WHD 2013

Showing posts with label ocha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ocha. Show all posts

Saturday, November 30, 2013

Video - Humanitarian actors work on a three-year response plan


By The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs


Humanitarians closed today a two-day workshop on the Sahel chaired by the UN Assistant Secretary-General and Regional Coordinator for the Sahel, Robert Piper. They discussed anticipated needs of the Sahel and defined strategic objectives for the humanitarian response.

A three-year Sahel Strategy will be developped to support governments and humanitarians in the planning, coordination and implementation of their humanitarian work. This strategy will be launched in February 2014.


 

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

A strong partnership for a more effective humanitarian action in West Africa and Central


By the Regional Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, West and Central Africa (OCHA ROWCA)


On 2-3 October, OCHA ROWCA hosted a Humanitarian Policy Conference in Dakar. It brought members of the humanitarian community, academic institutions, civil society and the private sector to think and to work together for a more efficient humanitarian programming in the region. "We need to look at how to work better and smarter to break the cycle of vulnerability and crises," said Robert Piper, United Nations Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel.
 
 
During the conference participants made an overview of the humanitarian situation, vulnerability and risk management in the region. Discussions covered the future of humanitarian interventions with a focus on new partnerships, innovation and how to provide a much more effective response to the needs of vulnerable populations. "We need a new toolbox. We need to build on what we have, but we also need innovation and new tools, "said Mr. Piper.
 
The forum was organized in perparation of the World Humanitarian Summit scheduled in 2016. This summit will map out a new humanitarian approach that is more effective and inclusive, and more representative of the needs and challenges of our rapidly changing world. Currently, several consultations are being conducted to identify humanitarian priorities for each region.
 
For more go to www.ocha.org/rowca
 

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

UN General Assembly: 4 things you need to know


By the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs


Dozens of heads of state along with the UN Secretary-General, Government Ministers, leaders of UN agencies and civil society and other dignitaries are gathering in New York for the 68th Session of the United Nation’s General Assembly. The annual event – a series of meetings starting on 24 September and stretching over the better part of two weeks – will see Member States discuss and debate a range of political, economic and security-related issues.
 
Each year, OCHA and its partners take the opportunity to highlight key areas of humanitarian concern, and to advocate on behalf of people in crisis for solutions and support.
 
Here are four key humanitarian issues that OCHA will be focusing on during the 2013 General Assembly.
 
Each year during the UN General Assembly, OCHA and
its partners highlight key areas of humanitarian concern,
taking the opportunity to advocate on behalf of people in crisis
for solutions and support. Credit: UN
1. The humanitarian crisis in Syria must not be overshadowed by the political debate. The conflict in Syria and the use of chemical weapons are likely to continue to dominate discussions over the coming days. Our hope is that this does not detract attention from the country’s severe humanitarian crisis. Some 7 million Syrians are in need of humanitarian support, with more than 2 million having fled the country.
 
UN Humanitarian Chief Valerie Amos has issued similar calls throughout the crisis (including in an opinion piece published at the beginning of September, at the re-launch of the Syria humanitarian appeal in June, and in a statement to the UN Security Coucil in April). On Tuesday 24 September, she will be taking part in a UK-organized High-Level Meeting on Syria.
 
“At the moment we are talking about the whole chemical weapons issue, it is important that that is addressed (and) it is important that we maintain the pressure to get a political solution,” said Ms Amos, in an interview that will be published later today. “But (the) humanitarian issues and the human rights abuses that are really spiralling out of control inside Syria – we need our political leaders to address those as well.”
 
2. We will urge Member States to do what they can to reverse the deteriorating situation in the Central African Republic (CAR). Every single person in CAR has been affected by their country’s descent into insecurity, violence and despair. Since December 2012, 250,000 people have been forced to flee their homes and a further 60,000 have left the country all together.
 
Persistent insecurity has severely hampered the ability of humanitarian organizations to reach those most in need. Earlier this month, two aid workers with the French NGO ACTED were killed north of the capital of Bangui.
 
On Wednesday 25 September, Ms. Amos and Kristalina Georgieva, the EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Affairs, will chair a High-Level Event that will focus on the situation in CAR. Ms. Amos and Ms. Georgieva visited CAR earlier this year.
 
“We were both shocked by what we saw but felt that there was a very real opportunity (…) for the international community to really make a difference,” said Ms. Amos. “If they would just focus on the Central African Republic and think about the resources required – the support required to begin to build the institutions in the country – and to give much needed financial support to the many organizations operating on the ground.”
 
“So this meeting (will) I hope be an opportunity for that to happen.”
 
3. We will celebrate a new generation of African Humanitarian Champions. Later on Wednesday 25, OCHA will co-host an event with the African Union to celebrate African Humanitarian Champions. The event will highlight the rise of a new approach towards humanitarian intervention in Africa – an approach driven by African governments and civil society, that places increased emphasis on building resilience, rather than addressing needs in the short term.
 
The event will be an opportunity for African governments and private sector representatives to show how they are addressing humanitarian needs, and to convey the changing narrative about Africa’s response to humanitarian situations.
 
4. We will emphasize that building resilience should be at the heart of our support to the countries of the Sahel. People in the Sahel – a region that stretches across nine Saharan countries – are some of the most vulnerable people in the world today. They face food insecurity and malnutrition, health crises, natural disasters and, increasingly, insecurity and violence.
 
On Thursday 26 September the Secretary-General will convene a meeting on the Sahel, which is expected to endorse a new, integrated strategy for the region. One of the three ‘pillars’ of this new strategy is Resilience – the idea that humanitarian and developments efforts should focus on addressing the chronic and structural causes of vulnerability. This approach is already at the heart of much of the work of humanitarian agencies in the Sahel.
 
Ahead of the event, we will feature an interview with Robert Piper, the regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel.
 
For more go to www.unocha.org

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Échange d'expérience au Sahel et dans la Corne de l'Afrique sur la gestion de l'insécurité alimentaire et la résilience


Film réalisé par le Groupe URD (Urgences, Réhabilitation, Développement)


La conférence « Exchange on Practices and Lessons Learnt on the Resilience in the Horn and the Sahel » a été organisée à Dakar les 2 et 3 juillet 2013 par le Bureau des Nations Unies pour la Coordination des Affaires Humanitaires et le Programme des Nations Unies pour le Développement.
 
 


Échange d'expériences au Sahel et dans la Corne de l'Afrique sur la gestion de l'insécurité alimentaire et la résilience from Groupe URD on Vimeo.

Elle a permis de faire ressortir les similarités et les différences entre ces deux contextes, y compris leur variabilité interne. Elle aussi permis de mettre en valeur des expériences tout à fait passionnantes : celles développées par OXFAM sur les systèmes de micro-assurance en Ethiopie ou celles mises en place par le gouvernement nigérien avec l’Initiative 3N, à titre d’exemple. Le rôle des institutions nationales a été mis en valeur avec le cas du Niger et du Kenya, celui des instances régionales avec la présentation de l’Autorité intergouvernementale pour le développement (l’IGAD, Intergovernmental Authority on Development). Des approches originales, comme celle du Sila au Tchad et de sa « déclaration de Goz Beida », ont montré comment des dynamiques inclusives et remontantes pouvaient, en s’articulant sur une « réflexion résilience », faire bouger les lignes.
 
Les grands facteurs de contrainte, comme les phénomènes de spéculation, d’accaparement des terres, mais bien sûr aussi de natalité non contrôlée, induisant une pression toujours plus forte sur les ressources ou les changements climatiques en cours, ont été analysés en détail à l’aune des expériences de ces deux régions qui comptent parmi les plus fragiles du monde, mais dans lesquelles les sociétés, comme les systèmes pastoraux, sont extrêmement résilients.
 

Thursday, March 14, 2013

Bienvenue à M. Robert Piper, Coordonnateur Humanitaire Régional pour le Sahel


M. Robert Piper, le nouveau Coordonnateur humanitaire régional pour le Sahel, a pris ses fonctions le 7 mars 2013. M. Piper succède à David Gressly.


De nationalité australienne, Robert Piper apporte dans ses nouvelles fonctions 24 ans d'expérience avec l'ONU, dont deux positions de Coordonnateur résident / Coordonnateur humanitaire au Kosovo et au Népal, deux ans en tant que chef de cabinet du Président Clinton lorsque celui-ci dirigeait les efforts internationaux de reconstruction après le tsunami de 2004 dans l’océan Indien, une expérience en tant que conseiller principal pour la réforme des Nations Unies au Siège du PNUD, un passage comme adjoint de ce qui est maintenant le Bureau de la prévention des crises et du relèvement du PNUD et divers postes de longue durée sur le terrain, en Thaïlande, au Cambodge et à Fidji. Son expérience s’étend de la consolidation de la paix à la réduction des risques, au développement et à la coordination humanitaire, toutes activités qui sont particulièrement pertinentes pour les défis complexes qui nous font face dans le Sahel.
 
Pour plus d'informations sur le Sahel visitez http://www.unocha.org/rowca/
 
 

Welcome to Robert Piper, Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel


Robert Piper, the new Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel, took up his assignment on 7 March in Dakar, taking over from David Gressly.

 
Robert Piper, an Australian national, brings 24 years of experience with the UN to his new role, including two Resident Coordinator/Humanitarian Coordinator assignments in Kosovo and Nepal, two years as Chief of Staff to former President Clinton when he led the international Tsunami recovery effort, a period as Senior Advisor on UN reform at UNDP Headquarters, a stint as Deputy of what is now UNDP's Bureau for Crisis Prevention and Recovery and various long-term field assignments in Thailand, Cambodia and Fiji. His experience spans peace-building, risk reduction, development and humanitarian coordination, all of which are especially relevant for the complex challenges in front of us in the Sahel.
 
For more on the Sahel http://www.unocha.org/rowca/ 

Follow Robert Piper on Twitter

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Crisis in Mali disrupting schooling of 700,000 children


 

 By UN News Centre



The education of some 700,000 children in Mali has been disrupted due to the violence in the country, the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said last week, adding that there is an urgent need to rebuild schools, train teachers and provide learning supplies.


A student writes on a chalkboard at a school in Bamako, Mali. Credit: UNICEF/Tanya Bindra

Northern Mali has been occupied by radical Islamists after fighting broke out in January 2012 between Government forces and Tuareg rebels. The conflict uprooted hundreds of thousands of people and prompted the Malian Government to request assistance from France to stop the military advance of extremist groups.

Since the violence began over a year ago, at least 115 schools in the north were closed, destroyed, looted and sometimes contaminated with unexploded ordnance. Of the 700,000 children affected, 200,000 still have no access to school, UNICEF said in a news release.

Many teachers were among those displaced and have not returned to the northern part of the country. Instead, they are working in the already overcrowded schools in the south, which cannot cope with the amount of displaced students from the north.

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Interview with David Gressly, UN Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel

 

By the United Nations Regional Information Center for Western Europe (UNRIC)


What does food security mean? How serious is the situation right now in the Sahel? How does the military intervention affect the humanitarian situation?




Learn more about UNRIC

Follow UNRIC on twitter

Thursday, February 14, 2013

« Mama Légumes » and resilience in Senegal


By Esther Huerta García, Communication and Social Media Officer - OCHA Sahel


Joséphine runs a fruit stand in Dakar. Everyone in the neighborhood knows her as “Mama Légumes” (Mama Vegetables). She is very lucky, since she has many clients coming from around the city to buy her produce - ruby colored tomatoes, juicy carrots and leafy green bundles of cilantro, just to name a few. Mama has adapted to the times. She uses SMS to inform her clients each time she receives some particularly succulent fresh fruits and vegetables. “Hello, this is Maman Légumes, I received some juicy local oranges. How many should I keep for you?”

She will hand you the calculator at the end of each purchase, her lovely smile glowing across her face. She allows you to calculate the total amount yourself. It is all about trust.

"Mama Légumes" runs a fruit stand in Dakar. Credit: E. Huerta García- OCHA

“Maman Légumes” has long known exactly what resilience means. Though she has never heard of the word, she fully embodies it. “I come from a family of eight brothers and sisters. My mother sold fruits and vegetables too. I could not spend a lot of time at school. I had to leave when I was a child to help my family. But at least I attended enough classes to understand many things.” She smiles again. “It´s what´s in your head that really helps you move out of difficult situations.”

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Interview with David Gressly, Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel

 

By UNOCHA




Learn more about David Gressly

Latest updates on people displaced by the fighting in central and northern Mali, ways to provide humanitarian aid to cut- off communities in Mali, significant changes in the Sahel region since 2012, updates on the Sahel Resilience Strategy and main challenges as the Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel.

Dernière mise au point sur les personnes déplacées par le conflit récent au nord du Mali, moyens alternatifs pour que l´aide humanitaire arrive aux communautés isolées au Mali, changements significatifs dans la région du Sahel depuis 2012, nouvelles sur la stratégie de la résilience au Sahel et défis principaux du Coordonnateur Humanitaire Régional pour le Sahel.

Interview in English



 Interview en français





Thursday, January 3, 2013

From early warning to reinforcing resilience: 

Lessons learned from the 2011-2012 Sahel response


By UN-OCHA Evaluation Section





Guiding principles for coherent resilience approaches:


Resilience is a multi-level and multi-stakeholder endeavor. This resilience has to encompassindividuals, households, and communities. A resilient international aid system (able to engage strategically, with flexibility and in a sustained manner) and well prepared national institutions (equipped, trained and able to plan ahead) are critically needed. This will create an environment enabling prevention and reduction of structural vulnerabilities, anticipation of risks, timely and effective delivery of humanitarian aid and linkages between emergency response and recovery.


Context matters: “one size fits all” approach to be avoided. The region is very diverse and only customized solutions can work. However, sharing of information and experiences within the region and with areas with similar characteristics (Horn of Africa) will increase understanding of response options.


Pro-resilience strategies of governments and regional institutions must be supported by development agencies and donors. The 3N initiative in Niger, the recently prepared rural strategy in Chad, the intersector Emel project in Mauritania, Senegal’s resilience approach, the ECOWAS emergency stock project and AGIR-Sahel are important initiatives that help frame the international response. They show that governments are addressing the growing vulnerabilities in a landscape of frequent shocks.

Proactive interaction between humanitarian aid and development. There are growing efforts to ensure that planning goes beyond the short term funding framework. The AGIR-Sahel initiative, the UN Sahel Resilience plan and donor, agency and organization specific strategies are milestones in that direction. Development donors should be encouraged to engage more strategically with humanitarian

See full report 



Friday, December 28, 2012

SAHEL: Malnourished to remain above one million in 2013

 By IRIN, Dakar (Senegal)

 

Children in the Banemate village in Oullam district in Niger's Tillaberi region have been living on wild fruits since last year
© Jaspreet Kindra/IRIN

Despite good rains across much of the Sahel this year, 1.4 million children are expected to be malnourished - up from one million in 2012, according to the 2013 Sahel regional strategy.

The strategy, which calls on donors to provide US$1.6 billion of aid for 2013, says fewer people are expected to go hungry in 2013 - 10.3 million instead of 18.7 million in 2012.

Harvests across much of the Sahel were fairly good this year following more steady rains, but vulnerability remain as the 2012 crisis, on the back of crises in 2005 and 2010, left many families heavily indebted, with severely depleted assets, and with no seeds to plant.

Friday, December 21, 2012

A propos de OCHA


Nouvelle version en français de la brochure qui explique en détail le rôle du bureau des Affaires Humanitaires des Nations Unies.

OCHA mobilise l’aide humanitaire, mais qu´est-ce que cela veut dire exactement?

Cliquez sur l´image!



Thursday, December 20, 2012

Tchad: la malnutrition persiste malgré les bonnes récoltes


By Pierre Péron, Chargé de l´Information Publique à OCHA, Tchad


Le Tchad a enregistré beaucoup de pluie dans la seconde moitié de 2012 et les récoltes ont fait le double de la quantité moyenne, suscitant des espoirs pour des lendemains meilleurs. Mais selon les prévisions de l'UNICEF, à peu près le même nombre d'enfants souffriront de malnutrition aiguë sévère en 2013 qu’en 2012.

Les raisons en sont complexes. Les ménages ont accumulé des dettes importantes au cours de la période de soudure en 2012, ce qui signifie que les familles pauvres devront vendre la grande partie de leur production immédiatement après sa récolte.

Selon Jane Lewis de la branche humanitaire de la Commission européenne (ECHO), cela signifie que les gens continueront de peiner pour acheter les denrées alimentaires à des prix élevés.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Resilience in simple terms/ La résilience en termes simples

 

How international aid can support resilience


 

By Andrew Thow, Humanitarian Policy Officer, OCHA

 



Since the first signs that the food and nutrition crisis in the Sahel was getting worse in late 2011, ‘resilience’ has become the most talked about topic in humanitarian policy circles. We must get better at preventing recurrent crises in the Sahel and other regions. On this, everyone agrees. But when we talk about doing business differently, what exactly does that mean?

Niger, 2012: Man in Molia village tends vegetables.CR: D. Ohana, OCHA

Resilience is just a word, and when we are talking about families and communities it sounds simple enough. People are resilient when they can cope with hardships. Farmers with drought-resistant crops won’t lose their livelihoods when the rains fail. Well-nourished children can get a better education and so provide for their own families in the future.

But the word ‘resilience’ is also being used to sum up a series of changes in the way
the international aid system supports people and countries affected by recurrent crises. In particular, it has come to mean more closely integrating short-term humanitarian relief and longer-term development assistance, so that together they are more effective. Many governments in the region have taken the lead in preparing national plans to do just that. The UN has a common approach on building resilience in the Sahel, which brings together its different programmes.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

Resilience in simple terms/ La résilience en termes simples

 

 What does resilience mean for Amadou & Moussa? 

 

By Esther Huerta García, Communication & Social Media Officer - OCHA Sahel





These young boys below might not have participated in the global debate around resilience in the Sahel region. Still, they know very well what it means to live in a family whose resilience has been completely eroded.

Children playing in Mopti- CREDIT: ECHO

Losing resilience -  in very simple terms

Amadou and Moussa live in Mali and are among the generation of children that have missed a whole year of school in 2012 due to the food crisis.

Their parents, after this year´s drought, were forced to reduce the quantity and quality of food they could give to their children.  When food is not sufficient, this is the first strategy many households follow to adapt to this new situation. After that, as the crisis continued, the family was forced to sell their livestock and take out a loan. They had nothing left.

Friday, November 23, 2012

Resilience in Simple Terms/ La Résilience en Termes Simples

Oumou Moussa: a resilient woman

Video by UNOCHA, with the contribution from CBM


Due to drought and poor harvests, a food crisis is looming in Niger. There are solutions. In a village just outside the capital, Niamey, Oumou Moussa is helping to feed her community with the produce from a garden that she started with the help of international NGO, CBM
 


Thursday, November 15, 2012

Semaine Espoir et Résilience à Dakar, Sénégal


Photos: Vernissage de l´expo photo "Espoir et Résilience" à Dakar, Sénégal (Institut Francais)

Par OCHA Sahel, Oxfam et Institut Francais

 

 18 photos qui proviennet de 11 acteurs (UN, ONGs et pays donateurs) du Sahel.

 

Il est toujours temps d´aller les voir à l´Institut Francais de Dakar (exposées jusqu´au 21 Décembre 2012)!!

À 19h, le cocktail-vernissage commence à l´Institut Francais...




READ MORE: BEAUCOUP PLUS DE PHOTOS!!

Monday, November 12, 2012

Semaine Espoir et Résilience à Dakar, Sénégal 

"Espoir et Résilience" au Sahel


Ismaël Lô sera le grand protagoniste de la rencontre!

 

Par OCHA Sahel, en collaboration avec Institut Francais de Dakar, Oxfam et l´UCAD

 

L´événement "Espoir et Résilience" braque les projecteurs sur l´importance de la résilience pour mettre fin au cycle de la faim au Sahel à travers l´art et la culture. Au rendez-vous, une exposition photos, la voix et les messages du chanteur musicien Ismaël Lô, des discussions à l´université et la projection d´un film documentaire, qui  essaieront d´ouvrir la voie vers le nouveau chemin de la résilience.



L´agenda de la semaine "Espoir et Résilience" à Dakar:

Mardi 13 Novembre 19h: Vernissage de l´exposition "Espoir et Résilience". Photographies prises par différents acteurs dans les neuf pays du Sahel. Institut Francais de Dakar. Jardins de l´Institut.

Mardi 13 Novembre 21h: Ismaël Lô chante pour le Sahel. Institut Francais de Dakar.
Théâtre de Verdure de l´Institut Francais.

Mercredi 14 Novembre 10h: Rencontre- Débat universitaire sur le Sahel à l´UCAD (Université de Dakar)

Jeudi 15 Novembre 19h: Projection du film de Marie Monique Robin Les Moissons du futur. Institut Francais de Dakar.


Pour plus d´infos sur le Sahel, suivez @DavidGressly

Pour plus d´infos sur la résilience, venez nombreux à l´événement Sahel!

Monday, October 22, 2012

« Maman Légumes » et la résilience au Sénégal

 

Par Esther Huerta García, Chargée de Communication/Médias Sociaux - OCHA Sahel Team


Dakar, Senegal. La définition du terme « résilience » est très large. Dans le monde humanitaire, le terme est connu comme « la capacité des populations à résister aux chocs ».

 De mon point de vue, une façon facile d´avoir une  définition concrète de la résilience est de mettre un pied dans le Sahel; au Sénégal, par exemple.  Ici, vous n´avez plus besoin de dictionnaires pour comprendre, puisque la résilience est un parfum qui se respire dans tous les coins.


Joséphine dans son stand de fruits et légumes- CRÉDIT: EHG

Joséphine en ai un exemple. Elle s´appelle Joséphine mais la plupart des gens du quartier la connaissent comme « Maman Légumes »