UN emergency fund allocates $125m to address growing gap in humanitarian aid

The allocation raises the emergency fund’s total assistance this year to more than $270 million. (File/AFP)
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Updated 05 September 2023
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UN emergency fund allocates $125m to address growing gap in humanitarian aid

  • Afghanistan and Yemen are the largest recipients with $20 million each

LONDON: The UN on Tuesday allocated $125 million from its Central Emergency Response Fund to underfunded humanitarian operations in 14 countries and territories in the Middle East, Africa, Asia and the Americas.

Afghanistan and Yemen are the largest recipients with $20 million each, while the Occupied Palestinian Territories will receive $6 million.

The allocation raises the emergency fund’s total assistance this year to more than $270 million, the biggest annual amount ever allocated to the largest number of countries.

According to the UN, the need for extra funding reflects rising humanitarian needs as regular donor contributions are falling short.

“It is a cruel reality that in many humanitarian operations, aid agencies are scraping along with very little funding right at a time when people’s needs compel them to scale up,” UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Martin Griffiths said.

He added: “Thanks to the generosity of a vast range of donors, we can count on CERF to fill some of the gaps, (and) lives are saved as a result. But we need individual donors to step up as well — this is a fund by all and for all.”

The CERF allocation will also be used to provide humanitarian aid in Burkina Faso, Mali, Myanmar, and Haiti totaling $34 million.

It will also contribute $6 million to refugee operations in Bangladesh and Uganda. The remaining $26 million in funding will go to Venezuela, the Central African Republic, Mozambique, Cameroon and Malawi.

In 2023, global funding requirements exceeded $55 billion to support 250 million people affected by conflict, the impact of the climate crisis, natural disasters, disease outbreaks, displacement and other crises. However, fewer than 30 percent of the required funding has been received.

 


Sequestered Suu Kyi overshadows military-run Myanmar election

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Sequestered Suu Kyi overshadows military-run Myanmar election

  • Suu Kyi’s reputation abroad has been heavily tarnished over her government’s handling of the Rohingya crisis

YANGON: Ousted Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi has been siloed in military detention since a 2021 coup, but her absence looms large over junta-run polls the generals are touting as a return to democracy.

The Nobel Peace Prize laureate was once the darling of foreign diplomats, with legions of supporters at home and a reputation for redeeming Myanmar from a history of iron-fisted martial rule.

Her followers swept a landslide victory in Myanmar’s last elections in 2020 but the military voided the vote, dissolved her National League for Democracy party and has jailed her in total seclusion.

As she disappeared and a decade-long democratic experiment was halted, activists rose up — first as street protesters and then as guerrilla rebels battling the military in an all-consuming civil war.

Suu Kyi’s reputation abroad has been heavily tarnished over her government’s handling of the Rohingya crisis.

But for her many followers in Myanmar, her name is still a byword for democracy, and her absence on the ballot, an indictment it will be neither free nor fair.

The octogenarian — known in Myanmar as “The Lady” and famed for wearing flowers in her hair — remains under lock and key as her junta jailers hold polls overwriting her 2020 victory. The second of the three-phase election began Sunday, with Suu Kyi’s constituency of Kawhmu outside Yangon being contested by parties cleared to run in the heavily restricted poll.

Suu Kyi has spent around two decades of her life in military detention — but in a striking contradiction, she is the daughter of the founder of Myanmar’s armed forces.

She was born on June 19, 1945, in Japanese-occupied Yangon during the final weeks of WWII.

Her father, Aung San, fought for and against both the British and the Japanese colonizers as he sought to secure independence for his country.