11/12/2023

The world we live in...

 

UN needs $46.4 billion for aid in 'bleak' 2024


The United Nations said Monday that it needed $46.4 billion next year to bring life-saving help to around 180 million people in desperate circumstances around the world.

   The UN said the global humanitarian outlook for 2024 was "bleak", with conflicts, climate emergencies and collapsing economies "wreaking havoc" on the most vulnerable.

   While global attention focuses on the conflict raging in the Gaza Strip, the UN said the wider Middle East, Sudan and Afghanistan were among the hotspots that also needed major international aid operations.

   But the size of the annual appeal and the number of people it aims to reach were scaled back compared to 2023, following a decrease in donations.

   "Humanitarians are saving lives, fighting hunger, protecting children, pushing back epidemics, and providing shelter and sanitation in many of the world's most inhumane contexts," UN aid chief Martin Griffiths said in a statement.

   "But the necessary support from the international community is not keeping pace with the needs," he said.

   The 2023 appeal was for $56.7 billion but received just 35 percent of that amount, one of the worst funding shortfall in years. It allowed UN agencies to deliver assistance and protection to 128 million people.

   With a few weeks left to go, 2023 is likely to be the first year since 2010 when humanitarian donations declined compared to the previous year.

   The UN therefore scaled down its appeal to $46.4 billion this time around, and will focus on those in the gravest need.

   

   - 72 countries -

      Launching the 2024 Global Humanitarian Overview, Griffiths said the sum was nonetheless a "massive ask" and would be tough to raise, with many donor countries facing their own cost of living crises.

   "Without adequate funding, we cannot provide life-saving assistance. And if we cannot provide that assistance, people will pay with their lives," he said.

   The appeal covers aid for 72 countries: 26 states in crisis and 46 neighbouring nations dealing with the knock-on effects, such as an influx of refugees.

   The five largest single-country appeals are for Syria ($4.4 billion), Ukraine ($3.1 billion), Afghanistan ($3 billion), Ethiopia ($2.9 billion) and Yemen ($2.8 billion).

   Griffiths said there would be 300 million people in need around the world next year -- a figure down from 363 million last year.

   But the UN aims to reach only 180.5 million of those, with NGOs and aid agencies targeting the remainder -- not to mention front-line countries and communities themselves who provide the first help.

   

   - Climate impact -

      The Middle East and North Africa require $13.9 billion, the largest total for any region in 2024.

   Beyond Syria, the Palestinian territories and Yemen, Griffiths also pointed to Sudan and its neighbours, and to Ukraine, Afghanistan, Venezuela and Myanmar as hotspots that needed sustained global attention.

   Ukraine is going through a "desperate winter" with the prospect of more warfare on the other side, he said.

   With the Gaza war between Israel and Hamas, plus Russia's war in Ukraine, Griffiths said it was hard for the Sudan crisis to get the attention it deserved in foreign capitals.

   More broadly, Griffiths said climate change would increasingly impact the work of humanitarian aid workers, who would have to learn how to better use climate data to focus aid resources.

   "There is no doubt about the climate confronting and competing with conflict as the driver of need," he said.

   "Climate displaces more children now than conflict. It was never thus before," he said.



  UN urges return to spirit of universal rights declaration, 75 years on

Geneva, Dec 11, 2023 (AFP) - The UN on Monday urged world leaders to revive the spirit that led to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights 75 years ago, to counter today's widespread oppression and polarisation.

   The text adopted after World War II and the Holocaust marked the first time that countries agreed to protect fundamental rights and freedoms on a universal scale, for all people.

   "In the ashes of global warfare, it brought hope. To put an end to cycles of bloodshed, it promised justice," said United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk

   "It set out the path to peace," he told a gathering celebrating the 75th anniversary of the groundbreaking tract, adopted in Paris on December 10, 1948.

   Turk said his thoughts went "to the millions of people suffering unbearably in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, notably in Gaza, and Israel; in Sudan; Ukraine; Myanmar; and so many other places".

   "Famine. Oppressive and hateful discrimination. Repression and persecution. Threats to human rights generated by climate change, pollution and biodiversity loss."

   "These are profound and interlocking challenges that stem from failure to uphold human rights," Turk told Monday's event at the UN's European headquarters in Geneva.

   During the event, which began with a minute of silence for victims of rights violations, Turk said the declaration provided a "guide" to solve the towering challenges we face today.

   The declaration, he said, "resonates with the ancient wisdom that connects all human beings".

   It drew its inspiration from around the world, he said, including the philosophies of the Enlightenment; Islam's emphasis on human dignity and compassionate sharing; and the demands of the Haitian revolution for an end to enslavement and racist oppression.

   Although not legally binding, the declaration stresses the supremacy of individual rights over those of states.

   "The drafters of the Universal Declaration transcended geopolitical clashes and economic differences.

   "They set aside many terrible disputes to achieve this luminous text, which lit the path to peace, justice and freedom," he said.

   The 75th anniversary, he said, should be seen as "a call to hope and ... action".

   "At a time of so little solidarity, and so much divisive and short-sighted vision, I view it as a call to overcome polarisation," he said.

   "A call to hark back to the spirit that led every member state to adopt the Universal Declaration; and to base local, national and global decisions, across all areas of policy, on the intrinsic, and equal, value of every human life."


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