheses, et cetera,
which would be very difficult in this environment.
Thank you.
Congratulation, James
very much.
But I don't know who would like, uh, you would like to say something like that.
And I, um
uh, went
with a health colleague.
Yes, and we called every single hospital that was still functioning,
and but this was now two weeks ago,
and the number was approximately around the 1000 mark of Children who had lost, um,
one or more of their lower limbs.
Certainly, John.
Again, I don't have specific numbers,
but what I can tell you is that we had prior to
this war a very fine team doing limb reconstruction in Gaza.
Our our patient management,
staff member
Dina Dima
was killed in an airstrike. So not only
are we having the Children injured
the people there serving them are also being killed and dying.
Catherine?
Yes, Um,
a question for you.
Uh, Alessandra, I, um I think it's it's going to be a bit difficult for you to answer,
but I'm asking, um, to you,
uh you recall that in in 2011
In, In
in? Yes, it was in 2011.
Uh, the there was a UN resolution, uh, about Libya.
And at that time, um, there was a a multi state, NATO led coalition, Uh, that
took a decision to
make an intervention in Libya in order to implement the UN resolution.
Do you think that
in front of so
much horror
in front of so much violation
of human rights,
we will reach
that same situation in order to stop
the country
that is openly violating all humanitarian laws.
Katrin,
I don't think we are in the business of speculating on what's
going to come.
But what I can tell you is that
the fact that the secretary general so exceptionally used
Article 99
it says what it says. I mean, the secretariat is doing what we can.
Of course, I cannot prejudge what the
member states will decide and how the implementation of the resolution,
not only the latest one.
There are many resolutions, but the latest one, indeed, on the humanitarian
on stopping the guns in order to allow for humanitarian aid
will be implemented.
But definitely I think that on our side, we are really doing.
And the secretary general is doing what he can after the use of Article 99
and,
as you know, the non approval of the resolution by the Security Council.
He has been and his staff and been on the phone with everyone
that can have an influence on the situation in order to obtain this humanitarian
pa or ceasefire, as we have been asking for.
So we are not going to stop or continue to advocate for this,
and we will see how it
will develop.
Yes, of course.
James James would like to add something to John's questions, please.
Thank you,
John.
The Children with amputations.
One of the reasons that I think that as Margaret is
pointing to and what I found is that you know,
compa comparing, um, crisis zones is un unhelpful and
and not fair. Because, of course, we're well aware of what you know.
Children in Sudan right now are enduring
what struck and why.
Your question on amputations is so real, is just the sheer number.
It was in a hospital and you would turn in every corner
I would in I would speak to five or six Children with amputations
and have five or six other carers
we wanting me,
then to go and see other Children you were
talking about dozens in a in a single hospital,
much less in other hospitals in the north that I went to that were referral.
Hospitals
and Children with amputations were often outside awaiting care because
I guess they were seen as critical and stable,
not just critical,
and that then just segues to the trauma in that country.
Trauma, of course, being a psychological term. But let's say mental health stress.
It was four in five Children before October 7,
and I think it's safe to say, now it's every single child.
but of course,
Gaza is the worst place in the world to possibly recover from anything.
So you've got these families moving 345 times,
their their physical resolve,
being depleted every time but their psychological resolve.
They're meant to be dealing with the grief of a killed mother or brother.
And yet they're moving time and again
A.
And I think that's what makes this so remarkable and so bleak that
for almost every other crisis we can imagine
the place you go for safety is outside of that conflict zone.
There is no way to get outside of this conflict
zone apart from these cynically so called safe zones.
So I think that's what makes beyond the sheer
numbers of Children with amputations the sheer number of
Children with amputations who have not yet been told
that their parents also died in the attack.
And, of course,
that every single child is enduring this 10 weeks
of hell and not one of them can escape.
Indeed.
Uh,
sorry. Um, Eliza, Eliza has raised her hand first. Lisa?
Uh, yeah. Thanks. This is actually for anyone. For you also.
Uh, Alessandra, whoever can answer it,
I was wondering whether um,
uh, any proof has been found that these hospitals which have been attacked, uh,
have been
our
shield. Um, shielding Hamas
terrorists.
Um, also, um,
Margaret,
are you
in terms of supplies?
Are you lacking? Really? Still
unable to deliver
what is needed. I mean, it's, uh, so many supplies. Life saving supplies of all sorts
are unable to get in,
but I was wondering whether there was any sort of improvement or not.
Thank you.
Please. On your first question, I think I will, uh,
refer you to what Mr Lazzarini said at his press conference the other day.
But, uh, I will try to track track down what he said for you, but, uh,
I think ura has been answering these questions,
and I don't know if you have anything to add, Margaret.
Uh, well, certainly what we see when we go to the hospitals is healthcare. We see
doctors, nurses, paramedical staff,
desperately working to deal with people who are very sick, who are desperate,
who are in need.
That's what we see in all the hospitals that we go to
on the supplies.
Yes, some supplies are coming in,
but there are two issues, and James alluded to it before.
It's not just bringing them in across the crossings.
It's then getting them to where they're needed,
in volume and, uh, with safety. And that's
often impossible. We arrange. We organise missions every day
to or plan missions every day to the hospitals. We have to go through deconfliction.
We have to make sure that they can go safely,
but also the roads that any truck that's got bringing, um,
reasonable amounts of supplies can go on. There are very few of the such such roads.
You know,
some of the hospitals, we, um even the patients can't physically get there.
There's a maternity hospital in the north.
The the women in labour are arriving, either carried by relatives or on donkeys
that,
uh, and certainly vehicles just cannot access these hospitals. So so
just
bringing in the volumes are needed.
And remember, every day,
vast numbers of people are being injured vast numbers
of people are sick now from other diseases.
Vast numbers of people need healthcare way more
than was needed in normal times.
And yet so little, uh, is either coming across the border.
But then even less can actually get to
the hospitals because of the massive infrastructure damage.
I hope that helps.
Thank you, Katherine.
Uh, thank you, Margaret.
Uh, do you have any news from the medical doctors that have been arrested?
And are some medical doctors still arrested? As far as you know,
So I don't have the numbers, but certainly we are with partners, um,
very concerned about their welfare and continually, uh,
advocating to ensure that they are,
um uh, uh, uh. Protected and looked after.
But we I don't have any specific information. Sorry.
Last questions to Emma.
Thanks. It's sort of related. Margaret, um,
you've been reporting on detentions and deaths among health care workers.
I'm just wondering if you have any idea of sort of what portion
of health care workers, um, are still in their functions.
And if you have anything on Kamal
at
one hospital, there were horrific reports, um, of,
uh, bulldozing in the courtyard of people living in tents.
Do you have any confirmation of that at all? Thank you.
On your second. I don't have specific confirmation, but obviously every
report we we look to to verify,
uh,
the numbers I have and I'll have to give them to you separately.
But I think the reduction
is we've only got about 30% of healthcare workers now available to work. Uh, there.
Originally, there were something like 20,000 healthcare workers.
I'll have to get the numbers. I
should have got them up.
but there's been a massive reduction, and we've seen at least 200 doctors killed.
I don't have the specific numbers of nurses,
but you can presume that that that there is even more
numbers of nurses who've been killed.
and
many of the healthcare workers simply can't get to the hospitals to do the work.
They've already been displaced from wherever they were,
and now they're sheltering somewhere with their families. So again, even
though healthcare workers may have moved from the north to the south,
it's not necessarily possible for them to come to work.
We do know in Al
Shifa, which has restarted its work.
Um, there were 11. 0, you've got the numbers in front of me. That's superb.
Uh, yeah, yeah.
Uh, only house houses, 11
doctors and nurses.
So that was 56 doctors, five nurses, or it could be the other way around.
But basically 11,
there are 70 volunteers,
but they're not people who were trained to be doctors or nurses.
They are just people who are trying to help.
And there are tens of thousands of people sheltering there,
Um, at least 1000 patients. And
when I was describing before the my colleagues going in, it was our sheer
where they went into the emergency department
and
couldn't walk for people. Just people lying there,
desperate for help and
and again, you've got
It's a 750 bed hospital.
You've got 11 healthcare workers trying to deal with that, and
and you've got thousands more patients than those 750 beds.
So you've got many, many more patients than can actually go in the bed, so
but they are doing what they can, you know, they've got the dialysis, um,
the department working again.
They're working 24 hours to provide dialysis because
it's the only place that can provide dialysis.
And if you are a person with kidney failure, if you don't get dialysis every few days,
you die.
So despite
the impossible odds,
they are continuing to try to provide health care in what I would describe as
an impossibility. But they are doing what they can.
Thank you very much. Um,
Gabriela, it's really the last one. We have other other subjects to to touch upon.
Really? The last one. Go ahead.
Thank you. Thank you very much. Alexandra. Hi, James. Hi. Uh, Margaret,
my question is,
uh, you mentioned Alexandra that Secretary General General, uh,
used, uh, the Article 99 of the chart.
What else can he do?
What else can United Nations can do to
To to try to stop this
horror? Uh, going on. Uh, is
it the United Nations failing? I mean,
the the the situation is beyond words, but I just wanted to ask, uh,
what else can be done.
Thank you.
I think the answer to your questions is multiple, Gabriela.
First of all, not what else we can do. But what else we are doing.
And I think you heard from
our colleagues on the humanitarian
side that the UN is doing what it can
in terms of humanitarian support. And obviously,
as we have said, we need to have more access.
We need to have more humanitarian aid coming in. It is not sufficient
and we have said it several times.
But colleagues, as as Margaret said,
are doing impossible things and they are doing it now.
So it's not a question of what we are we are going to do. We are doing it now.
We are doing it as much as we can. I think UN W uh,
colleagues are working under incredible strain and they are there.
They are really physically there.
And, uh,
you have heard the commissioner General Lazzarini, saying,
you know
that
the humanitarian aid, whenever possible, is there in desperate situations.
And then, of course there is the political process.
And as we said before with Catrin,
there will be this discussion at the Security Council this afternoon.
Obviously, this is a decision of member states,
and what we can do as Secretariat in terms of political action
they will
work is being done, as I said by the Secretary General, who is
really all the time on the phone and in contact with these people with these
senior staff working with those who have an influence and who could eventually
help get into this humanitarian ceasefire and more access for humanitarian aid.
And I close here now, on this subject, I would like to really thank you very much,
James.
Thanks so much for for being there for being here for we are happy to see you back.
And, uh, thank you very much, Margaret, for this update,
I'll ask Jens to come to the podium.
Jens and William are going to talk to us about another dire situation.
Very dire humanitarian situation in Sudan.
And I understand, Margaret, if there are questions on the medical aspects,
you are also able to answer
on Sudan, so I'll start now with Jens, and then we will go to William.
Thank you, Alessandra. Good morning, everyone.
Indeed, from
one bleeding wound to another
in Sudan, we are alarmed by the ongoing fighting in
Wad Madani
in Al Jazeera state that started on Friday, the 15th
of December,
and have continued with airstrikes and
shootings still being reported late yesterday.
Eight months into the war,
this development dramatically affects the humanitarian situation
in the south eastern town of some
700,000 people and our ability to respond there and in the wider region.
Preliminary information from our IOM
colleagues in Al Jazeera indicates that at least 250,000 people have fled
Al Jazeera state, many in panic
and with no other option than fleeing on foot
wad.
Madani was considered a place of refuge and safety
for nearly half a million people who fled violence
and bloodshed elsewhere in the country earlier in the war
that has now ended
since April Wad
Madani has also operated as a key humanitarian hub,
but aid organisations have been forced to temporarily suspend operations
because of the fighting and relocate to neighbouring states.
Local authorities have announced a state of
emergency and introduced a nightly curfew.
A
similar curfew was introduced in neighbouring Garre
SAR and White Nile states.
All humanitarian field missions within and from Al
Jazeera state have been suspended until further notice.
If the fighting continues, aid distribution for some 2 million people,
about a third of the population in the state
will be compromised
and we need the fighting to stop so we
can restart our programmes for people in acute need.
National health authorities have also relocated outside of Al Jazeera
state and are working remotely to coordinate emergency health response.
This puts further strain on the health system in the middle
of a cholera outbreak in the state and neighbouring states.
Healthcare is already stretched to the limit.
70 per cent of hospitals are out of function in conflict defected states,
while facilities in non conflict
def states are overwhelmed by the influx of displaced people.
For context, almost 25 million people require humanitarian assistance in Sudan.
The UN and our partners have reached 5 million people with some form of assistance.
So the
fifth
that assistance includes food, health support,
shelter supplies and protection services.
The major response challenges in Sudan,
our lack of access
and that's due to insecurity but also bureaucratic impediments.
The humanitarian community engages continuously with
the conflict parties to address this.
Funding for the response is also a challenge.
The humanitarian plan for this year about to wrap up
is only 39% funded of the 2.6 billion required.
Thank you.
Thank you very much,
Jens. And I'll go now to win him.
Thank you, Alessandra.
to complement. What? Uh, Jens has, uh, uh told you about this, uh, deepening
crisis in Sudan as fighting spreads.
Uh, we'd like to, uh, say that, uh, UN AC R is, uh, also very concerned
about the deepening forced displacement crisis,
uh,
both in Sudan and in the neighbouring countries as
hundreds of thousands more people flee from the latest fighting
in Al Jazeera state,
uh, to other parts of Sudan.
We are also very concerned about the reports of an escalation
in the conflict in the Darfur
region.
On the 16th of December, renewed fighting in Al
Fasher
in North Darfur resulted in civilian casualties,
injuries and further displacement,
followed by looting of homes and shops
and arrests of youth.
In
Yala in South Darfur,
an aerial attack was reported, causing death,
injuries and destruction of civilian homes
as we heard from yens.
Heavy fighting, including airstrikes and shootings,
was reported on the outskirts of Wad Madani, the capital of the Al Jazeera state,
on Friday.
The fighting has now reached the town
after conflict first broke out in Sudan's capital in April.
Over half a million
people, including some 7000 refugees fled to wad Madani from Khartoum.
With this latest bout of fighting.
Panic has reportedly spread among the civilian population in Wad
Madani
and people were seen leaving the town on vehicles and on foot,
some for the second time in only a few months.
According to IOM,
between 550,000 people have fled Wad Madani
and surrounding areas since the clashes began.
UNHCR
is working to deliver and distribute urgently needed coal relief
items to the people newly displaced from Al Jazeera to SA
and Jed
states.
Despite efforts by national and international humanitarian
organisations and local actors to provide assistance,
the overall humanitarian situation remains dire.
Since the war broke out in April,
more than 7 million people have fled their homes in Sudan,
many of them moving repeatedly to find temporary safety.
This repeated
displacement shows how devastating this conflict
has been for the civilian population.
We are very worried that if the
fighting further escalates and spreads to white knight
state, it could significantly impact the work of UN, AC,
R and other humanitarian organisations
that provide critical assistance to over 437,000 south Sudanese refugees
and some 433,000 internally displaced Sudanese there.
Since the onset of the conflict in April,
Eurasia
has provided emergency shelter to approximately 42
families and coal relief items to nearly 12,000 vulnerable families.
There are also reports of people on the move towards south Sudan,
where the border town of rank is severely overcrowded and lacking enough
aid to meet the needs of the people who have already arrived.
Heavy rains have made the roads impassable,
hampering the relocation of refugees.
UNHCR and partners are doing what they can to prepare,
but resources were already severely overstretched.
We continue to strongly appeal to all parties to end the conflict,
to respect the safety of civilians in accordance with international law
and to allow humanitarian access so that critical
life saving aid and services can reach those in need.
Thank you.
Thank you very much, William.
Uh,
and
for this comprehensive update, I'll open the floor to question first in the room.
I don't see any hand up.
OK, so let's go to the platform. Peter.
Uh, thanks for taking my question.
Uh, this seems to be pretty dire in Sudan. Uh, Jens.
Um I'm just wondering, Is the situation worsening
and is the Is is it as bad as it has been?
You also mentioned impediments. Uh, UN, uh, problems for of impediments For UN.
Uh uh, personnel to to get to places. Could you elaborate on those, please?
Thank you. Uh, Peter, for for that question.
Without a doubt, the situation is getting worse.
We are getting into this territory where we're talking about protracted
conflict with very little
light at the end of the tunnel.
At
this
point,
it is,
as you know, started with a rivalry between two generals.
I recall Martin Griffith at the beginning
of this, asking them to knock it off.
Obviously, they haven't.
We continue, of course, to, um
to speak to the parties,
as as I mentioned for the for the purpose of gaining access to the people in need
we have, as I have read out to you.
And as you can read in our reports, we have some data from some places about
how bad it is. What really worries us are what we do not know.
A lot of Darfur, for example, is pretty much closed off.
There is very little information coming out from from from there.
And we are extremely concerned about what may be happening
that we are not seeing.
So it is
as bad
as
it gets
in terms of impediments.
So these are these are restrictions bureaucratic red
tape that are put in front of us.
We don't understand why, really.
But we can see clearly what the effect is, and that is
it slows down operations.
In some
instances, it stops it. It's kind of a stop start
thing
you get to
to one bureaucratic barrier.
You overcome that just to meet another one on the other side.
we are also having issues with getting the visas that we need.
Many aid workers are are trying to get in
to help beef up the operation. The visas are are not getting through,
so we we can't go in.
So those are these kind of
bureaucratic decisions
that ends up in
the death of people. Frankly,
because the operation is not
anywhere near at the scale it should be.
Thank you very much. Lisa.
Yeah? Hi. Uh, first William, I assume that your notes are on the way. Right?
Thank you.
Um, I'm wondering um,
has humanitarian aid essentially stopped in the,
conflict hotspots.
And then, uh, I. I hope James is there. I don't know if he is, he is
that
good? Ok, James, could you,
uh,
comment to, uh, tell us what the situation of Children is? Uh,
I'm not.
I know you prepared for Gaza,
so I don't know whether you have all the information ready, but
anything that you could tell us to enlighten us about the condition of Children
in Sudan would be very much appreciated. Thank you.
Thank you. Um, James, maybe you wanna come to the podium.
And meanwhile, I don't know, maybe William
and
Jens.
Yeah, Go ahead,
William.
Thanks. Alessandra.
I I'm not sure what, uh, what? The question was, uh um,
but but, uh, if if it refers to the, uh, possibility of continuing, uh,
operations in South Sudan
that this has been going on for, uh, for for some time throughout, uh,
the conflict with, uh, very, uh,
difficult, Uh uh, circumstances.
But,
uh uh, We have been doing our best to reach, uh, the population, uh, with, uh, uh,
humanitarian aid.
And until very recently,
uh, what? Madani was a fairly stable place.
Uh, as Jens, uh, pointed out And, uh, it was a humanitarian hub,
and also a place where, uh, hundreds of thousands of people sought refuge because,
uh, the fighting had not reached there.
So there are areas of Sudan where
operations are ongoing and, uh,
where humanitarian assistance is being delivered.
Uh, but, uh, with the spreading of the fighting, these areas are becoming, um,
fewer and fewer.
Um, and the difficulties that we are facing are are, uh, getting, uh, more and more,
uh, challenging.
I saw you nodding when Lisa was asking for the notes, right?
Yes. The the notes will be sent there. The the notes will be sent, uh, straight away.
Thank you very much. James.
Hi. Thanks. Lisa. Yeah, It's a
It's something I do need to,
brief on and
in the early in the new year,
hopefully go into Sudan through Darfur.
What can we say now? Uh, it's the largest child displacement
in the world.
I think there's 3 million Children somewhere on the move from from as Jen said,
just the unrelenting ferocious attacks.
Sudan has always Lisa had one of the highest malnutrition rates.
The severest type, the type that will kill a child,
particularly if you're on the move.
Particularly if,
as we know, the, um, ready to use therapeutic food factory was burnt down.
So 600,000 Children,
um, with a
impossibility for many of them to access the kind of care,
be it therapeutic food or simply medical support that they need.
So whatever reported deaths we have.
And of course, the monitoring and reporting mechanism
takes time and is triangular verification. But you can
be assured that many times more that number of
Children will have been killed beyond grave violations.
Simply those Children who can't access,
uh, the care that they need because they are severely malnourished.
Um, I think it's 14 million Children need humanitarian assistance, Lisa.
And
not a single child is, um, accessing formal education.
Wow,
Katrine.
Yes. Thank you. Hi. Good morning, Jens.
Regarding Sudan as we know that the Security Council terminated the mandate
of the mission in Sudan
and you just spoke about restriction of visas.
Does it affect the humanitarian people that are still working from,
I think Is it port Sudan?
Could you please um, specify if they're able to still work. Thank you.
Yes, Thank you. Catherine. Yes. The hub remains in Port Sudan,
where the humanitarian coordinator is also
working. Working from
the visas are for getting into Sudan in the first place. So that's the first hurdle.
But there are also sometimes additional requirements
of moving between the states,
which which can also cause
delays.
Um, in moving humanitarian personnel around,
Thank you very much. And I don't see other questions on Sudan.
So I would like to thank all our humanitarian colleagues
and we have online. Oh,
sorry. You wanna add something?
Yeah. Go ahead. Sure, Sure.
Please.
So Margaret has something about cholera.
So just a quick ad while we're on the subject, we're very concerned, obviously,
about the news of the fighting, because there's an active cholera
outbreak and
a lot as has been mentioned by other
colleagues with a large number of displaced people sheltered
there.
So fighting displaced people, cholera is a very, very, very bad combination.
Um, we like others. You mentioned the hub. We've got a, um
we've got a, uh a big, um
uh, hub in Wad
madani
as well. It's been the backbone of our health response to K
toum.
So not only do you have cholera,
but you've got a disruption to the response to
all the other people who are desperately in need.
And this is a health system that was struggling before the conflict.
And it's just been,
really, really degraded. And
health. The health system's really sort of hanging in the balance
right now. Uh, you know, it's utterly dependent on a I DS. So
the fighting is only contributing to the greater misery of the people there.
Indeed. Thank you very much.
So I don't see other question.
So thank you very much to all the colleagues who've been briefing.
Um, I'd like to give the floor now to Claire. Newly for WMO. Uh,
who has to
answer
a news, which is not the news,
Claire, because we all know. But it's nice to hear
that. Um,
you'll tell us about your new boss.
Sure. Um, yes. Ok, you can see me and, um
and hear me. Um, sorry. I'm not with you in in the room. Um
um, but I am. I am obviously in the office. Um
uh,
so, as you know, uh, Professor Petri
tales,
uh, will be standing down at the end of this year. Um, he's completed his,
uh, maximum, uh, two term mandate.
So he's been with, uh, WMO for the past eight years.
You've met him, You know, during, uh,
during that time you've met him repeatedly on on many occasions.
Um, so it is the end of an era for for WMO. Uh, on the first of January.
Uh, we're delighted to welcome,
uh, a new secretary general. Uh, Professor Celeste
Saulo. She was elected,
uh, by the World Meteorological Congress back in June.
So it has been, you know, quite a long transition period.
Uh, she will take office on the first of January as
WM OS, first female secretary general. So we're especially glad about that.
And the first, um, the first Secretary General from From South America.
Um, I know that you will all be wanting to to meet her to interview her. Um, we will
send out a press release.
Hopefully, you know, the second or the third of January, just to
introduce you to her a little bit.
And then, um, I'm planning on having a press conference with her. It will probably be
the second week of January given that.
I know that quite a few people are away in in in the first week, so it'll probably be,
um, I'll I'll liaise with, uh, with Alexandra's team.
But as I said, it'll probably be the week commencing the the eighth, uh,
the eighth of January.
Uh, we'll try to avoid
doing it on a regular briefing day because I know UN TV is is busy. So,
you know, just, uh, be be bear with me.
But, uh, you know, we obviously will be giving the the
pet press corps, um, priority access to her, uh, in the, uh, in the opening days,
but thanks.
Thank you very much. Claire, is there any question?
Yes, Antonio.
Uh, thank you. Well, it's on another topic, but also for WMO. It's, uh,
this, uh, uh, volcano in Iceland that has erupted this morning.
Uh, I know it's very soon, but
do you have any
initial information on this?
And, uh, can this event, uh, trigger, uh,
some air traffic problems like it happened a few years ago?
Also in Iceland. Thank you.
Um, let me check on that. Um, the you know, as we all know,
Iceland has many very, very active, um,
volcanoes. Um, the ice.
The Icelandic Meteorological Office is actually
the organ the organisation within Iceland,
which is responsible for monitoring of volcanic activity and
eruptions. I will check with with them on the latest
in terms of disruption to, uh,
traffic.
Again I would need to check with with With With With our
With our experts on that we do have quite a well organised,
um, network. Um, the international Volcanic ash advisory network.
I think it it's called, um, who work together, you know, to to To to assess,
to assess the situation.
But let me let let me check.
And I can I can get back to you on that rather than, uh, speaking to the top of my head.
Ok, any other question to the
on the platform or in the room? No. OK, Claire, thank you very much. Yes.
Please coordinate with us for the
for the first press
of
your new secretary general Cest
de
solo.
Um, if there are no other questions, I'll give you a few updates on the,
uh I have been asked to to to state again
the arrangements for the next day. As we have said that
several times. Uh, now, the Paladin
as room will be closed as of tomorrow, so tomorrow is already closed.
Uh, and it will be closed until Sunday,
the seventh of October on the eighth of October.
Oh,
let me see
October.
Uh, that's
a
of course, January.
So on Monday, eighth of January, we will reopen the premises.
And as we have told you,
also is part disclosure is part of a series of energy saving
measures that we have been implementing since the month of October,
which is
so, um, I just repeat, you have access to all your, uh, offices located in building
two.
the entrance for this period will be made
through the nation gate by foot
and through prey
by car.
The, uh,
portal.
Sorry.
Bicycle. It will probably be
N
unless you wanna go up the hill. Um um
II I can ask. I think he he they will. They can open the door for, uh, bikes.
But let me let me confirm this.
Otherwise it would be pretty,
Uh, the port I the the
shaman de fair port.
I will be closed throughout the period, so don't use that, please.
Um as we have also told you, uh, the buildings will be heated, but, uh,
there will be no services available.
Um, we are going to hold the next press briefing virtually on. Only on on Friday.
Then we will make a pose.
The next one will be on the fifth of January, and it will also be fully virtual.
And then we will start again on nine of January from this room.
Of course, as we have said several times, anything should happen. We hope not.
But if we have a need to brief you, we will be back as usual in this room.
There are also a few colleagues who have told us that they want to hold
press conference or briefings during this period.
Uh, of course there will be high. Sorry. Be fully virtual.
Uh, we will continue coordinating as much as possible.
You will also receive the list of the focal points who are
on duty for each and every agency here in Geneva during the period of
the holidays. So, uh, don't hesitate to get in touch with all of us.
And if there are no questions, let me see. Yes,
Krin?
Yes. I'm sorry. Hi, Alexandra. again?
Yes. October. I mean, October next year. No,
of course. I mean
no.
Um, listen, I mean, in fact, you answer my question because of the situation,
and you mentioned that, uh, we will have briefings if needed.
So I suppose that if there is any improvement
of the situation in Gaza or any other places
you will tell us you will let us know.
Of course, improvement would be really great,
and we would definitely be happy to talk about it.
But I
was also referring to some,
um, briefings that are not maybe on, you know,
they're not necessarily breaking news.
But we've been told by colleagues that they
would like to brief you during this period.
And obviously, we will continue coordinating.
And although the the, uh,
briefings will be done virtually unless there is a reason for coming back in person,
which we will do with pleasure.
Uh,
especially if it's for giving good news. Absolutely
any other question.
I don't see any.
So, uh, bon appetit. Uh, well, not yet, but soon.
And, uh uh, I'll see you virtually on Friday. Thank you.