By NNN-WAM
Dubai : UNICEF has launched here its annual Arabic version of the Humanitarian Action Report (HAR) 2008 which calls for support for both immediate relief and long-term development in conflict-ridden and disaster-prone countries across the Middle East and North Africa.
The document, released Wednesday, underscores the plight of displaced children and other vulnerable populations inside Iraq and the daily challenges facing Iraqis who have sought refuge in Jordan and Syria.
UNICEF’s report also draws attention to the humanitarian situation affecting children in the occupied Palestinian territory, the worsening conditions of 2.4 million people presently displaced in the Darfur region of Sudan, the issues of child survival in south Sudan and the decline of socio-economic indicators in a protracted political stalemate in Lebanon. It also raises concern over mounting child malnutrition in Djibouti.
The concerned countries of the region need some USD 274 million out of a total USD 855 million that the report appeals for globally. Sudan alone will require USD150 million.
Overall, the HAR 2008 highlights the humanitarian and financial needs for 39 countries and emergencies worldwide, out of which seven are from the Middle-East and North Africa region.
In the profile of countries in the region, the report gave a mixed assessment.
It cites the deteriorating violence and instability in Iraq as having a long-lasting, serious effect on schooling, healthcare, as well as water supply and sanitation throughout the country. With half of the now nearly 1.5 million internally displaced being children, UNICEF hopes to expand its basic healthcare and routine immunisation outreach in 2008 to tackle the risk of chronic disease and outbreaks.
Other UNICEF-supported interventions envisage a more efficient distribution of emergency water supplies and the rehabilitation of classrooms across the country.
Funding in the amount of USD 93.5 million is expected to address the pressing needs of the 2.4 million displaced people in the Darfur region. Half of the Darfur population is in need of immediate humanitarian assistance, including necessary action in the fronts of improved sanitation and hygiene, immunisation against polio, DPT and measles.
Concern is also raised by UNICEF with regards to enduring maternal and infant mortality rates in south Sudan and the risk of an HIV and AIDS epidemic among the returnees. USD 56.8 million is requested for UNICEF emergency interventions in the south.
The report also underlines the deterioration of humanitarian conditions for children and women in the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt). In Gaza, currently, eight of 10 families rely on food assistance, principally from UNRWA (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine refugees in the Near East) and the World Food Programme (WFP) and around two-thirds of households are not connected to a sewerage network.
UNICEF will procure and distribute vaccines, immunisation-related supplies to health facilities across oPt. It will also rehabilitate water and sanitation facilities in schools and undertake regular water-tankering operations to vulnerable areas.
An estimated 100,000 vulnerable children will benefit from remedial education programmes organised by UNICEF.
Estimates of the number of Iraqi refugees in Syria range up to 1.5 million, with children representing at least 50 per cent. Funding will support the provision of school equipment, the rehabilitation of sanitation facilities in provisional refugee schools and the expansion of existing “child-friendly spaces”.
In Jordan, UNICEF assists Iraqis who have fled the conflict. Funding will support UNICEF’s delivery of essential supplies to health centres, sustain routine immunisation and ensure training of health workers on psychosocial counselling. The delivery of basic teaching supplies and vocational training for adolescents will complement the effort in 2008.
For Lebanon, UNICEF’s appeal for funding will help rehabilitate damaged water networks and support a nationwide measles campaign reaching more than one million children. Mine risk education for children is also planned.
In Djibouti, acute malnutrition rates in under-five children remain high. Frequent droughts, high unemployment and food prices contribute to the poor nutritional status and recurring food insecurity which affects urban and rural populations alike. Scaled-up malnutrition management and nutrition education within health facilities and at community level will be UNICEF’s principal activity to be carried out through HAR funding.
“Strong and results-oriented partnerships will enable us to meet the needs and rights of affected children and women in these countries,” said Sigrid Kaag, UNICEF Regional Director for the Middle East and North Africa. “Predictable and timely funding will help us deliver much-needed assistance to the most vulnerable more effectively,” she added.