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http://www.bignewsnetwork.com/index.php/sid/226740233
UN envoy calls for funding backed by government action, peace successes in
troubled Sahel
U.N. - Top StoriesThursday 16th October, 2014
16 October 2014 - The African Sahel region needs more resources, more joint
action and faster ways to deal with the structural challenges, like climate
change, and successes on peace processes in Darfur, northern Mali and
Libya, a senior United Nations humanitarian today said.
Robert Piper, the UN Regional Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel, told
journalists in New York that the world body remains "very, very concerned"
about the region, which stretches from Mauritania to Eritrea, including
Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal and Sudan.
"Food and security continue to major issues," Mr. Piper said in a press
conference.
About 25 million people in the Sahel are estimated to be food insecure,
with a "real deterioration" from January to July of this year as people"s
stocks dwindled ahead of the rainy season. During that time frame, 4
million people crossed the UN"s emergency threshold.
Children are particularly vulnerable, the senior UN official noted, with
some 6.4 million severely or acutely malnourished.
In addition, the UN and its partners are monitoring the region for epidemic
risks that range from yellow fever to cholera, and also now include the
Ebola virus which is "in the neighbourhood."
"This is what we call the chronic emergency caseload " the food insecure,
the acutely malnourished, people at risk for epidemic," said Mr. Piper,
noting that the group includes up to 30 million people in the region.
In February, the UN and its global humanitarian partners today appealed for
$2 billion for the region. As of today, a bit over half of that amount has
been funded.
"Humanitarian aid can buy time" but the trend is very discouraging," Mr.
Piper said. "Ten years ago, we were managing a $200 million a year hum
response, today we are seeking $2 billion."
While the figures tell a "terrible story of suffering" the needs are
"enormous, unsustainable" and driven by structural needs as a result of
demographic growth, climate change, and access to basic services.
"Nothing can substitute for governments putting in place the right
policies," Mr. Piper said.
In addition, the region is fraught with violence and insecurity, which has
created protracted internal displacement. Internally displaced persons,
combined with refugees and returnees to the region, have pushed population
growth in the region in this year alone from 1.6 million to 3.3 million.
"The big numbers are coming from Nigeria, but also from the Central African
Republic (CAR)," Mr. Piper said, noting also the situation in the northern
Mali where 31 UN peacekeepers and at least two non-governmental workers
have been killed this year.
Received on Fri Oct 17 2014 - 08:28:01 EDT