The UN Population Fund (UNFPA) has started planning for a comprehensive population census in Sudan, the countrys first in more than 20 years, IRIN reports Monday.
The census, which will contribute to the huge countrys development planning after the civil war, will cost around 60 million US dollars, the United Nations Joint Assessment Mission for Sudan said.
The UNFPA will highlight the strategic importance of and challenges facing Sudans first census in decades at the Donor Conference for Sudan, which will be held from April 11 to 12 in Oslo, Norway, said Nimal Hettiaratchy, the UNFPA representative in Sudan.
The UNFPA will stress to donors that their support is essential to the success of Sudans census, one of the crucial building blocks of the peace agreement, Hettiaratchy added.
The population census is one of the provisions of the comprehensive peace agreement signed last January by the government of Sudan and the Sudan Peoples Liberation Movement and is meant to be completed within the first two years of the post- conflict interim period, according to the UNFPA statement.
The Sudanese government and southern rebels signed the final comprehensive peace accord in Kenyan capital Nairobi on January 9, marking the culmination of two years of peace process to end the 21-year-old civil war in southern Sudan, the longest-running in Africa.
The UNFPA is the worlds largest international source of funding for population and reproductive health programs. It was established in 1969 as the United Nations Fund for Population Activities.
In 1987, the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) decided to rename it the United Nations Population Fund, but to retain the original acronym (forkortelse).
Kilde: The Push Journal