FNs katastrofechef: Flere donorpenge end nogensinde mod katastrofer – men der mangler milliarder

Hedebølge i Californien. Verdens klimakrise har enorme sundhedsmæssige konsekvenser. Alligevel samtænkes Danmarks globale klima- og sundhedsindsats i alt for ringe grad, mener tre  debattører.


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Redaktionen

Mounting crises leave UN relief efforts with huge shortfall

NEW YORK, 16 September 2009: The top United Nations relief official Wednesday appealed to donors to fill a 5 billion US dollar (ca 25 milliarder DKR) funding gap the world body and its partner agencies face to provide emergency aid to people enduring the most severe humanitarian crises around the world.

Less than half of this years 9,5 billion dollar appeal the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) made to cover relief efforts assisting the worlds most vulnerable people has been funded, stressed UN Emergency Relief Coordinator John Holmes.

Deteriorating humanitarian situations in hotspots, such as Somalia, the occupied Palestinian territories, Zimbabwe, Sri Lanka, Pakistan and Sudan have led to an upwards revision of Consolidated and Flash Appeals by 1,5 billion dollar since the start of the year, Mr. Holmes said in New York.

He noted that in the DR Congo, for example, an extra 250.000 people have been driven from their homes this year by the conflict with the FDLR – a Rwandan rebel militia operating in the east of the country – as well as a campaign of terror inflicted on the population by another armed group in eastern DRC, the Lords Resistance Army (LRA).

– Donors actually have been responding remarkably generously and well to these rising needs, said Mr. Holmes, who also acts as Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and head of OCHA.

– For example, the 4,6 billion dollar we had collected in July in response to these needs was the highest ever figure in absolute terms that we collected, and in terms of a percentage of what we are asking for – 49 per cent – it was also the highest ever, he said.

– Nevertheless, that figure still leaves… 4,8 billion dollar worth of needs unmet, which is also the highest ever unmet demand we’ve had at this time of year, stressed Mr. Holmes.

Mr. Holmes pointed to deteriorating non-conflict related crises, such as the intense droughts and floods affecting various parts of the world, including countries in the Horn of Africa facing several years of failed rains.

Poor rains in Eastern African have produced crises in the areas of food, nutrition, water and disease among others, leaving some 24 million people in need of aid – up from 17 million last year – in Ethiopia, Djibouti, Eritrea, Kenya, Somalia and parts of Uganda.

– That is another powerful reason why we have been arguing that a climate change deal in Copenhagen is so essential, he said referring to the UN conference in December that will be seeking a successor greenhouse gas reduction pact to the Kyoto Protocol.

– Because we think those trends are bound to intensify, in fact they will intensify, noted he.

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