34819115-RR-MOZ-1345915-RR-MOZ-13459_Mozambique_Jan2015_ApplicationAfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-01-28T00:00:002015-01-28T00:00:002015-02-09T00:00:002015-02-13T00:00:003264783.003247508On 8 January 2015, following heavy rains, the Mozambique National Institute for Disaster Management (INGC) activated a nation-wide institutional orange alert for floods. The floods isolated entire districts and communities and cut off many communication routes. Rivers surpassed alert levels and impassable bridges have effectively cut off the north of the country from the south. An estimated 14,950 houses have been destroyed. 57 accommodation centres have been established to provide shelter for the more than 50,000 people who have been displaced. Furthermore, according to the Ministry of Agriculture and partners, floods have destroyed 52,052 hectares of crops, affecting 36,939 households nationally. These figures are expected to increase as assessments continue.
Preliminary assessments have identified some humanitarian needs. The national Insitute for Disaster management (INGC) is playing a elading role. It estimates that it will need about US$ 8 million to address the immediate needs of the affected people in terms of food, shelter, WASH, health, family kits including logistics for the initial 30 days of the response. This requirement is over and beyond the government’s current expenditure of US$ 1 million per week which is spent on distrusting food and medicine. More than half of this weekly expenditure has gone towards air transport as the areas are inaccessible by other means. This CERF response focuses on critical gaps jointly identified by the Government and the HCT. Current relief stocks indicate that there is a huge gap in food and non-food items to address the current humanitarian assistance in Zambezia Province. There is an urgent need to feed and provide shelter to the 50,000 affected people that are hosted in accommodation centers (most of which are schools, which need to resume by 06 February 2015). There is also the urgent need to provide emergency water supply, emergency sanitation and emergency hygiene promotion, thus providing minimum safe conditions for reducing the risk to public health by water and sanitation-related diseases. The CERF response will include and immediate response focusing on an initial response to the most affected (50,000 IDPs):
1) Logistics Cluster (WFp) intends to provide rapid response to cover the main operational gaps such as storage capacity and aerial and surface transport (road and river) to make sure that the relief assistance reaches the affected population.
2) The WASH Cluster (UNICEF) will give priority to the 50,000 displaced people to ensure the provision of safe water supply, basic sanitation and hygiene promotion in the accommodation centers/resettlement areas,
3) The Food Security Cluster (FAO, WFP) which includes agriculture will provide immediate food assistance for at least one month to the 50,000 displaced people.
4) Under the Shelter Cluster (IOM) will work in partnership with the Mozambican Red Cross (CVM) and Concern Worldwide, to provide temporary shelter NFIs to support IDPs currently residing in temporary/transit points throughout Zambezia Province.
5) The protection sector (UNICEF) will implement three activities: the identification of unaccompanied minors and efforts towards family reunification; prevention and response to violence and abuse (including gender-based violence); and immediate psycho-social support to displaced families and children.15-RR-MOZ-13459-NR01jennifer.topping@one.un.org#Jennifer ToppingEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2015-11-09T00:00:002016-11-01T20:51:18Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene20265187063897121092194704056279533ProtectionProtection530354604199076386493456973218172294Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture011180111800167701677027950Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI20968163353730320346187223906876371Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security87811050119282119381824330181494632015-02-06T00:00:0034919215-RR-MWI-1347115-RR-MWI-13471_Malawi_Jan2015_ApplicationAfricaMalawiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-01-30T00:00:002015-01-30T00:00:002015-02-12T00:00:002015-02-19T00:00:007950587.006961397In early January 2015, heavy rainstorms and floods hit 15 out of the 28 districts in Malawi and consequently the President declared a State of Disaster. Preliminary reportsby by Government and humanitarian partners estimate of 638,000 people are affected overall, and at least 174,000 people (numbers still being verified) have been displaced in the 3 worst hit districts (Phalombe, Nsanje and Chikwawa). Howver, access and transporation of relief items is a challenge.
CERF-funded interventions will be complementary to other actions already in place but insufficient to respond adequately and timely to the critical needs in the affected areas. The priorities for the flood response are:
The logistics cluster response is focuses on providing life-saving Humanitarian Aviation Services, CERF supported component of WFP project will reinforce the floods response by the provision of one (1) heavy duty helicopter for the transport of cargo and passengers for a period of 21 days under this funding to support the overall humanitarian response; fleet of specialized light and all terrain trucks for places hard to reach places. WFP will also support through provision of temporary storage facilities
The shelter and camp management cluster intervention aims at ensuring protection and a minimum of living conditions standards to the displaced population. The response includes technical support for CCCM, systematic and comprehensive data collection and registration of displaced communities; and provision of life-saving NFIs and establishment of emergency shelters in relocation sites.
The food security cluster response will food assistance to 270,281 flood-affected people in the first 3 months of the 6.5 month response period. This response is closely coordinated with the emergency agriculture intervention, focused on restoring the food production capacity of the most affected farming households, through agricultural input and livestock distribution for replanting by taking advantage of the remaining period of the rainy season as well as residual moisture. CERF funds will be funding the 6.3% of the overall agriculture cluster response. It will assist 16,000 vulnerable households with about 88,000 direct beneficiaries (50,000 women and 38,000 men) in the three most affected districts of Nsanje, Phalombe and Chikwawa.
The WASH cluster intervention will benefit a total of 25,000 flood affected target population, with the provision of water, sanitation and hygiene services from the CERF-funded emergency Intervention. The 25 camps are selected based on the severity of the disaster that affected the three districts in Chikwawa, Nsanje and Phalombe. The key outputs include provision of safe water services through water treatment and reticulated water systems. Temporary sanitation facilities will be constructed to ensure the affected population has access to gender segregated and gender-responsive latrine facilities.
The education cluster intervention aims at restoring and providing safe educational and recreational activities for children. The cluster will facilitate temporary learning to create safe protective spaces and resumption of school feeding to reduce hunger and increase participation and protection will be provided to 28,879 flood-affected learners through the provision of 689 school in box kits and 127 metric tons of food to 33 affected schools.
The original submission for 8 projects is almost US 8 million.15-RR-MWI-13471-NR01EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2015-11-12T00:00:002016-08-17T00:00:00EducationEducation136920136921414601414627838Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene7803117051950810344155162586045368Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture218993331655215236304023663866119081Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI398562947569331514244130892732162063Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security679156525013316570686679151386012717662015-02-11T00:00:0035028015-UF-BDI-1358315-UF-BDI-13583_Burundi_Feb2015_ApplicationAfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-16T00:00:002015-02-16T00:00:002015-03-12T00:00:002497553.002495246Burundi remains confronted with many humanitarian challenges, despite its decade-long post-conflict environment. For example, the country has an estimated 78,000 internally displaced people and with persisting instability in the region, Burundi is also host to some 50,000 refugees, mostly from neighbouring Democratic Republic of Congo. 34,000 Burundian former refugees, who returned from Tanzania in the last quarter of 2012, are going through a slow reintegration processes, especially given land tenure issues in the country. Moreover, according to a rapid profiling conducted by IOM, in collaboration with the Burundian Red Cross, around 45,000 expelled Burundian people arrived in Burundi from Tanzania from August 2013 to the end of June 2014. These expelled migrants are vulnerable and require humanitarian assistance for their survival.
This is a submission for the underfunded window of CERF. The funding situation for humanitarian response remains poor. In total, USD 24,297,166 is required for the humanitarian response in the various sectors. USD 4,838,605 has already been received through various funding channels so far, including CERF in September 2013. However, more 80 per cent of the required funding is still lacking.
While there are many humanitarian challenges in Burundi that require funding, with only US 2. 5 million CERF underfunded grant available, the humanitarian country team have agreed to prioritize and target the 45,000 expelled Burundian migrants from Tanzania. This strategy was developed by the HCT to ensure maximum impact with CERF funds. The submission further prioritizes these sectior and projects: Food Security (WFP, FAO), Nutrition (WFP), Protection (IOM, UNICEF) and WASH (UNICEF) in the two provinces where the expellees are concentrated.
Burundi Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $2.5 million (round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 16 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 6 Z - not in use - Returnees15-UF-BDI-13583-NR03EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-30T00:00:002016-04-30T00:00:002016-10-26T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7200550012700800063001430027000FullyNutritionNutrition1410014101823118930124422FullyProtectionProtection61410661680798194027384418FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene6946848915435722988361606531500FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture4500665011150565082001385025000Fully2015-03-04T00:00:0035128115-UF-TUR-1358115-UF-TUR-13581_Turkey_Feb2015_ApplicationAsiaTürkiyeWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-16T00:00:002015-02-16T00:00:002015-04-10T00:00:008999451.008999844The humanitarian situation in Turkey is affected by an influx of Syrian refugees.
The Turkey portion of the Syria RRP requirement is US$ 497 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the SRP was only 31% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets a total of 200,000 people in the Sanliurfa Province. This area is among the most affected in terms of the effects of the refugee influx and requires basic needs and food supplies.
Turkey Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $9 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 16 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 6 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Syria crisis 2011-15-UF-TUR-13581-NR01EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-30T00:00:002017-01-10T00:00:00ProtectionProtection196490196491982201982239471Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security14882121082699014202126572685953849HealthHealth275002320050700258002350049300100000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI202471473834985154491828233731687162015-04-01T00:00:0035228215-UF-EGY-1358415-UF-EGY-13584_Egypt_Feb2015_ApplicationAfricaEgyptNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-16T00:00:002015-02-16T00:00:002015-03-17T00:00:003500000.003500065The humanitarian situation in Egypt is affected by an influx of Syrian refugees.
The Egypt portion of the 2015 Syria RRP requirement is US$ 189.5 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the SRP was only 2% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets a total of 16,710 Syrian refugees in Greater Cairo, Alexandria, Damietta, Dakahiliya and Marsa Matrouh. Refugees in Egypt are exhausting their resources and becoming more vulnerable to negative coping mechanisms. With this CERF funding, WFP, UNHCR and WHO aim to implement food assistance and health care programs targeting the most vulnerable refugees.
Egypt Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $3.5 million (round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 16 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 3 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Syria crisis 2011-15-UF-EGY-13584-NR01anita.nirody@undp.org#Anita NirodyEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-30T00:00:002017-01-17T00:00:00HealthHealth4621426028159187447Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security53556605119604978665211630235902015-03-06T00:00:0035328315-UF-DJI-1359315-UF-DJI-13593_Djibouti_Feb2015_ApplicationAfricaDjiboutiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-02-16T00:00:002015-02-16T00:00:002015-03-20T00:00:003000000.003000059The humanitarian situation in Djibouti is affected by extreme erosion of the overall resilience capacity of the most vulnerable people combined with insufficient, inadequate or inexistent protection mechanisms which force rural communities, refugees and vulnerable migrants to adopt negative coping mechanisms that endanger their lives and their livelihoods.
The 2015 SRP Djibouti requirement is estimated at $67 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the SRP was 2% funded.
This CERF request will help implement immediate and urgent life-saving activities in Food Security, Nutrition, WASH to the benefit of 77,483 most vulnerable people in Obock/Migration Route and in the Refugee camps. Girls, adolescent girls and women represent 50% of the overall target population. Activities planned with the CERF allocation complement each other to provide immediate and vital responses to the most critical needs while contributing to re-build resilience of the targeted people.
Djibouti Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $3 million (round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 16 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 7 Food Security15-UF-DJI-13593-NR02valerie.cliff@undp.org#Valerie CliffEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-30T00:00:002016-04-07T00:00:002016-11-01T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene6959737114330660178291443028760NutritionNutrition894508945831539121222721172Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector453178341236541155420953521900Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security60359300153356563104871705032385Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture21001000310021001100320063002015-03-12T00:00:0035428415-UF-PRK-1359815-UF-PRK-13598_DPR Korea_Feb2015_ApplicationAsiaDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20152015-02-16T00:00:002015-02-16T00:00:002015-03-20T00:00:002000000.002000285The humanitarian situation in DPRK is affected by food and nutritional security across the country. The causes of under-nutrition are related to food inadequacy and a serious lack of food diversity to meet nutritional requirements for healthy growth.
The DPRK humanitarian requirement in 2015 amounts to US$ 111 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the UN agencies were 15% funded.
CERF funding will be utilized to target specific geographical areas with inter-sectorial interventions in order to reduce excess mortality and morbidity among 393,574 beneficiaries, primarily women and children. The aims of the submission are to address the immediate causes of, and to prevent and treat, under-nutrition through provision of life-saving therapeutic food, micronutrient supplementation and life-saving health interventions for pregnant and lactating women and their vulnerable new-borns in the most vulnerable 47 counties in the four most malnourished provinces of Kangwon, North and South Hamgyong and Ryanggang; and to improve the production of protein-rich food in key cereal production areas of North and South Pyongan, North and South Hwanghae Provinces to boost the supply of nutritious food for cooperative farmers and for beneficiaries in four northern provinces by distribution to state shops and public institutions.
DPRK Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $2 million (round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 16 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 4 Food Security15-UF-PRK-13598-NR03tapan.mishra@one.un.org#Tapan MishraEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-30T00:00:002017-01-10T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture573301911076440596701989079560156000NutritionNutrition1279620127962132655200001526552806172015-03-13T00:00:0035528515-UF-JOR-1360215-UF-JOR-13602_Jordan_Feb2015_ApplicationAsiaJordanWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-16T00:00:002015-02-16T00:00:002015-04-09T00:00:009000000.009000346The humanitarian situation in Jordan is affected by an influx of Syrian refugees.
The Jordan portion of the Syria RRP requirement is US$ 1 billion. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the SRP was 60% funded. Despite its higher funding levels, Jordan is extraordinarily recommended for a UFE allocation to support a comprehensive, regional response to the Syria crisis. The country plays an important role in the region by
setting a standard for the protection and assistance of refugees.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 70,000 people in the Amman, Irbid, Mafraq and Zarqa Governorates. These areas are among the most affected in terms of the effects of the refugee influx who require basic needs and food supplies.
Jordan Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $9 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 16 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 6 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Syria crisis 2011-15-UF-JOR-13602-NR01Edward.kallon@one.un.org#Edward KallonEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-30T00:00:002017-01-16T00:00:00Multi-SectorMulti-Sector107214881156021022058541607431676Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security3322128369615903155531760633151249052015-04-02T00:00:0035628615-UF-SYR-1360515-UF-SYR-13605_Syria_Feb2015_ApplicationAsiaSyrian Arab RepublicWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-17T00:00:002015-02-17T00:00:002015-04-02T00:00:0029932258.0029926021The humanitarian situation in Syria continues to deteriorate at an alarming pace, with fierce fighting prompting increasing level of civilian casualties, massive internal displacement, increased violations of IHL and HRL, and mounting refuge flows.
The 2015 SRP Syria requirement is $2.9 billion. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the SRP was xxxxxxxx% funded.
This CERF request seeks to enhance the capacity of humanitarian actors working inside Syria to respond to immediate life saving needs of an estimated 6.3 million people, prioritizing the most vulnerable including, displaced people, children, female-headed households, the elderly, people with disability and those with chronic diseases, in key locations across Syria. CERF funds will help to address humanitarian needs emerging from the severe winter conditions in Syria of more than 139,505 people; provide life saving health activities to 1.9 million people; deliver emergency assistance in food to 2,.5 million vulnerable conflict-affected people, as well as to provide lifesaving emergency assistance in food, shelter and winter items to 54,391 Palestine refugees. To address the critical gaps in the humanitarian situation, WHO, UNHCR, IOM, UNICEF, UNFPA, WFP, FAO, and UNRWA are submitting 15 project proposals to support activities in emergency winter response, WASH, Food Security and Agriculture Shelter and Non-Food Items.
Syria Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $30 million (round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 17 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 15 Syria crisis 2011-15-UF-SYR-13605-NR01EnglishDavid Hartstone2016-03-30T00:00:002016-04-14T00:00:002017-01-17T00:00:00Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector182791657434853958699521953854391FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4352555048749401294451465234719686171908746FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI293455006879413281607071298872178285FullyHealthHealth19864359739579603826555074151310070631803101FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture136624153449290073127364151333278697568770FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security646212507738115395067258852846212010502355000Fully2015-03-26T00:00:0035728715-UF-COD-1365215-UF-COD-13652_DR Congo_Feb2015_ApplicationAfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-18T00:00:002015-02-18T00:00:002015-04-20T00:00:009000000.008047670The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has long been affected by multiple acute crises. Multiple crises related to violence and armed conflict account for the vast majority of needs – approximately 67%. An estimated 7 million people are in need of some form of humanitarian assistance.
The Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) requirement is US$ 692,000,000. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the HRP was only 9% funded ($50,455,755).
DRC Underfunded submission:
Total envelope: $9 million (round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 24 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 4 Z - Not in use - Protection15-UF-COD-13652-NR04119#119EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-30T00:00:002017-01-25T00:00:00Protection - Mine ActionMine Action263752180899444651253026207594460620905271ProtectionProtection104717103828208545134737160759295496504041EducationEducation3694621433908936557177538332774212015-04-07T00:00:0035828815-UF-LBN-1368015-UF-LBN-13680_Lebanon_Feb2015_ApplicationAsiaLebanonWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-19T00:00:002015-02-19T00:00:002015-04-09T00:00:0018000000.0018004139The humanitarian situation in Lebanon is affected by an influx of Syrian refugees (and Palestinian Refugees from Syria [PRS]). The impacts of the influx include increased vulnerability, food insecurity, decreased access to health care and water/sanitation services among others for both refugees, PRS and vulnerable Lebanese. Most of these occur in norther areas along the Lebanese/Syrian border which are facing huge strains on the Government's response capacity. The number of people in need is estimated at 1.16 million (including 45,000 PRS and 20,000 Lebanese returnees) for 2015.
The Lebanon portion of the Syria RRP requirement is US$ 2.14 billion. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the SRP was 47% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 336,350 people in the Akkar, Bekaa, Beirut, Mt Lebanon and Tripoli. These areas are among the most affected in terms of the effects of the refugee influx who require health care (primary health care, secondary care, reproductive health), WASH (water supply and repairs in informal settlements) and food security.
Lebanon Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $18 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 16 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 6 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Syria crisis 2011-15-UF-LBN-13680-NR01ross.mountain@undp.org#Ross MountainEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-06-29T00:00:002016-12-29T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene138486823382081559541976675720157801HealthHealth2915121780509313450171531106032156963Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security50145598656131534386802602401163712015-04-02T00:00:0035928915-UF-RWA-1370215-UF-RWA-13702_Rwanda_Feb2015_ApplicationAfricaRwandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-19T00:00:002015-02-19T00:00:002015-03-20T00:00:002500000.002498220While overall the security situation in Rwanda remains calm, the situation in Eastern DRC remains volatile. Renewed fighting in Eastern DRC in April 2012 led to the most recent influx of 35,000 refugees who crossed into Rwanda until mid-2013. This influx increased the number of persons needing humanitarian assistance by approximately 40%, more than doubling the refugee population which today stands at over 74,500. As a result of this crisis, an additional two refugee camps were constructed, bringing the total number of refugee camps to five. As such, humanitarian agencies are constantly on alert to ensure preparedness in case of another refugee influx.
In addition to refugees, Rwanda is also receiving thousands of Rwandan returnees each year, coming home after years—in some cases even decades—living in countries of asylum. In order to ensure protection and reintegration, returnees are initially received in transit centers near the border for registration before they are assisted to return to their places of origin, to rebuild their lives in Rwanda. Although it is very difficult to predict the number of returnees, for planning purposes 5,000 returnees are expected to pass through transit centers in 2015.
This intervention is focused primarily on the two new refugee camps—Kigeme and Mugombwa, home to 25,500 refugees. These two new camps face severe gaps in sanitation, hygiene and health facilities, especially reproductive, maternal and neonatal health. It also addresses Gihembe camp—one of the older camps in Rwanda, which is home to 15,000 refugees. Gihembe has faced critical shortages of water in recent years. The entire camp population is targeted for food security and nutrition interventions, given that they have the highest rates of acute and chronic malnutrition among the refugee population in the country, and given that this sector is facing critical funding shortages which could lead to ration cuts for refugees in these three camps, who are entirely dependent upon food aid. Additionally, basic health and WASH services in new transit centers—which are expected to host 5,000 returnees as well as any newly arriving refugees who may enter—are urgently needed to ensure that basic standards are met. The response will also support provision of emergency food rations to 5,000 forcibly returned Rwandans. 5,000 returnees living in drought affected aeras are extremely vulnerable to critical food shortages which will persist until the next harvest.
With UN agencies facing shortfalls in funding, an underfunded allocation has been made of US 2.5 million. The HCT has prioritized and therefore included in this submission the following projects in these sectors WASH (IOM, UNHCR, UNICEF), Food Security (WFP, FAO), SGBV (UN Women) and Reproductive Health (UNFPA).
Rwanda Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $2.5 million (round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 19 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 6 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee15-UF-RWA-13702-NR02lamin.manneh@undp.org#Lamin MannehEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-06-29T00:00:002016-12-20T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security946011240207009160162302539046090Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence610035509650570062001190021550Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene9856114042126010399169442734348603HealthHealth91714912140839758871018468325512015-03-17T00:00:0036029015-UF-COL-1372715-UF-COL-13727_Colombia_Feb2015_ApplicationAmericasColombiaLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaUFHuman RightsConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-02-20T00:00:002015-02-20T00:00:002015-04-13T00:00:002999836.002994382The humanitarian situation in Colombia is affected by armed conflict between the government and guerrilla groups as well as violence generated by paramilitary successor groups which has led to insecurity and internal displacement. Impacts include forced displacement, mobility restrictions, SGBV, APM/UXO and forced recruitment among others. Most of these occur in remote and difficult-to-access territories with weak or no state response capacity. The number of people in need is estimated at 4.8 million for 2015.
The Colombia 2015 humanitarian requirement is estimated to be US$ 136,100,000. Based on the agency reports, Colombia's humanitarian funding was both below the non-SRP average of countries recommended by the CERF UFWG.
This CERF request will help implement immediate and urgent life-saving activities for approximately 48,730 people in the Arauca
Choco, Cauca, Putumayo and Valle del Cauca Departments. These areas are among the most affected in terms of the effects of armed conflict and require food assistance, health supplies/services, protection services and access to water and WASH assistance.
Colombia Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $3 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 20 February 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 8 Z - Not in use - IDP15-UF-COL-13727-NR01EnglishDavid Hartstone2016-03-30T00:00:002016-10-26T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1774120929831387129926865669FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene26703233590326533284593711840FullyNutritionNutrition110626503756996325442508006FullyProtectionProtection629535799874702054991251922393FullyHealthHealth14334308574114384219565711398FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture12679172184112988720164200Fully2015-04-02T00:00:0036119315-RR-MOZ-1375615-RR-MOZ-13756_Mozambique_Feb2015_ApplicationAfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-02-25T00:00:002015-02-25T00:00:002015-03-06T00:00:002015-03-11T00:00:00733311.00748857Cholera in endemic in Mozambique; however, the current outbreak is beyond the normal pattern of transmission with a total of 3,478 cases and 37 deaths between 1 January and 25 February. The most affected province is Tete with 1,619 cases and 20 deaths. The case fatality rate above 1% indicates poor management of the outbreak and a need to respond through health and WASH activities. The government's ability to respond to the cholera outbreak is limited due to the attention and resources directed towards the ongoing flood response in Zambezia Province.
On 25 February, the RC for Mozambique submitted a CERF rapid response application requesting some $700,000 to immediately scale up the health and WASH response to the outbreak.15-RR-MOZ-13756-NR02jennifer.topping@one.un.org#Jennifer ToppingEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2015-12-06T00:00:002016-11-01T00:00:00HealthHealth42372787702443032445674813772Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4203737278793154249036195786851580002015-03-03T00:00:0036229115-UF-IRQ-1382815-UF-IRQ-13828_Iraq_Mar2015_ApplicationAsiaIraqWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-03-03T00:00:002015-03-03T00:00:002015-04-15T00:00:008000000.007988899The humanitarian situation in Iraq is affected by an influx of Syrian refugees. The impacts of the influx include increased vulnerability, food insecurity, decreased access to health care and water/sanitation services among others. Most of these occur in areas along the Iraqi/Syrian border which contains 90% of incoming refugees. The number of Syrian refugees in need is estimated at 235,000 million.
The Iraq portion of the Syria RRP requirement is US$ 474 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the SRP was 35% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 100,000 people in the Kurdistan regions of Dahuk, Erbil and Sulaymaniyah Governorates. These areas are among the most affected in terms of the effects of the refugee influx and refugees require food assistance, health supplies and services, protection services and WASH response.
Iraq Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $8 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 12 countries)
Grant package received: 3 March 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 10 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Syria crisis 2011-15-UF-IRQ-13828-NR06177#177EnglishDavid Hartstone2016-03-30T00:00:002017-01-24T00:00:00HealthHealth0005160944289958899588FullyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection32643513615313094740777692FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence218975629453573129011647419419FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene254103439959809201482551445662105471FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security18867166883555518127250304315778712FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture7800904816848686474881435231200Fully2015-04-02T00:00:0036419415-RR-NER-1414215-RR-NER-14142_Niger_Mar2015_ApplicationAfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-03-20T00:00:002015-03-20T00:00:002015-04-30T00:00:002015-05-08T00:00:007000000.006710140This submission is part of the region-wide response addressing the needs of people fleeing from violence and insecurity in Nigeria stemming from Boko Haram. Approximately 150,000 people, mostly women and children, have crossed into Niger. This includes both Nigerian refugees and Nigerien returnees. Further, due to attacks in Niger in the Bosso and Diffa, a further 50,000 people have been internally displaced by end of March 2015.
The response focuses on protection of the displaced and providing them with lifesaving services. At the same time an objective is to increase access of humanitarian work.
The joint responses include 11 projects I including a health response (UNICEF, WHO and UNFPA) who focus in the same geographic areas and targeting the same health centres. UNICEF will provide critical medications while WHO will assist in epidemiological surveillance, and provision of drugs and trauma kits for treatment of those injured. UNFPA will provide reproductive health kits and services.
IOM and HCR will provide shelter and NFI with UNHCR focusing on camps and IOM in other areas where displaced are hosted. On protection side, UNHCR will work on documentation and registration, protection monitoring, border monitoring and family tracing while UNICEF will focus on children and psychosocial support, fostering children and providing a protective and safe environment. UNICEF will also provide WASH services alongside nutrition programmes aimed at treatment of severe acute malnutrition while WFP will work towards treatment of moderate acute malnutrition as well as feeding through general food distributions. WFP through its logistics cluster will also support the response of the humanitarian community through UNHAS flights. Z - Not in use - IDP, Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - not in use - Returnees Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-NER-14142-NR02EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-01-30T00:00:002017-01-05T20:00:33HealthHealth77753254101031637768662474140160243323Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI5362824213604635896301598829592Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000NutritionNutrition467321926865937222821165418519Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security237911615139942476120901456628560ProtectionProtection30849681127652975160441901931784Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene11308100102131812171101112228243600Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector3770020300580004030021700620001200002015-04-28T00:00:0036519515-RR-CMR-1419615-RR-CMR-14196_Cameroon_Mar2015_ApplicationAfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-03-20T00:00:002015-03-20T00:00:002015-05-08T00:00:002015-05-13T00:00:007044187.007066174This submission is part of the region-wide response addressing the needs of people fleeing from violence and insecurity in Nigeria stemming from Boko Haram. This includes Nigerian refugees, Cameroonian IDPS, host communities and other vulnerable people affected by the violence in the far North of the country, which has seen massive population displacements and human rights violations. $7 million in CERF funds will enable life-saving activities for 155,000 displaced people (90,000 IDPs and 65,000 refugees) and to 45,000 vulnerable host communities. The HCT has prioritised the following activities: multi-sector support to refugees, food distributions, treatment of SAM and MAM, improved access to water and sanitation, provide shelter and NFIs, conduct profiling and registration of displaced people, ensure education in emergency, provide essential health care, improve protection of the most vulnerable (incl. children, women at risk of SGBV). Z - Not in use - IDP, Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-CMR-14196-NR0487#87EnglishDavid Hartstone2016-02-08T00:00:002017-05-11T16:45:42Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security3167374373911028087158034389083000MostlyNutritionNutrition3518035183662036627180MostlyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector1345873452080313505100692357444377MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene773021009830598050001098020810MostlyProtectionProtection2340019000424002100164001850060900MostlyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection5270115271679762573569982626623MostlyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture26000450030500825055001375044250MostlyHealthHealth21413251374655022287261634845095000MostlyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence300050008000700050001200020000MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1870155534253110186549758400Mostly2015-05-06T00:00:0036619615-RR-NGA-1421715-RR-NGA-14217_Nigeria_Mar2015_ApplicationAfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-03-23T00:00:002015-03-23T00:00:002015-05-07T00:00:002015-05-20T00:00:0010000000.009889075This submission is part of the region-wide response addressing the needs of people fleeing from violence and insecurity in Nigeria stemming from Boko Haram. Approximately 1.2 million people have been internally displaced in the northeast of the country alone and nearly 200,000 people have fled to neighbouring Cameroon (27,000), Chad (66,000) and Niger (102,000) since May 2013. It is estimated that more than 1,000 civilians have already been killed in fighting associated with Boko Haram in 2015, while thousands of others have suffered horrendous atrocities. Hundreds of children have been killed, injured, abducted or recruited to fight and more than 300 schools have been severely damaged or destroyed in the north-east. Women and girls have been trafficked, raped, abducted and forcibly married. Protection needs of women, girls and children remain paramount. Inadequate shelters and protection in living facilities continue to pose protection challenges. Nutrition data indicates that 1.5 million malnourished children under 5 years of age and pregnant and lactating women in need of assistance in the affected area. In addition, 2.2 million people remain in need of protection, 4.6 million in need of food security, 3.5 in need of health care, 1.9 million in need of emergency shelter and NFIs, 2.2 million in need of WASH and 0.4 million in need of emergency education services.
The overall strategic objectives of the response remain those as formulated in the 2015 Strategic Response Plan (SRP) with specific focus on the North East; i) To track and analyze risk and vulnerability, integrating findings into humanitarian and development Programming; ii) Deliver coordinated and integrated life-saving assistance to people affected by emergencies and iii) Support to vulnerable populations to better cope with shocks by responding earlier to warning signals, by reducing post-crisis recovery times and by building capacity of national actors. Since 90 percent of the IDP population lives in host communities, and only some 10 percent in camps, these communities have been directly affected by the crisis as well. Therefore, the overall humanitarian response in North East Nigeria targets some 5.6 million people.
Priority areas for the response supported by CERF are therefore identified in protection, shelter/NFIs, food, nutrition security and provision of air services.
In the protection sector, there is a need to strengthen protection by presence in all four targeted states, Borno, Adamawa, Yobe and Gombe;.
In the nutrition sector, humanitarian partners currently delivering life-saving assistance in the North East have exhausted their nutrition supplies. RUTF nutrition supplies aim to reach 47,500 children under the age of 5 suffering from SAM in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states. These supplies shall target only the SAM cases.
In the shelter and NFIs sector, The CERF funds shall enable the distribution of 3,635 emergency shelter kits to vulnerable IDP households in the 4 targeted states.
In the food sector, some 49,828 people are considered most vulnerable among IDPs and host communities. Interventions shall be in emergency food distribution in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa states.
Security is also considered a priority for this response to secure access. Increasing security messages and providing air services, particularly to Borno will help to ensure effective delivery of assistance by CERF as well as monitoring and evaluation of the response.
Thus the following 8 projects are included in the CERF response with an approximate allocation of US 10 million:
Protection (UNICEF, UNFPA, UNHCR); Nutrition (UNICEF), Shelter/NFI’s (IOM), Food Security (FAO), Security (UNDSS), Logistics (WFP). Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-NGA-14217-NR02omuga@un.org#Vincent OmugaEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-02-07T00:00:002016-02-29T00:00:002017-03-10T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1160011601049010492209NutritionNutrition193200193202780102780147121Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1210087452084514113101992431245157Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence3039512544715584239243156615195858351700ProtectionProtection692658732015658591870107419199289355874Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI112351528326518106011582226423529412015-05-04T00:00:0036719715-RR-MDG-1422815-RR-MDG-14228_Madagascar_Mar2015_ApplicationAfricaMadagascarEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-03-23T00:00:002015-03-23T00:00:002015-04-07T00:00:002015-04-14T00:00:002482425.002294798As a result of drought since December 2015 in Southern Madagascar, an estimated 200,000 people are currently affected by food and nutrition insecurity, including 40,000 children < 5 years. According to the indicators in the national contingency plan for drought seven districts are affected by this emergency (Bekily, Beloha, Ambovombe and Tsihombe in the region of Androy, Amboassary in the region of Anosy and Ampanihy and Betioky in the region of Atsimo Andrefana) - three districts (Amboasary, Ambovombe and Bekily) are severely affected. A multi-sectorial rapid assessment was conducted in mid-February jointly by the Clusters (Nutrition, Health, Food security, WASH), The Ministry of Public Health (MOH), the National Nutrition Office (ONN) and the National Bureau for the Management of crises and natural disasters (BNGRC) supported by OCHA. On 9 March the Resident Coordinator submitted a concept note to the CERF. CERF requested the Country team to provide further information regarding the impact of the drought and focus more tightly on drought related needs. The Country Team reverted with a revised concept note on 13 March and official submission on 23 March 2015.15-RR-MDG-14228-NR01Fatma Samoura#Fatma SamouraEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-01-07T00:00:002016-07-01T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2059205941182621262152429360NutritionNutrition467204672461986251324417916Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security17171171713434217068170693413768479Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture279927995598388338837766133642015-04-02T00:00:0036819815-RR-VUT-1429315-RR-VUT-14293_Vanuatu_Mar2015_ApplicationOceaniaVanuatuMelanesiaMelanesiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-03-26T00:00:002015-03-26T00:00:002015-03-30T00:00:002015-04-07T00:00:005010408.005038408Tropical Cyclone (TC) Pam struck Vanuatu on the evening of 13 March with a request for international assistance delivered by the Government of Vanuatu on 14 March. Vanuatu is a country of more than 80 islands with a projected population of 270,000 people. The Category 5 cyclone caused widespread damage across all six provinces of the archipelago – Malampa, Penama, Sanma, Shefa, Tafea, and Torba. A state of emergency was officially declared on 21 March covering all affected provinces, including the capital, Port Vila. An estimated 166,600 people have been affected by the cyclone – more than half the country’s population. So far, 11 fatalities have been reported while 3,852 people are still living in the 30 evacuation centres on the main island of Efate.
Under the leadership of the HC, UNDAC and Pacific Humaniataran Team, a CERF request was developed for $5 million focusing on urgent needs in the first three months. The prioritized sectors include logistics, emergency telecommunications, food security, shelter, WASH, and health. The proposed projects and priorities are consistent with the Flash Appeal that was jointly developed with the government.15-RR-VUT-14293-NR01131;#Osnat LubraniEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2015-12-30T00:00:002016-02-10T00:00:002016-08-05T22:39:48EducationEducation30518865313832871512552997061353Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI31653922708744944180867415761HealthHealth49943603291102724991370220120133230405Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene9412129882240010196129042310045500Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture12392123882478011507124072391448694Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security157082356239270150922263837730770002015-03-30T00:00:0036919915-RR-TCD-1434915-RR-TCD-14349_Chad_Mar2015_ApplicationAfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-03-27T00:00:002015-03-27T00:00:002015-05-27T00:00:002015-05-27T00:00:003998056.003517882This submission is part of the region-wide response addressing the needs of people fleeing from violence and insecurity stemming from Boko Haram. In Chad about 85,000 are directly affected by the crisis, with over 18,000 refugees from Nigeria, 8,500 Chadian returnees, 15,000 IDPs and some 43,000 people from host communities. People who arrived were traumatized and in poor health and nutrition situation after having crossed the lake or having walked for days without any assistance. Many have witnessed or have been victims of violence and atrocities. Initially they were welcomed generously by communities and Chadian authorities alike, who rapidly made available sites at Ngouboua and Dar es Salaam (Baga Sola) for refugee camps. The local population, having strong family, linguistic and commercial ties with people from Borno state hosted the returnees in their own homes.
The response strategy includes the following strategic objectives: i) Provide life-saving assistance to people in areas affected by the movement of population and address access is sues, and ii) to address the protection issues resulting from the impact of the Nigeria crisis. CERF funds will be restricited to providing lifesaving assistance to the newcomers and to host people who are no longer able to cope. CERF funds will be used for camp establishment and UNHCR is providing multi sectora assistance to refugees in refugee sites. Those in and out of camps, refugees, IDP’s and hosts are targeted for food, nutrition, WASH, health and protection activities.
While 14 projects were originally submitted for an allocated amount of US 4 million for Chad. However, revisions resulted in a reduction of projects down to 10. The withdrawn projects were not in line with CERF’s lifesaving criteria.14 projects were originally submitted for an allocated amount of $4 million for Chad. One project (UNFPA) was withdrawn during the revision process based on guidance from the CERF secretariat that projects for under $100,000 were ineligible. One project (UNDP for DSS) was not accepted by DSS HQ who instructed the field colleagues to withdraw the project. The CERF secretariat found that two projects (FAO and UNICEF education) did not adhere to the CERF’s life-saving criteria. Despite guidance from the CERF, these were not revised sufficiently at the field level; therefore, the CERF secretariat will recommend that the ERC reject them. In the end, 10 projects will be recommended to the ERC for funding and the final amount to be disbursed will not reach the $4 million originally requested. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-TCD-14349-NR03EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-02-27T00:00:002016-12-20T00:00:00ProtectionProtection23350108873423720804146613546569702FullyNutritionNutrition1678016781996019963674FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector2084243245161961139133527868FullyHealthHealth12404711595113155514682912780FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene36007400110007000145002150032500FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security42633492775544003550795015705FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI43822062644437382707644512889Fully2015-05-22T00:00:0037020015-RR-SDN-1456515-RR-SDN-14565_Sudan_Apr2015_ApplicationAfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRMeaslesBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-04-07T00:00:002015-04-07T00:00:002015-05-12T00:00:002015-05-14T00:00:004066528.001991765Sudan is experiencing a severe measles outbreak across several states. It started in two states in December 2014 but spread to 14 states by April 2015 with more than 3,500 individuals affected. The overall case fatality rate is 1.3%; however, this rises dramatically in states like East Darfur and Kassala where treatment is minimal. Federal MOH with full support from WHO and UNICEF has led the response to the outbreak. 102 localities in 16 states of Sudan have been prioritized for the implementation of all the components of the response and containment plan (risk Assessment Feb-March 2015). With funding from the MoH, UNICEF and the Measles and Rubella Initiative, health partners have carried out emergency vaccination campaigns in some high risk localities; however, more is required to stem the outbreak.
CERF grants will be used to contain the outbreak in 22 first priority-high risk localities in four Darfur states (North, South, Central and East) where the situation is aggravated by additional factors such as; instability, conflict induced displacement (long-term and new), poor living conditions in crowded camps and camp-like settlements, and disrupted health services with unequal population access to essential health care. The activities include procurement of vaccines and supplies, vaccination and Vitamin A supplementation of children between 6 month to 15 years of age, proper management of measles cases, and community mobilization and awareness for optimal uptake of vaccination, and improved communities’ behavior for prevention.
The target is to vaccinate and provide Vitamin A to 1,849,656 children (at least 95 % coverage) in 22 priority one - high risk localities in North, South, East and Central Darfur states aiming to interrupt the transmission of the measles virus at community level and the further spread of the disease, and to improve the access to timely and proper measles case-management. The combined effect of these two actions would lead to the control of the outbreak, and a significant reduction of the measles-induced morbidity, mortality and disabilities.On 7 April 2015, the RC/HC ai for Sudan sent a rapid response request for $4 million for UNICEF and WHO to respond to the outbreak. The amount was considered high in comparison with other disease outbreak allocations and as a proportion of the overall funding requirements; therefore, the CERF secretariat instructed the agencies to reduce the request to no more than $2 million focusing on the highest priority localities. The request was resubmitted on 30 April.15-RR-SDN-14565-NR04el-mostafa.benlamlih@undp.org#El-Mostafa BenlamlihEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-02-12T00:00:002017-01-16T00:00:00HealthHealth9483331263949596875384116687655018261462015-05-08T00:00:0037127815-RR-CHL-1469615-RR-CHL-14696_Chile_Apr2015_ApplicationAmericasChileLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-04-23T00:00:002015-04-23T00:00:002015-05-18T00:00:002015-05-22T00:00:001248220.00777854The humanitarian situation in Chile is affected by a flood emergency which stuck three regions of northern Chile on 24 March 2015. As of 12 April, the National Emergency Office of the Ministry of Interior and Public Security (ONEMI) reports 26 deaths, 125 missing, over 160,000 people affected - of which 29,741 are directly impacted. In addition, 8,325 homes are reported as uninhabitable. Nearly 11,460 homes will need to be repaired. Most of the affected people are currently living with host communities and relatives. However, 2,527 people are housed in schools as temporary shelters . At the moment, there are no planned solutions for the return of people in temporary shelters to other locations.
The impacts of the floods include decreased water & sanitation services, shelter needs and decreased access to health care among others. The most affected municipalities are Copiapo, Chanaral, Tierra Amarilla, Diego de Almagro, Alto del Carmen, Freirina, Huasco and Vallenar. The number of Chileans affected by the floods is estimated at 160,000.
On 23 April, the RC for Chile submitted a rapid response application for $1.2 million to support urgent three-month needs. The initial application required focusing on gaps that were unmet by the government response in three priority sectors. The key priorities put forward in the revised submission for CERF funding were WASH, shelter/NFIs, and health. This final application is for US$781,560 and targets approximately 35,000 people in the Atacama region. This area is among the most affected in terms of the effects of the floods and requires health supplies and services, shelter supplies and WASH response to complement the Government response.15-RR-CHL-14696-NR01EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-02-18T00:00:002016-07-20T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management73017042434760177425344968FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene629114001202926440130571949739789FullyHealthHealth3224716510389343176241105521444Fully2015-05-13T00:00:0037320115-RR-NPL-1484515-RR-NPL-14845_Nepal_May2015_ApplicationAsiaNepalSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20152015-05-01T00:00:002015-05-01T00:00:002015-05-08T00:00:002015-05-13T00:00:0015000000.0014913716A 7.8 magnitude earthquake struck Nepal on 25 April at 11:56 local time creating large-scale damage and many casualties. According to initial estimations and based on the latest earthquake intensity mapping, over 8 million people are affected in 39 of Nepal’s 75 districts. The Central and Western Region, including the Kathmandu Valley districts, are most affected. Over 2 million people live in the 11 most critically hit districts. The estimated number of affected people was calculated using data from the 2011 census and Government guidance that 50 per cent of the total population in the earthquake-hit districts is affected. According to the Government and as of 29 April, the earthquake caused 5,006 deaths, most of them in Bhaktapur, Kathmandu and Lalitpur. Over 10,194 people have been injured.
On 26 April, the ERC agreed to an initial allocation of $15 million to jumpstart the response. On 1 May, the RC/HC for Nepal submitted a rapid response application for $15 million to support urgent three-month needs in line with the Flash Appeal. The key priorities put forward for CERF funding were food, logistics, WASH, shelter/NFIs, health, and protection.As agreed by Chief of CERF, due to the urgent needs and evolving situation on the ground in Nepal, maximum flexibility in terms of project targets and budget lines would be allowable for this emergency.
Similarly, due to the massive devastation and the difficulty accessing remote locations, transportation costs may be high in relation to other emergencies.
Lastly, due to the need for urgent surge support to Nepal, international travel for surge staff is justified.15-RR-NPL-14845-NR02EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-02-08T00:00:002016-07-20T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4918114754219672345398136193181591378314ProtectionProtection375468667949104341736818676934611375322180949Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI7631312451020082377337131683209020409843HealthHealth5375671332436708106323331567577890901459900Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1528312110513638821528322110523638847277662015-05-06T00:00:0037420215-RR-RWA-1500615-RR-RWA-15006_Rwanda_May2015_ApplicationAfricaRwandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-05-10T00:00:002015-05-10T00:00:002015-05-22T00:00:002015-05-26T00:00:007994773.007984746On March 31 2015, Rwanda experienced a sudden influx of refugees fleeing from Burundi in advance of elections in that country. As of May 6, 24,967 refugees have entered Rwanda from Burundi, with a daily arrival rate currently averaging 520 new arrivals per day but which was averaging over 2,000 new arrivals daily earlier in the month. The Rwanda UNCT expects an additional 65,000 to enter the country in the coming months.
On 10 May 2015, the RC for Rwanda sent a CERF rapid response request to address the immediate four-month needs of 30,000 refugees currently in country. The request includes food and nutrition assistance, shelter materials, health services, safe water, sanitation facilities and protection at the Bugesera and Nyanza reception centers and the newly established Mahama refugee camp. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Burundi political crisis 2015-202015-RR-RWA-15006-NR01EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-02-22T00:00:002016-12-20T00:00:00NutritionNutrition3400034003215032156615Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection3818038183336033367154HealthHealth17193170153420816943187273567069878Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7890735015240750072001470029940Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector72005100123008700900017700300002015-05-20T00:00:0037520315-RR-TZA-1511315-RR-TZA-15113_Tanzania_May2015_ApplicationAfricaUnited Republic of TanzaniaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-05-18T00:00:002015-05-18T00:00:002015-06-05T00:00:002015-06-16T00:00:007777809.007656005Of the 71,717 refugees in Tanzania 18,563 are in Nyaragusu refugee camp. An estimated population of 50,000 asylum seekers are in the overcrowded village of Kagunga. While arrivals were initially expected in all Tanzanian regions bordering Burundi, an overwhelming number of asylum seekers selected the route via Kagunga, a small border village on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, from where they attempt to board a ferry to Kibirizi / Kigoma. Kagunga is an isolated village without any water or sanitation facilities, and as the areas is mountainous, vast groups of people trying to camp are forced to do so in a very densely congested area. People are using the lake for sanitation and also as drinking water, which means that the outbreak of waterborne diseases and other illnesses is a matter of time only unless life-saving measures are taken immediately.
The humanitarian situation in Kagunga village remains difficult – and at present even the minimum capacity to assist all asylum seekers is absent. Transportation is also slow, as only 1,800 people can be transported by boat per day from the Kagunga village to Kigoma Transit Centre. Key challenges remain in WASH, Health, Shelter and Security in Kagunga village, which is overcrowded; slow transportation out of Kagunga village; lack of transit facilities in Kigoma; congestion of Nyarugusu Camp; food assistance and lack of NFIs. There are high risk of malaria, respiratory illnesses, and diarrhoea which present major health concerns. As of 14 May there were 70 confirmed cases of cholera reported.
To address this the priorities for a CERF response were outlined to support 40,000 refugees for 3 months. Multi sector assistance to be provided addressing immediate needs include protection - fast and onward transportation of asylum seekers out of transit centers to camps is a main priority as well as registration and profiling of arrivals and family tracing and reunification of separated children. Health is focusing on provision of basic medicine and supplies, kits for maternal health and vaccinating arrivals. WASH is constructing infrastructure in the new camp for potable and washing water and latrines are being constructed. Food assistance and NFI’s will be provided as well as emergency shelter. The package is for approximately US7.7 million which includes Protection (UNICEF, UNHCR, IOM), Shelter and NFI’s (UNHCR), Food Security (WFP), health (WHO, UNICEF, UNHCR) and WASH (UNHCR, UNICEF). Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Burundi political crisis 2015-202015-RR-TZA-15113-NR01EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-05T00:00:002016-10-26T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene108008800196001140090002040040000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI108008800196001140090002040040000HealthHealth28920197734869328611204604907197764ProtectionProtection108008800196001140090002040040000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security196081173131339198311425634087654262015-06-02T00:00:0037620415-RR-SSD-1515915-RR-SSD-15159_South Sudan_May2015_ApplicationAfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-05-19T00:00:002015-05-19T00:00:002015-06-08T00:00:002015-06-15T00:00:005900005.005616616Intensified fighting between the Sudan People’s Liberation Movement-North (SPLM-N) and the Sudan Armed Forces in South Kordofan has generated a new influx of refugees into South Sudan’s Unity state since mid-December 2014. Most new arrivals are from Umdoreen, Haeban and Delami counties in Sudan.
After protracted negotiations with UNHCR, in February 2015 the Government granted permission for the expansion of Ajuong Thok camp to accommodate up to 40,000 persons and to the establishment of a new camp in Pamir with an initial capacity of 20,000. This unprecedented move by the Government has provided a window of opportunity to respond assertively to improve conditions for the refugees.
UNHCR, UNICEF and WFP and their respective partners have been responding to the increased needs of the refugees in Ajuong Thok camp, both new arrivals from Sudan as well as those relocating from Yida. However, existing services are no longer able to cope with the increasing caseload and there is a serious deterioration in living conditions for refugees with commensurate risks to health and wellbeing. Water supply coverage is generally below the recommended Sphere Standard; the Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) rate is 11.1 per cent among newly arrived children; the ratio of pupils per classroom has increased to 150. Owing to poor WASH conditions there was an outbreak of acute watery diarrhoea in March 2015, with 330 cases reported. Increased new arrivals have put additional pressure on the existing food pipeline in catering for a standard full basket of food assistance. While vaccination at both Ajuong Thok and Yida is ongoing, given the crowded living conditions the risk of a major disease outbreak remains high. Newly arrived refugees have few belongings, lack livelihoods alternatives, and have little option but to rely on humanitarian assistance for their survival.On 19 May 2015, the HC for South Sudan sent a CERF rapid response request for $5.9 million to support the expansion of the camp as well as provide assistance to 10,000 new refugees. The request includes UNHCR, UNOPS, WFP and UNICEF. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-15-RR-SSD-15159-NR04EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-08T00:00:002016-10-06T00:00:00Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector42793362764134902723621313854Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene42793362764134902723621313854HealthHealth1793017932506192044266219EducationEducation356821358929982130196608NutritionNutrition1740380212019271620354756672015-06-04T00:00:0037720515-RR-PER-1516015-RR-PER-15160_Peru_May2015_ApplicationAmericasPeruLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-05-19T00:00:002015-05-19T00:00:002015-06-09T00:00:002015-06-15T00:00:001195642.00914395Severe flooding in the Loreto Region of Peru has affected more than 200,000 people. This region suffers from high levels of poverty, malnutrition and poor infrastructure. The floods damaged housing, schools, and especially sanitation facilities. Floods are affecting urban and peri-urban areas of Iquitos as well as rural areas. As of 25 May, approximately 7,000 people were residing in 50 overcrowded collective shelters in the urban and peri-urban areas. While the regional government is providing some assistance in the form of food aid, it does not have the capacity to scale up urgently needed health and WASH services. The government requested the assistance of the humanitarian community to support the flood response operation.On 19 May 2015, the RC for Peru sent a rapid response request for $1.3 million to respond to the needs of flood-affected communities in Loreto Region of Peru. The CERF secretariat responded requesting additional information on the life threatening situation and recommended agencies focus on the most immediate needs rather than underlying issues of poverty and protection. The RC resubmitted the application on 26 May; however, several activities continued to focus on longer-term assistance and underlying issues (such as training/capacity building, and GBV and child protection). The CERF asked that these components be removed from the projects. The final request was sent on 29 May with a focus strictly on provision of immediate NFI, shelter, health and WASH assistance and the provision of seeds to restart agricultural activities.15-RR-PER-15160-NR01EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-03-09T00:00:002016-07-20T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4660569510355525464231167722032Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI115888420421069108421534195Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture22991564386323931564395778202015-06-05T00:00:0037920715-RR-UKR-1538415-RR-UKR-15384_Ukraine_Jun2015_ApplicationEuropeUkraineEastern EuropeEastern EuropeRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-06-08T00:00:002015-06-08T00:00:002015-06-24T00:00:002015-06-24T00:00:005091984.004920172The humanitarian situation in Ukraine has severely deteriorated since the beginning of 2015, following the intensification of conflict in January-February in the east of the country. This resulted in additional displacement and suffering of civilians, and further constraints to access, both for humanitarian actors to reach people in need and to affected population to access life-saving assistance. The intensity of the conflict somewhat subsided in March, following the Minsk II agreement (11 February) although the situation remains fragile and clashes continue to be reported in areas along the frontline. There is now a window of opportunity available for further - rapidly - stepping up the humanitarian response to those in need.
The targeted CERF request focuses on immediate assistance to an estimated 300,000 people of Donetsk and Luhansk in limited government-controlled and non-government controlled areas that are in close proximity to the line of contact between Government and armed forces. The request aims to bolster logistics capacity in the east, provide critical medical supplies and services, and deliver safe water through water trucking and rapid repair of water systems.On 8 June 2015, the HC ai for Ukraine sent a CERF rapid response request for $4 million. This came after several rounds of negotiation between the CERF secretariat (upon guidance from the ERC) and OCHA Ukraine on a concept note for funding. The HC originally suggested $20 million in the concept note; however, the ERC and CERF secretariat noted this was particularly high and requested further identification and targeting of the priorities.15-RR-UKR-15384-NR02tyszkoj@unaids.org#Jacek TyszkoEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-04-21T00:00:002016-04-25T00:00:002017-01-03T00:00:00HealthHealth1063773655114718881282985222136505111122399Common Services - LogisticsLogistics61330903703552219727496452Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene12690057810070500014310065190079500015000002015-06-19T00:00:0038120915-RR-COD-1555615-RR-COD-15556_DR Congo_Jun2015_ApplicationAfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-06-24T00:00:002015-06-24T00:00:002015-08-06T00:00:002015-08-06T00:00:008831907.006792923More than 10,000 people, mostly Burundian refugees but also repatriated Congolese refugees and returning Congolese economic migrants have fled to the DRC due to pre election violence in Burundi. Most have fled to South Kivu which borders Burundi. Upon the advice of UNHCR, the Government of the DRC has accepted to grant them the status of refugees prima facie. Ten per cent of the refugees, considered as the most vulnerable, have initially been taken into transit centers in anticipation of their transfer to a more permanent site. Congolese authorities have decided on the relocation of Burundian refugees to a camp near the village of Lusenda with a capacity for 10,000 people. As of yet, over 3,200 refugees have accepted to be transferred to this site. Most others have settled in host families within local communities in South Kivu’s Fizi and Uvira territories.
Tensions in the volatile host areas are exacerbated by the new arrivals, generating protection needs. Partly as a result of the limited control over affected areas by State authorities, these areas are also prone to activities from numerous armed groups, to banditry, and to resource-based inter-community conflicts. humanitarian actors have observed a significant increase of tensions between local and guest communities, especially in sites where most of the Burundian refugees are currently settled
According to a multisectoral assessment by the Rapid Response mechanism to Population Movements (RRMP) and additional cluster evaluations recently carried out in the affected area, the most urgent needs include access to water and sanitation structures, as well as access to food for refugees. These needs are followed by a high need in Non-Food-Items (NFI) and access to schools for the children. Moreover, access to primary health care by the refugees, continues to be a priority for the humanitarian community.
Objectives of the response include: i) addressing multi sector life saving needs of incoming population as well as families who host them ii) alleviating pressure on communities in host areas and iii) providing protection including in Lusenda camp. As such, WHO, UNICEF and UNFPA will be working to increase access to primary health services, replenishing emergency stocks of medical kits and vaccines, and meeting reproductive health needs. UNICEF will also provide a nutrition response. UNHCR will be providing protection (refugee tracking, documentation) services as well as multi sector assistance within the Lusenda camp while WFP and FAO will be providing food and livelihood assistance targeting camp and host populations. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Burundi political crisis 2015-202015-RR-COD-15556-NR03severe@unhcr.org#Stefano SevereEnglishMateusz Buczek2016-05-06T00:00:002016-05-12T00:00:002016-11-23T18:21:07Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture7439306310502787735011137821880FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security8050487912929937452781465227581FullyHealthHealth11483113132279614882181733305555851FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector33922759615136192994661312764FullyNutritionNutrition608060877407741382FullyProtectionProtection1459118726461557128828455491Fully2015-07-31T00:00:0038221015-RR-SSD-1565715-RR-SSD-15657_South Sudan_Jul2015_ApplicationAfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-07-06T00:00:002015-07-06T00:00:002015-07-23T00:00:002015-07-29T00:00:005871644.005192853Renewed conflict in the Greater Upper Nile region in Unity and Upper Nile States in May and June 2015 resulted in further displacement and the destruction of homes and livelihoods already affected by crisis. It is estimated that over 750,000 individuals have been displaced or cut off from assistance as a result, being in locations that are inaccessible through pre-existing response modalities due to insecurity and logistical constraints. Building on the successful “Southern Unity Survival Kit Operation” project, CERF funding will provide conflict-affected people in remote locations with lifesaving supplies through the provision of a survival kit designed to meet immediate needs. Each nine-kilogram kit contains items to provide a family of five with emergency shelter, nutrition, health supplies and livelihood support.On 6 July 2015, the HC a.i. for South Sudan sent a CERF rapid response request for $5.8 million for the delivery of survival kits to some 30,000 stranded households in Greater Upper Nile region. The request was subsequently reduced to $5.1 million following reductions in recurrent staffing costs of some of the agencies, as well as a reduction of inputs of some agencies to ensure consistency in beneficiary figures. South Sudan crisis 2013-15-RR-SSD-15657-NR05lautze@un.org#Sue LautzeEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-04-23T00:00:00HealthHealth421971856560762467052818874893135655Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture421971856560762467052818874893135655Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4219788902131099467052818874893205992Common Services - LogisticsLogistics4219718565607624670528188748931356552015-07-16T00:00:0038321115-RR-SDN-1574515-RR-SDN-15745_Sudan_Jul2015_ApplicationAfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-07-15T00:00:002015-07-15T00:00:002015-08-18T00:00:002015-08-24T00:00:007180740.007087382The political conflict that broke out in South Sudan on 15 December 2013 displaced thousands of civilians in South Sudan and continues to cause mass outflow of refugees into neighbouring countries, including Sudan. An estimated 607,606 individuals have fled South Sudan into neighbouring countries in Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda and Sudan. Sudan has received the highest number of new arrivals with 191,584.
Prior to the recent influx, White Nile State had received 78,356 individuals, 58% of all South Sudanese refugees arriving in Sudan. The population is now at 103,703 refugees in White Nile, with an arrival rate of between 150 and 200 per day. This large influx of 29,500 since early May has stretched the basic services and space available across all sites.
The objective of the CERF funded support is to enhance services in six existing sites (excluding Dabat Bosin as no new arrivals have been received) and 2 border areas, in White Nile with a concentration on those sites with the highest number of new arrivals. The focus will be on rapidly meeting the new and additional needs required in the areas of Non Food Item’s/Emergency Shelter, Food Security and Livelihood health, Health, Nutrition, Protection, and Water, Sanitation and Hygiene due to the large influx of new arrivals in a short period of time. An integrated approach will be ensured to enhance life-saving services and improve the underlying protection environment to make sure these services can be adequately accessed. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-15-RR-SDN-15745-NR05adnan.khan@wfp.org#Adnan KhanEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-05-18T00:00:002016-06-09T00:00:002017-01-18T20:55:39Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security75001440021900810078001590037800HealthHealth9388555014938977183241809533033ProtectionProtection98152573123881126052091646928857Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI30313031606230323031606312125NutritionNutrition49970499750493485853413531Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3245711749442063603120022560531002592015-08-17T00:00:0038421215-RR-PRK-1579715-RR-PRK-15797_DPR Korea_Jul2015_ApplicationAsiaDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-07-16T00:00:002015-07-16T00:00:002015-08-18T00:00:002015-08-21T00:00:007042843.006276701For the last eighteen months, a long period of abnormally dry weather has affected DPRK resulting in a drought. While precipitation has consistently been below average in 2014 and 2015, the shortfall has been far greater in May and June 2015. In May 2015, total precipitation was 57 per cent below average. Analysis demonstrates that 2015 recorded the lowest average rainfall in the last 5 years. According to EU-JRC, 2015 is the driest season since 2008 (drought year) in the four most affected provinces—South and North Hwanghae, South Pyongan and South Hamgyong.
As a consequence of drought conditions and resulting decreases in water volume in dams, rivers and underground reservoirs there has been a significant increase in the incidence of waterborne diseases and other health concerns. As many communities rely on domestic water wells, the drying or already dry water bodies are leading people to use unsafe water. The effects of unsafe drinking water and poor sanitation is a major concern in DPRK as 88 per cent of diarrhoeal diseases are attributed to unsafe water and 13 per cent of deaths for under-five children are attributed to diarrhoea (second biggest cause of death amongst children).
Diarrhoea directly contributes to increased rates of malnutrition. Based on an assessment of all CMAM programme sites nationwide, the total number of wasted children under five ‘with and without complications’, treated in the CMAM programme from January to June 2015 is 30,158. This is a significant increase when considering only 26,407 children under five were treated for malnutrition from January to December in 2014. Typically, there is a spike in the number of children treated during the lean season so there are serious concerns that numbers will significantly increase. Field assessment missions in May/June 2015 to South Hwanghae and North Pyongan Provinces identified the most severe cases of SAM ever observed, with children’s heights and weights reported as being minus 4 and minus 5 standard deviations from the norm (usually overserved as severe as minus 2 or 3 standard deviations). As a result of the prevailing drought conditions the health system is unable to cope with the increased diarrhoeal cases. In particular, cases of malnutrition are presenting with severe dehydration and the health system is facing a severe shortage of oral rehydration solutions (ORS) needed to prevent death from diarrhoea.
In nutrition, the response targets malnourished children under 5 and pregnant and lactating women through implementation of an integrated treatment for malnutrition, including supplementary food rations like fortified biscuits, blended foods, oils and pulses; promoting lifesaving infant and young child feeding practices; micronutrient supplementation; and other medicines required to combat malnutrition. UN agencies currently work in 29 counties in nutrition but will be expanding these programmes to reach an additional 60 counties.
In WASH, the response focuses on expanding the provision of safe drinking water as well as preventing the escalation of incidence of diarrhoea through safe hygiene practices. The interventions in this sector include: providing supplies for treatment and safe storage of drinking water, such as water purification units, tablets, water treatment sets, foldable jerry cans and buckets; supplies and promotion of safer hygiene practices, including soap and hygiene education materials.
The application includes two joint projects in nutrition (UNICEF, WFP) and two joint projects in WASH (UNICEF, WHO).15-RR-PRK-15797-NR01darlene.tymo@wfp.org#Darlene TymoEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-05-18T00:00:002016-11-29T00:00:00NutritionNutrition44373044373459392358769526113899Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene372505360005732503735059946063681012100602015-08-11T00:00:0038521315-RR-YEM-1580915-RR-YEM-15809_Yemen_Jul2015_ApplicationAsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-07-20T00:00:002015-07-20T00:00:002015-09-15T00:00:002015-09-16T00:00:003392792.002592511Even before the escalation of conflict in March 2015, Yemen faced one of the world’s largest humanitarian crises. The current conflict has affected most of the country, leaving 21.1 million people – 80 per cent of the population – in need of some form of humanitarian assistance. The fighting led to the evacuation of all UN and INGO international staff in March 2015 and whilst 110 international UN staff have returned to Sana’a, there is an urgent need, in line with the L3 activation, to increase international UN and INGO staff presence across the country. Funding is needed to facilitate the rapid establishment of security prerequisites and operational necessities for international staff to operate in areas of most humanitarian need. Area hubs have been identified for the UN and INGO to establish presence across the country. The CERF funds will directly benefit 1056 UN humanitarian workers and the staff of 34 NGOs working from these area hubs. The hubs will enable the serving of 11,442,573 beneficiaries in Aden, Hudaydah, Sa’ada, Sana’a, and Taizz, and the funding will focus on the establishment of emergency telecommunications and data sharing and the provision of adequate security and safety measures for the humanitarian community.15-RR-YEM-15809-NR04Jamie McGoldrick#Jamie McGoldrickEnglishJulia Wittig2016-08-01T00:00:002016-09-04T00:00:002016-10-07T00:00:002016-12-22T00:00:00Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0107610760001076FullyCommon Services - Emergency TelecommunicationsEmergency Telecommunications0276276000276FullyCommon Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0103010300001030Fully2015-09-10T00:00:0038621415-RR-SSD-1581015-RR-SSD-15810_South Sudan_Jul2015_ApplicationAfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-07-20T00:00:002015-07-20T00:00:002015-08-11T00:00:002015-08-14T00:00:002702501.002637025Eighteen months following the onset of the crisis in December 2013, the humanitarian needs still remain high in South Sudan. More than 1.6 million people are currently displaced in Protection of Civilian (PoC) and non-PoC displacement sites primarily in Jonglei, Unity, and Upper Nile states. Despite continued response by the humanitarian community, the situation among the displaced people and the host communities remains poor.
The humanitarian situation has been compounded by a cholera outbreak declared on 23 June 2015. As of 11 July 2015, 862 cholera cases including 34 deaths have been reported in Juba and Bor counties of Central Equatoria and Jonglei States respectively. In Juba County 794 cases including 33 deaths have been reported from 75 villages in eight Payams. In Bor, as of July 7th, 72 cases including 1 death have been reported.
While the initial cases were traced back to PoC displacement camps, the cholera outbreak is closely tied tied to the current economic crisis. Public water supply provision for drinking and domestic use is extremely limited and is very much dependent on water trucking and the availability of bottled water. An increase of 50 - 200% in the cost of water has reduced the level of safe water available leading to poor sanitation and hygiene practices and making the communities more vulnerable to the spread of waterborne diseases such as cholera.
The strategic objective of the cholera response is to reduce morbidity and mortality associated with cholera and prevent its spread through effective response and control mechanisms in cholera affected and high risk areas of South Sudan. The priorities identified within the national response framework to be funded by this CERF rapid response include: procurement of life saving supplies and medicines for case management, emergency support supervision, deployment of qualified staff, provision of life saving WASH supplies. Specifically, health partners will focus on procuring essential medical supplies (cholera kits), establishing and deploying rapid response teams to all high risk areas, ensuring adequate care through case management of cholera patients, and increasing accessibility of oral rehydration sites within health facilities, while WASH partners will ensure chlorination of water sources in high risk areas, conduct systematic water quality testing, procure and distribute supplies such purification chemicals and support solid and liquid waste disposal in affected locations. To maximize the use of limited resources, aid agencies have prioritized activities with maximum impact and are leveraging both human and financial resources to avoid duplication of activities. The required cholera outbreak response is beyond the available capacity of the Ministry of Health and other government institutions without significant support from the international community.
This request is a joint WASH/Health project between UNICEF and WHO with a requested US2.6 million for the initial response. South Sudan crisis 2013-15-RR-SSD-15810-NR06lautze@un.org#Sue LautzeEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-05-11T00:00:002016-06-02T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene62905519651148706837690256158632273502HealthHealth318321865369317923855564109332015-08-08T00:00:0038921715-RR-UGA-1585115-RR-UGA-15851_Uganda_Jul2015_ApplicationAfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-07-24T00:00:002015-07-24T00:00:002015-08-07T00:00:002015-08-12T00:00:003304024.003238788Uganda continues to receive new arrivals from Burundi through border crossing point with Rwanda and Tanzania. As of 9 July 2015, 11,165 new arrivals have been assisted since January 2015, with the majority of the new arrivals arriving since mid-April following the general deterioration of the situation in Burundi. The interagency response and interest to the emergency has been good but, there are glaring gaps in protection and assistance against the standards and indicators expected in an emergency response. The needs are critical in Protection (registration, child protection, GBV prevention & response), WASH, health (including nutrition and reproductive health), shelter and food.
The CERF’s niche in this humanitarian funding will be primarily for life-saving response measures in 1) water and sanitation, 2) registration and protection of persons with specific needs, in particular the large number of women and children, 3) and shelter, as well as health and food/nutrition. The strategic objective of the CERF request is for ensure refugees get status recognition, care for unaccompanied minors and ensure emergency response services attain SPHERE standards for water and shelter. The health activity for cholera screening is directly linked to adequate water and sanitation provision. This rapid response is based on the draft Uganda chapter of the RRP.On 24 July, the RC for Uganda submitted a rapid response request for $3.3 million for 10 projects addressing urgent needs of new Burundian refugees in Uganda.
The Uganda RR application originally included three individual UNHCR proposals: health, shelter/NFI, and protection. To reduce the administrative and management burden and because all projects were specfically targeting refugees in a refugee operation, CERF secretariat requested that UNHCR resubmit as one multi-sector refugee assistance proposal. Subsequently, projects 15-RR-HCR-033 (helath) and 15-RR-HCR-034 (protection) were noted as withdrawn and 15-RR-HCR-035 was marked as multi-sector refugee assistance rather than just shelter/NFI. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Burundi political crisis 2015-202015-RR-UGA-15851-NR02EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-05-07T00:00:002016-10-26T00:00:00ProtectionProtection196490196491982201982239471Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security14882121082699014202126572685953849HealthHealth275002320050700258002350049300100000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI202471473834985154491828233731687162015-08-06T00:00:0039322015-UF-ETH-1622015-UF-ETH-16220_Ethiopia_Aug2015_ApplicationAfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-08-19T00:00:002015-08-19T00:00:002015-09-16T00:00:009999964.0010015968Each year Ethiopia addresses humanitarian emergencies arising from chronic food insecurity; however the failure of the recent belg harvest and the developing El Niño weather patterns indicate a particularly challenging period ahead. The situation is more pronounced in the north-eastern Afar, Amhara and Tigray, central and eastern Oromia and the south-eastern pastoralist areas of the country. The 2015 Humanitarian Requirements Document (HRD) targets some 2.9 million beneficiaries for relief food assistance; an estimated 2.4 million people for nutrition interventions and an additional 1.4 million people in drought and flood-prone areas for WASH support. A further 5.8 million people are targeted for health response. These figures will be adjusted based on the findings of the latest seasonal assessment findings, of which the preliminary results indicate a deteriorated overall food security situation and increase in beneficiary numbers and requirements. As it stands, the HRD is 52 per cent funded, with US$203 million contributions.
Considering the HRD funding status and limited funding prospects, the $10 million CERF allocation prioritized the most pressing emergency needs to address drought conditions in north-eastern and southern Ethiopia, with life-saving interventions focusing on nutrition and related supportive sectors including WASH, agriculture and health, as well as response to “underserved” refugee populations in Afar and Addis Ababa.
This CERF application would support aid agencies that are working to respond to immediate life-saving needs of a targeted 982,754 people: providing lifesaving nutrition interventions (therapeutic and targeted supplementary support) to 295,333 people in Afar, Amhara, Oromia and SNNPR; delivery of primary health services to 86,400 marginalized communities (Afar and Somali); access to water to 283,000 at risk population in Afar, Oromia, SNNP and Somali regions; protection and restoration of livelihoods of 56,127 vulnerable households (280,653) in Afar and SNNP regions; and for provision of life-saving health care services to 37,386 Eritrean and urban refugees (30,530 Eritrean-Afar refugees and 6,856 urban based vulnerable refugees).
Ethiopia Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $10 million (Round II allocation: $70 million for 8 countries)
Application first received: 19 August 2015
Number of projects submitted: 6 Food Security El Nino 2015-201615-UF-ETH-16220-NR03EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-09-28T00:00:002017-03-10T00:00:00HealthHealth22971167033967422767239594672686400FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture81589817111633008180481921163725327025FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector13006107062371213111133632647450186FullyNutritionNutrition143098014309814297965256208235351333FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene73821709261447477683473821150655295402Fully2015-09-11T00:00:0039429215-UF-SDN-1623215-UF-SDN-16232_Sudan_Aug2015_ApplicationAfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-08-20T00:00:002015-08-20T00:00:002015-10-07T00:00:0015150000.0015116739The humanitarian situation in Sudan is affected by protracted conflict-affected IDPs whose needs have been neglected over time. Despite years of assistance humanitarian needs are acute and in some cases are expanding. The impacts of the displacement include increased vulnerability, education needs, food insecurity, malnutrition, plus decreased access to health care and water/sanitation services among others. The number of Darfur IDPs in need is estimated at 4.5 million.
The Sudan HRP requirement is US$ 1.04 billion. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the HRP was 31% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 448,146 people in the North Darfur including El Fasher (including Zam Zam IDP camp), Kabkabiya, Mellit, Tawilla, and Dar Elsalam (including Shangal Tobaya). These areas are among the most affected by displacement and IDPs require food assistance, health and nutrition supplies and services, emergency education, NFIs, protection services and WASH responses.
Sudan Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $15 million (Round II allocation: $70 million for 8 countries)
Grant package received: 20 August 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 17 Z - Not in use - IDP15-UF-SDN-16232-NR08EnglishJulia Wittig2016-09-07T00:00:002016-09-30T00:00:002016-10-13T00:00:002017-01-06T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management26834126853951927068176894475784276FullyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection308312028951120323912479757188108308FullyEducationEducation3744037443456034567200FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security831595491013806910036658076158442296511FullyHealthHealth6018326874870576530242232107534194591FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI17772177733554517773177723554571090FullyNutritionNutrition7476074767071564126348370959FullyProtectionProtection50018002300360064501005012350FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence5001800230032006450965011950FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4676817078621755473100170786243886461440Fully2015-09-30T00:00:0039529315-UF-ERI-1626315-UF-ERI-16263_Eritrea_Aug2015_ApplicationAfricaEritreaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-08-21T00:00:002015-08-21T00:00:002015-09-21T00:00:002015-09-21T00:00:003000000.002993896Eritrea is at risk of drought due to a late rainy season and already faces low soil moisture, the consequences of a locust infestation earlier this year, and outbreaks of communicable diseases. Many people are affected by food insecurity and malnutrition. Some 70% of this CERF application under the second round for underfunded emergencies in 2015 will help to address critical humanitarian and basic needs related to food security, health, and nutrition, as well as multi-sector response for 2,800 refugees, largely in the drought-prone areas of the Northern and Southern Red Sea regions. The remaining 30% of funds will be used to respond to disease outbreaks and emergency reproductive health needs in the Red Sea regions, as well as Anseba, Debub, and Gash Barka. The application seeks $3 million to assist some 550,000 people. Food Security15-UF-ERI-16263-NR01maputseni@un.org#Clever MaputseniEnglishMateusz Buczek2016-10-30T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture2638777310411284180901093121342FullyNutritionNutrition7055569212747997588851886031607FullyHealthHealth8780019027027807084355182808267163545233FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector819645146475956413232787Fully2015-09-16T00:00:0039629415-UF-TCD-1630415-UF-TCD-16304_Chad_Aug2015_ApplicationAfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-08-24T00:00:002015-08-24T00:00:002015-10-02T00:00:006000000.005998567The humanitarian situation in Eastern Chad is affected by people who have fled fighting in Darfur and many have remained for several years. The impacts of the displacement include increased food insecurity, malnutrition, plus decreased access to health care and water/sanitation services. The number of Darfur refugees in need in Chad is estimated at 400,000.
The Chad HRP requirement is US$ 572 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the HRP was 27% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 315,000 people in the Wadi-Fira Region (including Iridimi, Touloum, Am Nabak, Mile et Kounougou camps), Sila and Ennedi-Est. These areas are among the most affected by displacement and refugees and host communities require food assistance, nutrition supplies, health supplies and services and WASH response.
Chad Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $6 million (Round II allocation: $70 million for 8 countries)
Grant package received: 24 August 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 9 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee15-UF-TCD-16304-NR06EnglishDavid Hartstone2016-09-28T00:00:002016-10-10T00:00:002017-01-17T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security5160124911765126049840925101423177935FullyHealthHealth26625833001099252771286701114413224338FullyNutritionNutrition476304763493968611180016563FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene34152972243874400923078670878114752Fully2015-09-29T00:00:0039729515-UF-AFG-1631715-UF-AFG-16317_Afghanistan_Aug2015_ApplicationAsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-08-24T00:00:002015-08-24T00:00:002015-10-07T00:00:008000000.007983646The humanitarian situation in Afghanistan is affected by conflict-induced displacement in the North and Northeast. The impacts of the displacement include increased food insecurity, malnutrition, shelter needs plus increased multi-sectoral needs in camps. The number of refugees, returnees, internally displaced populations (IDPs) and host communities in need is estimated at 3.8 million.
The Afghanistan HRP requirement is US$ 416.6 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the HRP was 29% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 336.000 people in the Badghis, Baghlan, Baghlan, Bamyan, Daikundi, Farah ,Faryab, Ghor, Helmand, Kabul, Kandahar, Khost, Kunduz, Laghman, Logar, Nangarhar, Nuristan, Paktika, Paktya, Takhar, Zabul. These areas are among the most affected by displacement and IDPs, refugees, returnees and people in host communities require food assistance, health supplies, shelter and multi-sectoral responses.
Afghanistan Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $8 million (Round II allocation: $70 million for 8 countries)
Grant package received: 24 August 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 5 Z - Not in use - IDP, Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee15-UF-AFG-16317-NR03mcfaddenm@un.org#Maia McFaddenEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2017-02-03T00:00:002017-04-13T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security305745205982633293755001879393162026MostlyHealthHealth253363470160037243423334157683117720MostlyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector7442651513957696351261208926046MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI39152953686840743074714814016Mostly2015-09-30T00:00:0039829615-UF-BGD-1633015-UF-BGD-16330_Bangladesh_Aug2015_ApplicationAsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-08-25T00:00:002015-08-25T00:00:002015-09-24T00:00:003000000.002992959For more than three decades, Bangladesh has hosted between 300,000-500,000 Rohingya refugees fleeing persecution, many of them having no legal rights. Approximately 33,000 Rohingyas are officially registered with the Government of Bangladesh as refugees. Both communities live in poor conditions, receive very limited aid, and are subject to arrest, extortion, and detention. Without urgent funding to address shortfalls, thousands are at risk of disease, abuse, hunger and death, thereby erasing any gains made through emergency relief and development assistance. This will also further exacerbate the impact of the recent floods.
Funding from the CERF Underfunded Emergencies window will provide life-saving assistance to 150,000-180,000 people, including vulnerable documented and undocumented Rohingyas and people from the host community. UN agencies and their partners will provide protection and emergency health services, access to safe drinking water with improved sanitation, and nutrition services to address acute malnutrition.
The UN Country Team requires about $31 million for humanitarian action in Bangladesh in 2015, and the CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $3 million for 8 projects, if approved.
Bangladesh Underfunded Emergencies application
Total envelope: $3 million (Round II allocation: $70 million for 8 countries)
Grant package received: 25 August 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 8 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee15-UF-BGD-16330-NR01robert.watkins@undp.org#Robert WatkinsEnglishMateusz Buczek2016-09-28T00:00:002016-12-28T20:17:54Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection85694974135431020044511465128194MostlyHealthHealth27288242325152028514103900132414183934MostlyNutritionNutrition2271587903150522216233104552677031MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene20742243714511319571247624433389446Mostly2015-09-18T00:00:0039922115-RR-SOM-1634715-RR-SOM-16347_Somalia_Aug2015_ApplicationAfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-08-26T00:00:002015-08-26T00:00:002015-10-01T00:00:002015-10-07T00:00:005306444.005300084The ongoing conflict in Yemen has resulted in the outflow of almost 29,000 refugees, 90 per cent of them Somalis, and migrants into Somalia. The estimated rates of return of 2,000 have been significantly surpassed, straining the absorptive capacity of reception centres at the ports of entry, namely Mogadishu, Puntland and Somaliland. CERF funds will provide critical support to the immediate priority and short term lifesaving needs of 10,000 Yemen arrivals, including refugees and Somali returnees. The scope of activities proposed for the CERF rapid response grant will be limited to boosting lifesaving response at the ports of entry, reception centres and the provision of a nominal assistance package to returnees at their areas of origin and refugees over a three month period.15-RR-SOM-16347-NR03declercqp@un.org#Peter de ClercqEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-07-01T00:00:002016-07-15T00:00:002016-12-21T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security84511261971885116720524023PartlyHealthHealth2000150035002100185039507450PartlyNutritionNutrition194401944202454225664510PartlyProtectionProtection8848711755614111417283483PartlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1355121925741230124624765050Partly2015-09-30T00:00:0040029715-UF-MMR-1641515-UF-MMR-16415_Myanmar_Sep2015_ApplicationAsiaMyanmarSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-09-08T00:00:002015-09-08T00:00:002015-10-09T00:00:002015-10-07T00:00:005369946.005367651The humanitarian situation in Myanmar is affected by Inter-communal violence in Rakhine State, and unresolved conflict in Kachin and northen Shan states. The impacts of the conflict has been displacement and increased food insecurity, malnutrition, protection and shelter needs and poor access to clean water and sanitation. 416,600 people are in urgent need of humanitarian assistance in Rakhine State (9.4 percent of the States’ total population of around 3.3 million people) and 119,800 people in Kachin and northen Shan states.
The Myanmar HRP requirement is US$ 265 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the HRP was 19% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 271,568 people in Rakhine State, Kachin State, and Shan State (Northern townships). These areas are among the most affected by displacement and IDPs and people in host communities require food assistance, health supplies, protection services, shelter and WASH responses.
Myanmar Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $5 million (Round II allocation: $70 million for 8 countries)
Grant package received: 8 September 2015
Total # of projects submitted: 1215-UF-MMR-16415-NR03EnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-30T00:00:002017-01-12T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection3457737334950340704503452069470FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security262874519371480266615077877439148919FullyHealthHealth64381203764142215356957717218FullyNutritionNutrition52240522462300623011454FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence18313567539823095452776113159FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4693938624904739631825FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene7449664514094882188291765031744Fully2015-10-01T00:00:0040122215-UF-SOM-1643315-UF-SOM-16433_Somalia_Sep2015_ApplicationAfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-09-08T00:00:002015-09-08T00:00:002015-10-13T00:00:002015-10-16T00:00:0019899827.0019989234In Somalia, about 3 million people are in need of lifesaving and livelihoods assistance, of whom 731,000 are unable to meet their basic food requirements. Insecurity, erratic Gu rains, and floods have worsened food security. About 203,000 children are acutely malnourished and 38,000 are at risk of death. A further 2.3 million people are on the verge of slipping into acute food insecurity. Over 1.1 million internally displaced people live in over-crowded settlements and have limited access to protection and basic services. They make up 76 per cent of the people in acute food insecurity. Forced evictions of displaced people and further displacements due to a military offensive are on the increase.
The Somalia HRP funding requirement is $863 million. At the time of this CERF application, the HRP was 35% funded.
This CERF application for underfunded emergencies targets approximately 685,000 people, mostly in South-Central Somalia. The targeted areas are the most affected by fighting, displacement, and food insecurity.Somalia Underfunded Emergencies application
Total envelope: $20 million (Round II allocation: $70 million for 8 countries)
Application first received: 8 September 2015
Number of projects submitted: 19 Food Security, Z - Not in use - IDP, Z - Not in use - Malnutrition15-UF-SOM-16433-NR04haggarty@un.org#Alta HaggartyEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-30T00:00:002017-01-27T00:00:00Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0103510350100010002035FullyEducationEducation729761179084430185461512523FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security110127075180871164576551930037387FullyHealthHealth3435737625719823346669982103448175430FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture2032352032354010138634138644462184FullyNutritionNutrition2005502005522009150353704457099FullyProtectionProtection8730125992132912531288694140062729FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4740636011100681090901590027000FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene406423506775709484764405792533168242Fully2015-10-12T00:00:0040222315-RR-PAK-1680715-RR-PAK-16807_Pakistan_Sep2015_ApplicationAsiaPakistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-09-24T00:00:002015-09-24T00:00:002015-10-16T00:00:002015-10-19T00:00:0010999117.0011000547This new emergency is the sudden and massive return of vulnerable poor and malnourished IDPs (approximately 930,000 individuals since August) to areas of origin in FATA devastated by conflict and abandonment, where markets and basic social services are non-functional and public and private structures severely damaged. The HCT aims to support 45,000 families returning to SW, Khyber, and Kurram Agencies with lifesaving health, water, sanitation, shelter, protection, food, education, and nutrition services to avoid mortality due to malnourishment, diseases, lack of shelter and violence, for the critical transitional period of 3-6 months before services begin operating.
The total requirement estimated for this operation is $85 million, of which the HCT is seeking $11 million from CERF.15-RR-PAK-16807-NR02Neil Buhne#Neil BuhneEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-08-17T00:00:002017-01-04T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection137743232170061111560461716134167FullyEducationEducation7202156487665413441585414620FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security81084692351503197787166553144424294743FullyHealthHealth4145036552780025055759710110267188269FullyNutritionNutrition3368603368634976180835305986745FullyProtectionProtection40262969699530813057613813133FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence895553364283864110871495121379FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI325502415056700241502415048300105000FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene21580121383371822460126343509468812Fully2015-10-14T00:00:0040322415-RR-YEM-1688815-RR-YEM-16888_Yemen_Sep2015_ApplicationAsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-09-26T00:00:002015-09-26T00:00:002015-10-30T00:00:002015-11-04T00:00:0014997844.0014942667Since 2011, the humanitarian situation in Yemen has severely deteriorated due to political instability, conflict and an economic and fiscal crisis, leading to the near-collapse of basic services. Even before the escalation of conflict in March 2015, the scale of needs made Yemen one of the largest humanitarian emergencies. Fighting, coalition airstrikes and the restrictions on commercial imports have impacted virtually the entire country. Since July 2015, the number of IDPs has increased by 25 per cent, to 1.44 million, and the number of deaths reported by health facilities has increased from 2,288 to 4,855 and injuries from 9,755 to 24,971 injuries, from 19 June to 15 September. The rapid deterioration of the situation, amidst continuing fighting, requires an immediate response to prevent Yemen from falling into a humanitarian catastrophe. It is of critical importance to intervene with life-saving activities before it is too late. The overall focus of this $15 million proposal shall be the response to the recent influx of IDPs in Aden, Al Dahle, Amran, Hajjah, Ibb, Lahj, Sa’ada, and Taizz, for Early Recovery in mine action and solid waste management, Health, Protection, Shelter and WASH sectors. The Multi-sector response for refugees and migrants will be responding in in Aden (Basateen), Taizz (Bab El Mandeb and Mokha), Hodeidah (Hodeidah City), Sana’a, Mukalla, where the current needs are largest as per latest assessments. The CERF allocation is directly targeting 2.6 million Yemenis in need and envisaged to have a multiplier effect; kick starting stronger commitments and funding from traditional and non-traditional donors to the YHRP.15-RR-YEM-16888-NR05EnglishJulia Wittig2016-08-09T00:00:002016-09-03T00:00:002016-08-31T00:00:002017-03-09T21:08:44Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management21095241864528124775273845215997440FullyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection9686217325114187864371232698763212950FullyEarly RecoveryEarly Recovery179804185651365455170008175537345545711000FullyHealthHealth1003367316317349999834383070482904656403FullyProtection - Human RightsProtection80698771168408069101741824335083FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector37096142015129721269103753164482941FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0430043007600181502575030050FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene211237214001425238212621215106427727852965Fully2015-10-30T00:00:0040422515-RR-MWI-1689215-RR-MWI-16892_Malawi_Sep2015_ApplicationAfricaMalawiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-09-26T00:00:002015-09-26T00:00:002015-10-16T00:00:002015-10-20T00:00:0020326783.009963628Drought conditions which started to manifest during the 2014/2015 where the cropping season started with a one month delay in rains followed by floods in January 2015 started to intensify in February and march with 4 to 6 weeks of dry spells. This has caused a 225,000mt deficit for the 2015/2016 consumption year. Consequently, the Malawi Vulnerability Assessment of June 2015 indicates that about 2.8 million people require food support – up from 1.5 million in 2014. This doubling of people requiring food support is a concerning spike illustrating a significant deterioration in food insecurity which has triggered a CERF rapid response request. The nutrition situation has also deteriorated and admissions into health facilities for acute malnutrition has also seen a shart rise, and in some areas as high as 49% compared to the same period in 2014. Priority needs identified therefore included food and agricultural support as well as nutrition and protection. With CERF funds, the humanitarian team plans to target xxx of the most acutely food insecure of 2.8 million requiring assistance.
WFP aims to meet urgent food needs through local and regional procurement of maize which is the staple commodity in coutnry. The Government of Malawi is contributing in kind maze from its strategic grain reserve, however, WFP needs funds to pay for associated costs related to that donated maize (transport, distribution and other related costs) and intends to use some of the funds from CERF for that purpose. FAO plans on providing key agricultural inputs for food availability and nutritional diversity through quick maturing legume seeds, cassava cuttings, sweet potato vines but also including cereal seeds. UNICEF and WFP are working in tandem to respond to acute malnutrition with UNICEF providing treatment to severe acutely malnourished children and WFP providing treatment to moderately malnourished children and pregnant and lactating women.
CERF funds will kick start a collective response to the unfolding crisis. The humanitarian team is requesting xxx million for 4 to 5 month response for xx beneficiaries. El Nino 2015-201615-RR-MWI-16892-NR02mia.seppo@undp.org#Mia SeppoEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-07-30T00:00:002017-01-09T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture45738559021016405821271148129360231000FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security4990244615619605855193924804009997921960377FullyNutritionNutrition45430454347292028675711300Fully2015-10-14T00:00:0040522615-RR-MRT-1714315-RR-MRT-17143_Mauritania_Oct2015_ApplicationAfricaMauritaniaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-10-07T00:00:002015-10-07T00:00:002015-10-22T00:00:002015-10-26T00:00:002610652.002532163Mauritania is facing an alarming nutrition situation revealed by an increase in admissions of children with severe acute malnutrition (SAM) in nutrition in centres in the seven southern regions of the country: Hodh El Chargui, Hodh El Gharbi, Assaba, Guidimakha, Gorgol, Brakna and Tagant. Increasing malnutrition has been confirmed by a recent SMART nutrition survey whose results were published by the Ministry of Health in July 2015. Overall, 172,000 people are affected. The most vulnerable groups include children under five and pregnant and lactating women suffering from acute malnutrition, being at high risk of morbidity and mortality if lifesaving interventions are not immediately implemented. Aid agencies require $10.9 million to respond to this situation but have received only $4.2 million so far.
Aid agencies will use CERF funds to support the Government in organizing and implementing Integrated Management of Acute Malnutrition (IMAM) for 9,794 children with SAM, assist 2,000 malnourished pregnant and lactating women, and provide clean water to 9,000 people in villages with the highest prevalence and in 176 health centres for four months. CERF funds will also be used to provide supplementary feeding activities for 2,664 children with moderate acute malnutrition and 353 pregnant and lactating women with moderate malnutrition, as well as protection rations to 23,652 people in the district of Kobéni in Hodh El Garbhi region. Interventions will cover the 10 worst affected districts, except for WFP activities which will cover only one of the districts, and will be implemented in partnership with NGOs and local government counterparts.This application includes only one project, a joint nutrition project with a budget of $2.6 million by UNICEF (asking for $1.45 million), WFP ($0.6 million), UNFPA ($0.2 million) and WHO ($0.3 million). Food Security, Z - Not in use - Malnutrition15-RR-MRT-17143-NR01mario.samaja@one.un.org#Mario SamajaEnglishJulia Wittig2016-07-22T00:00:002016-09-09T00:00:002017-01-27T22:05:51NutritionNutrition5582812291681195363854573108211176330Fully2015-10-20T00:00:0040622715-RR-ZWE-1719115-RR-ZWE-17191_Zimbabwe_Oct2015_ApplicationAfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-10-10T00:00:002015-10-10T00:00:002015-11-05T00:00:002015-11-06T00:00:009861180.008110712CERF support was requested to provide emergency assistance to save lives and livelihoods in a food insecurity emergency brought about by a poor rainfall season. An estimated 924,000 people in Zimbabwe are currently food insecure, and this figure is expected to increase dramatically to 1.5 million people during the peak of the lean season (January to March 2016). There has also been an associated 53 per cent increase in child malnutrition rates. The Zimbabwe Food Insecurity Response Plan, September 2015, requires $132 million and is 36 per cent funded. The total CERF funds of $8.1m will be used to support more than 184,000 people in five prioritized provinces that remain uncovered by current responses in the sectors of Agriculture, Food, Nutrition and WASH. El Nino 2015-201615-RR-ZWE-17191-NR02bishow.parajuli@one.un.org#Bishow ParajuliEnglishDavid Hartstone2016-08-05T00:00:002016-10-24T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture958097721935220284145533483754189FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security347053203566740375073470572212138952FullyNutritionNutrition1340013401539140161555516895FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene308012488455685374472686764314119999Fully2015-11-02T00:00:0040722815-RR-IRQ-1725215-RR-IRQ-17252_Iraq_Oct2015_ApplicationAsiaIraqWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-10-13T00:00:002015-10-13T00:00:002015-10-30T00:00:002015-11-04T00:00:007462553.004490040The humanitarian situation in Iraq is deteriorating. The number of Iraqis in need of humanitarian assistance has increased more than four-fold over the course of this year. There are now 8.6 million people – nearly a quarter of the population – who require humanitarian support as a result of violence and armed conflict linked to the take-over of Iraqi territory by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and ongoing military operations. Since January 2014, nearly 3.2 million people have fled their homes, including over 300,000 people since April 2015. An estimated 2.3 million people are living under ISIL control. Nearly 400,000 people have returned to areas recently returned to government control. By the end of the year, some 10 million are expected to need assistance, due to the effects of ongoing conflict, violence and military operations.
A cholera outbreak was declared by the Iraqi Government on 15 September 2015. Based on WHO case definition for cholera, out of 53,238 suspected cholera cases between 1 September and 18 October, 1,748 cases were confirmed for vibrio cholera in 15 governorates: Baghdad, Babylon, Basrah, Kerbala, Missan, Muthanna, Najaf, Qadissiya, Salah Al Din, Kirkuk, Thi Qar, Wassit, Erbil, Dahuk and Diyala. Out of the 1,748 confirmed cases, 53% are males and 47% females. So far, two deaths due to cholera have been confirmed by the Ministry of Health. The range between 0.01% to 0.05% attack rates has been used for the off-camp population and host community. Therefore, it is estimated that there may be up to 7140 cases in this epidemic. In most cholera outbreaks, approximately 20% of symptomatic cases of cholera develop a severe form of the disease which requires vigorous rehydration. In IDP and refugee camps, the high percentage will be taken due to the living conditions. Therefore, approximately 286 to 1,428 cases would require admission for intensive treatment including antibiotics during the next 3 to 4 months.
A cholera outbreak amidst a large-scale humanitarian emergency highlights the need for rapid response to control and prevent further spread to areas with a high concentration of displaced people and refugees who are especially vulnerable to infectious diseases. About 7.8 million people need health assistance in Iraq. Health facilities are overburdened and medicines and supplies are running short. In four of the most severely affected areas in the country, 14 hospitals and more than 170 health facilities have been damaged or destroyed. The resources of host communities have been drained. Many of those displaced have had to flee multiple times as the frontlines of the conflict have shifted, making adequate response to their needs both complex and challenging. Public health services and water and sanitation infrastructure in areas of displacement, already fragile and under stress are overloaded. Poverty and unemployment have increased. Sectarian and social tensions have deepened.
The grant request is to support the Ministry of Health and the Directorate for Water to control the outbreak and prevent further spread of the disease. Activities under the grant include immediate support to water testing and implementation of remedial actions, distributions of hygiene kits, bottled water, basic family water kits and jerry cans to high risk populations in affected governorates; hygiene promotion with messages on cholera prevention (door-to-door campaigns, radio, text messages and community networks), and monitoring of sanitation facilities i.e. grey water disposal, septic tanks and cesspools. In relation to health, the grant will support the Ministry of Health in implementing a cholera vaccination campaign for about 247,319 IDPs and refugees at high risk of contracting the disease, to pre-empt further spread of cholera and as a complementary tool to traditional control measures. UNICEF and WHO are requesting US 4.5 million from CERF to contribute to the initial health and wash sector response.15-RR-IRQ-17252-NR04grande@un.org#Lise GrandeEnglishDavid Hartstone2016-07-30T00:00:002016-10-31T00:00:00HealthHealth70362457281160906764850945118593234683FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene8507085070170140103974103974207948378088Fully2015-10-30T00:00:0041023115-RR-TZA-1737915-RR-TZA-17379_Tanzania_Oct2015_ApplicationAfricaUnited Republic of TanzaniaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-10-22T00:00:002015-10-22T00:00:002015-11-05T00:00:002015-11-10T00:00:001500314.001500314In Tanzania, an outbreak of cholera, which began in Dar Es Salaam in late August 2015, has spread to 12 of the 28 regions of Tanzania, putting 32.7 million people at risk. Some 6,208 cases and 83 deaths had been recorded as of 29 October 2015. Over 75% of the cases were reported from Dar es Salaam. The case fatality rate of 1.5% is considered high by WHO standards, although underreporting may partially explain the high rate.
The current outbreak is different from previous ones in its vast geographical spread within a short period of time. The last major outbreak in 2010 had 1,997 reported cases but this was limited to Tanga and Dar es Salaam regions. The current situation has not yet stabilized. The rapid spread of the outbreaks across the past four weeks has fuelled fear that the situation could get substantially worse if the epidemic is not controlled before the start of the rainy season in late October. The concentration of cases in Dar es Salaam, the main commercial city of Tanzania, conjugated with a very mobile population across the country, further enhances this risk.
To respond, aid agencies require some $6 million, including $4 million for UNICEF and WHO. This application incldues one joint health project by the two agencies.15-RR-TZA-17379-NR02alvaro.rodriguez@undp.org#Alvaro RodriguezEnglishDavid Hartstone2016-08-05T00:00:002016-10-26T00:00:00HealthHealth32183323654132333103633612877FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene84173880873016504681075391103322021086113759079Fully2015-11-05T00:00:0041123215-RR-HND-1750215-RR-HND-17502_Honduras_Oct2015_ApplicationAmericasHondurasLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-10-28T00:00:002015-10-28T00:00:002015-11-13T00:00:002015-11-19T00:00:002296208.002187908In Honduras, the 2015 drought caused by the El Nino phenomenon is one of the most severe in the country's history. There have been historical temperature records across the country, especially in the departments affected by drought with temperatures that have reached over 40 degrees centigrade. The drought has affected 146 municipalities in twelve provinces.
As a result, 50,585 households are severely food insecure, a 40% increase compared to 2014. 98% of small producers are affected by drought on average representing an 81%loss in agricultural production. Rural areas do not have a steady daily water supply, which jeopardizes the quality of the water supplied. Added to this, people store greater amounts of water in the home, which can encouraging the creation of mosquito breeding sites and spread water borne disease. Health facilities are also poorly equipped to address the needs of people affected by water borne diseases such as dengue, Chikungunya and diarrhea. Furthermore, the nutritional status of nearly 6,000 children is threatened by the drought and 600 children are already suffering from acute malnutrition.
Based on the preliminary results of the August Emergency Food Security Assessment (EFSA), the Humanitarian Country Team developed a Preliminary Humanitarian Response Plan to address the most urgent priorities. The plan was launched in country in late September by the Resident Coordinator and requires emergency funding to preserve the lives of 50,586 families (252,930 people) who are at high risk by the humanitarian situation caused by the prolonged drought, and who needs immediate assistance with food security, WASH, health, nutrition, education, protection and livelihoods.
To respond to the deteriorating situation, aid agencies require some $23 million, including $2.3 million for UNICEF, WFP and WHO. This application includes one food security project, one health project, one WASH project and one joint nutrition project. El Nino 2015-201615-RR-HND-17502-NR02EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-08-13T00:00:002016-11-18T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security6832383110663705462241327823941FullyHealthHealth288769259812297795861256322375FullyNutritionNutrition7372411778376731717939017173FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene28222561538328163101591711300Fully2015-11-13T00:00:0041223315-RR-ETH-1755715-RR-ETH-17557_Ethiopia_Oct2015_ApplicationAfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-10-30T00:00:002015-10-30T00:00:002015-11-12T00:00:002015-11-16T00:00:0025000000.0017003929Ethiopia is currently experiencing an El Niño driven slow-onset natural disaster. The impact of the failed spring / belg season was compounded by the arrival of the El Niño weather conditions that weakened summer / kiremt rains that feed 80 to 85 per cent of the country. This greatly expanded food insecurity, malnutrition and devastated livelihoods across six affected regions of the country. On 2 October, the Government informed UN agencies, NGOs, Donor representatives, and the media that the number of people in need of relief assistance in Ethiopia due to El Niño phenomenon had increased to 8.2 million in the Afar, Amhara, Oromia, SNNPR, Somali and Tigray regions of Ethiopia.
The current HRD requires $596.4 million and is nearly 60 per cent funded, with serious gaps for the fourth quarter. To date, the HRF has secured the following: US$30 million from DfID and US$1 million from the Swiss Government. Pledges received to date include US$1 from the Swiss, US$18 million from the EU and US$5.5 million from the Netherlands. USAID/Food for Peace has called forward US$97 million (out of which US$20 million is in new funding) and Sweden, US$17 million for WFP.
CERF funds will be used to support 1.37 million drought affected people and around 164,000 moderately malnourished women and children in the next two months to cover food needs and Targeted Supplementary Feeding supplies. Timely response to the emergency is key to avoid further deterioration and even greater magnitude of needs in 2016. El Nino 2015-201615-RR-ETH-17557-NR04EnglishDavid Hartstone2016-08-12T00:00:002016-08-17T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security3863293384187247473779393575497354881460235Mostly2015-11-11T00:00:0041323415-RR-CAF-1759915-RR-CAF-17599_CAR_Nov2015_ApplicationAfricaCentral African RepublicMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-11-03T00:00:002015-11-03T00:00:002015-12-21T00:00:002015-12-23T00:00:0012004614.0011556590Between the 26 September and 29 September 2015 a new wave of violence in Bangui and other parts of the Central African Republic worsened an already dire humanitarian situation and resulted in the displacement of over 42,000 people in Bangui and another 20,000 in other locations. There are now more than 400,000 IDP’s in the country. For Bangui only, this represents an increased by 38% in IDPs seeking refuge in existing or new displacement sites. The violence has also aggravated the condition of people already displaced and living in over 33 displacement sites who have been cut off from any assistance for days. A large number of people in Bangui have also fled their homes where violence occurred, to take refuge with host families in a few specific neighbourhoods. This situation has created a phenomenon of overpopulation in settings where basic services were already limited. Host families, already living in precarious conditions, will only have the capacity to absorb these new arrivals over a short period of time. While the numbers of IDPs in host families is difficult to assess and is currently estimated to be as large as 45,000, neighbourhoods where people have sought refuge are clearly identified and require assistance.
The Humanitarian Country Team has endorsed the following two primary strategic objectives for this CERF allocation:
i) to provide life-saving assistance to respond to new critical needs that have arisen in the recent crisis, complementing the ongoing response which includes provision of direct support through provision of health services (WHO, UNICEF), Food assistance and Nutrition commodities and services (WFP, UNICEF), Site facilitation and displacement tracking matrix as well as camp management response in IDP sites (IOM, UNHCR), Protection services geared towards children and against gender based violence (UNFPA, UNHCR, UNICEF), and provision of WASH related items and services.
ii) to strengthen access and support a further decentralisation of humanitarian operations which includes provision of humanitarian air services (UNHAS-WFP) and logistics support to support the humanitarian community (WFP).
The strategy was developed through discussion at the inter cluster coordination group and later presented to the Humanitarian country team which includes NGO’s UN agencies and donors.15-RR-CAF-17599-NR03lebeux@un.org#Anne-Sophie Le BeuxEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-09-21T00:00:002016-09-30T00:00:002018-06-12T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management313133075262065382574202180278142343Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection50632965802844352015645014478Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0515100051Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0272700027Early RecoveryEarly Recovery757075709059051662Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security10146107492089510802135802438245277NutritionNutrition3010030103260032606270Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence10404109922139610828184312925950655Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene258583539261250270583669263750125000HealthHealth874073609012349794691390981337892572862015-12-17T00:00:0041423515-RR-AFG-1767515-RR-AFG-17675_Afghanistan_Nov2015_ApplicationAsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-11-10T00:00:002015-11-10T00:00:002015-12-23T00:00:002015-12-28T00:00:009816867.005802858On 11 November UN Deputy Special Representative for Afghanistan and UN Resident- and Humanitarian Coordinator Mark Bowden submitted an application to the CERF’s rapid response window in response to the post-conflict Kunduz situation and a 26 October in northeast Afghanistan.
KUNDUZ CONFLICT
The escalation in fighting in Kunduz City, particularly from 28 September to 2 October, and similarly brazen AGE attacks wreaked havoc and provoked the widespread displacement of at least 14,000 families within the Northeast (Balkh, Baghlan, Takhar, Badakhshan), with an estimated 2,800 families displaced to Central Region, to escape the armed conflict. The Kunduz regional airport, health facilities, and schools were closed and water, electrical and communication services disrupted during the conflict and humanitarian actors evacuated. Health sector response was made even more difficult following the 3 October US bombing the Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) trauma centre in Kunduz City, detrimentally impacting access to surgical care for hundreds of thousands. Critical needs for the majority of IDPs are initially assessed to be food and shelter, with NFI, health, WASH, and protection needs are also key.
EARTHQUAKE
On 26 October a 7.5 magnitude earthquake rocked north-eastern Afghanistan, affecting at least 16 of the country’s provinces and leaving more than 129,000 people in need of some form of humanitarian assistance. Ongoing assessments as of 8 November show that 112 people were killed, 510 injured, 11,693 homes damaged and 6,546 houses destroyed. Kunar and Nangarhar and Badakshan provinces were hardest hit. The immediate priorities are providing emergency shelter, heating, food and protection of livestock / livelihoods for the affected communities, particularly in remote and hard to reach areas.15-RR-AFG-17675-NR02mcfaddenm@un.org#Maia McFaddenEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-23T00:00:002016-11-30T00:00:002017-06-09T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture42630711111137414093168283109214222955PartlyObvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.HealthHealth1727238641131659203522201126124PartlyObvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence800232831281639386855078635PartlyObvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.2015-12-23T00:00:0041523615-RR-DZA-1772715-RR-DZA-17727_Algeria_Nov2015_ApplicationAfricaAlgeriaNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-11-13T00:00:002015-11-17T00:00:002015-12-11T00:00:002015-12-16T00:00:006599040.005051640Heavy rainfalls lasting over a week in late October led to severe floods in Tindouf in south-western Algeria, causing an unprecedented level of destruction to all five Saharawi refugee camps, impacting the entire refugee population- the majority of them vulnerable children and women. Assessments have put the total number of destroyed/damaged shelters at 17,821, meaning 17,821 families lost their shelter (houses) and some 17,000 families lost food rations (≈ 85,000 food rations). Furthermore, 30% of health facilities and schools are damaged, and medical supplies including vaccines may have been destroyed.
The humanitarian partners already present in the camps are quickly responding to the crisis. The inter-agency humanitarian response will be guided by the following strategic objectives:
i) Priority humanitarian actions to provide emergency shelter and essential relief items, including drinking water:
1. Provide emergency family tents;
2. Provide emergency non-food items, including tarpaulins, kitchen sets and jerry cans;
3. Provide a new water truck to ensure drinking water availability;
4. Support initial repairs and rehabilitation of houses, prioritizing the most vulnerable families.
ii) Priority humanitarian actions to provide food and adequate nutrition:
1. Replace food stock losses, amounting to 85,000 rations
2. Provide 124,960 full food rations of 2,125 MT of several commodities for some months, until the food security and nutritional situation stabilizes;
iii) Priority humanitarian actions to provide refugees with adequate health facilities:
1. Set-up temporary health care spaces (large tents);
2. Provide emergency health supplies and consumables: obstetric and newborn kits, crucial drugs for de-worming, vitamin A supplements;
3. Ensure availability and storage of vaccines;
4. Restore electricity, cold room and cold storage facilities in hospitals, including for vaccines;
5. Restore damaged hospitals and provide them with medicine supplies and life-saving equipment.
iv) Priority humanitarian actions to enable students to pursue their schooling and support their well-being:
1. Set-up temporary learning spaces for primary school children;
2. Provide educational supplies and recreation materials for schools;
3. Ensure child care for young children (0-5 years), by providing “child friendly tents” and kits for early childhood development;
4. Provide psychosocial support for vulnerable children (including children with disabilities);
The amount originally requested is 6,599,040 USD. The response will include the following sectors: Health, Food security, and Shelter/NFIs. The requesting agencies include: WFP, UNHCR, UNICEF and WHO. More specifically, CERF Funds will be used to (1) provide emergency shelter and essential relief items, including drinking water; (2) replace food stocks lost and secure food security and nutrition for the initial weeks; (3) provide emergency health care to affected population.15-RR-DZA-17727-NR01cristina.amaral@one.un.org#Cristina AmaralEnglishMateusz Buczek2016-09-11T00:00:002016-12-27T22:10:59Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security22936105033343924580269815156185000FullyHealthHealth8097370411801867695231819930000FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI112507250185001125072501850037000Fully2015-12-10T00:00:0041623715-RR-PHL-1775015-RR-PHL-17750_Philippines_Nov2015_ApplicationAsiaPhilippinesSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20152015-11-17T00:00:002015-11-17T00:00:002015-12-17T00:00:002015-12-08T00:00:001581292.001512074Category 3 Typhoon Koppu made landfall over Casiguran municipality in Aurora province in Central Luzon (Region III) on 18 October 2015. While not striking with the same strength as super typhoon Haiyan of November 2013, Typhoon Koppu was unusually large and slow-moving, and brought incessant and intense rain in its 650 km diameter for more than four days. It caused flooding, flash floods and landslides, leaving 60 people dead and 90 injured, according to the Philippine Red Cross. The typhoon affected all seven regions of the Luzon island (Regions I, II, III, IV, V, Cordillera Administrative Region (CAR) and Metro Manila).
Some 713,600 people were still displaced as of 3 November, according to the latest NDRRMC report. Most (or 99 per cent) were staying with relatives and friends or in the open nearby their damaged homes in Regions I, II and III, where damage to houses was the most significant. The rest (9,100 people) were in 37 evacuation centres primarily in Region III.
More than 18,800 houses were destroyed and 118,900 houses partially destroyed as of 3 November. People with damaged houses will remain displaced until their homes are repaired or reconstructed, requiring extended humanitarian aid such as food, non-food items (e.g. blankets, flashlights for municipalities without electricity, mosquito nets), medicines, enhanced disease surveillance, shelter repair kits, protection particularly against trafficking, temporary learning spaces and livelihoods support. The typhoon also damaged 70 health facilities, according to the Department of Health (DoH), and more than 1,400 classrooms, according to NDRRMC.
The CERF application for $1.5 million will help mitigate further deterioration of food security and related increase in malnutrition and vulnerability to diseases of 212,000 people affected by Typhoon Koppu in Nueva Ecija, Pampanga and Tarlac provinces in Region III and in Pangasinan province in Region I. Of these people, 65,000 people are from small-scale, rice-farming households in Region III devastated by typhoon flooding. FAO will lead the provision of certified rice seeds and fertilizers for planting during the current cropping season by mid-December 2015 for harvest in April 2016. WHO will lead the provision of essential health care. Food security and agricultural production capacity of the most severely affected farmers will be restored while protecting flood-affected people from disease outbreaks over the next five months until April 2016.15-RR-PHL-17750-NR01ola.almgren@one.un.org#Ola AlmgrenEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-09-17T00:00:002017-01-03T00:00:00HealthHealth50880557561066364939655968105364212000FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture326883541268100213382406245400113500Fully2015-11-30T00:00:0041723815-RR-HTI-1775815-RR-HTI-17758_Haiti_Nov2015_ApplicationAmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-11-18T00:00:002015-11-18T00:00:002015-12-29T00:00:002015-12-31T00:00:002363728.001986864The CERF funds will be used to cover increased protection and humanitarian needs that were created by the arrival of 85,000 migrants, returnees and deported people from the Dominican Republic in Haitian municipalities located alongside the border. The response is needed in order to avoid the escalation of a humanitarian crisis reinforced by a context of violence and cholera epidemic. Humanitarian and protection response are currently weakened by the insufficient of required resources both for the government’s institutions, NGOs and UN Agencies.
The Haiti HCT seeks $2 million to support xx,xxx people to:
•Scale-up border monitoring of four formal and some 96 informal border crossing points. This monitoring system also functions as a referral mechanism of specific protection cases and early-warning system.
•Ensure referral and registration and support readmission / repatriation of persons entitled to Dominican citizenship with due respect to the principle of family unity.
•Ensure minimum protection and care of vulnerable and unaccompanied children, including family tracing and reunification.
•Prevent informal settlements through adapted support to return, delocalisation and appropriate referral of immediate and medium needs.15-RR-HTI-17758-NR04mourad.wahba@undp.org#Mourad WahbaEnglishMateusz Buczek2016-09-29T00:00:002016-10-04T00:00:002017-03-15T02:14:15Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection5323398393058368237407670FullyProtectionProtection11709314084311711073124232349666613Fully2015-12-28T00:00:0041823915-RR-TCD-1778715-RR-TCD-17787_Chad_Nov2015_ApplicationAfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-11-25T00:00:002015-11-25T00:00:002015-12-29T00:00:002016-01-05T00:00:006999724.006997593Since January 2015 the humanitarian situation in Chad’s Lac region has significantly deteriorated due to Boko Haram attacks in Chad and in neighboring countries Nigeria and Niger. An initial influx of refugees and Chadian returnees who arrived at the beginning of the year was followed by successive waves of internal displacement from July 2015. The situation deteriorated further since September 2015 with the successive attacks of Boko Haram in Chad and the intensification of Chadian military operations in the Lac region causing the displacement of more than 52,000 persons between the end of July and October.
Overall, 321,242 persons (232 242 host communities and 89,000 people in displacement) are affected by the Boko Haram crisis in Lac region, among them 201,000 are in need of humanitarian assistance.
The strategic objective of the CERF RR application from Chad is to provide lifesaving assistance and protection to 133,935 vulnerable people including IDPs, returnees, refugees, TCNs and host population principally in Baga Sola and Bol, as well as surrounding areas in the department of Mamdi. CERF funds will help to provide lifesaving assistance to most vulnerable people including IDPs, refugees, returnees, TCNs and host communities who are in need of urgent support for protection, health, nutrition, food security, NFIs and shelter and education.
Despite the current efforts of the humanitarian community, significant needs remain in all sectors. Urgent needs and gaps are of particular concern in IDP sites due to the volatility of displacements. The key imperatives to efficiently respond to the crisis are increasing access to basic services of people affected by the displacements, insuring their protection and addressing vulnerabilities outside facilitating integration of IDPs in host communities. As humanitarian access remains difficult due to insecurity and military operations, CERF will primarily focus on IDPs, refugees, and host communities in Bol and Baga Sola areas with possible extension of assistance to people in new areas once access becomes possible and if assessments are available. Z - Not in use - IDP, Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - not in use - Returnees Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-TCD-17787-NR04sawadogoa@un.org#Abdoulaye SawadogoEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-30T00:00:002017-01-27T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture385198223674938445893811305FullyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1554119027441590109226825426FullyEarly RecoveryEarly Recovery206800206801333201333234012FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2488213398382801658889322552063800FullyHealthHealth124874417156658129974597358970115628FullyProtectionProtection7215766714882641692521566830550FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1115306049917202912132967655188984361013Fully2015-12-28T00:00:0041924015-RR-SLV-1782815-RR-SLV-17828_El Salvador_Dec2015_ApplicationAmericasEl SalvadorLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20152015-12-01T00:00:002015-12-12T00:00:002015-12-18T00:00:002015-12-30T00:00:002710000.002710000 El Nino 2015-201615-RR-SLV-17828-NR01Christian Salazar#Christian SalazarEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-04-04T00:00:002016-05-18T00:00:002016-09-18T00:00:002017-03-10T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture201880731009117907159894919040FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security6937722414161660683951500129162FullyNutritionNutrition79070790782280822816135FullyEarly RecoveryEarly Recovery6220663912859590276881359026449Fully2015-12-18T00:00:0042024115-RR-NER-1785215-RR-NER-17852_Niger_Dec2015_ApplicationAfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-12-02T00:00:002015-12-02T00:00:002015-12-29T00:00:002016-01-05T00:00:006999916.007031508The first Boko Haram attack on Nigerien soil took place in Bosso, near Lake Chad, on 6 February. Since then, repeated attacks from April through October caused successive waves of displacement. The state of emergency in Diffa region was renewed by the Government of Niger from 29 October 2015 to 26 January 2016. As a result of the violence and insecurity, more than 300,000 people are directly and severely affected by the crisis. The overwhelming level of new needs created by the situation triggered this CERF request, focusing on Food Security, Emergency Shelter/Non Food Items, WASH, Protection and Reproductive Health as the most pertinent to the situation of populations on the move, in highly unstable settings. Interventions will take place in seven municipalities of the Diffa Region. The selected municipalities lie along the border with Nigeria, between five and 20 kilometers inside Nigerien territory and within a 150-kilometres radius from Diffa. They have been chosen by a majority of the people fleeing from the border areas as spontaneous assembly points. Interventions will target displaced populations as well as the small and vulnerable host communities. Interventions will support nearly 152,000 people over five months. Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-NER-17852-NR03EnglishDavid Hartstone2016-09-29T00:00:002016-11-29T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection27879116253950431247131714441883922FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security236814477168452465181902065537500FullyHealthHealth13282108682415015592127582835052500FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI3332499883301237630941547023800FullyProtectionProtection423583332675684425643390576469152153FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene16563177883435118085237264181176162Fully2015-12-29T00:00:0042124215-RR-NGA-1786815-RR-NGA-17868_Nigeria_Dec2015_ApplicationAfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-12-03T00:00:002015-12-03T00:00:002016-02-29T00:00:002016-03-02T00:00:009930000.009854146On 3 December the RC/HC of Nigeria submitted an application to the CERF’s rapid response window in response to needs resultant from the regional Lake Chad basin crisis/Boko Haram related crisis.
The ongoing armed conflict in North-East (NE) has directly affected 14.8 million people, of whom 7.4 million are in need of urgent humanitarian assistance. While the armed conflict has directly affected four NE states - Borno, Adamawa, Yobe and Gombe - Borno State has been disproportionately affected and is the epicentre of military operations and displacement of civilians. The current humanitarian response is covering all the four directly affected states of Borno, Adamawa, Yobe and Gombe.
The Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) has shown reasonably steady growth in the numbers of Internally Displaced People (IDPs), from fewer than 400,000 in December 2014 to over 2 million in the last quarter of 2015.
In Borno State alone there are 1.6 million IDPs, the majority of whom are in the capital city, Maiduguri. While the majority of the IDPs are living in host communities, 118,400 IDPs in Borno live in 24 camps. Eight of the IDP camps in Maiduguri City, the capital of Borno State, are occupying schools.
The submission focused on supporting the process of relocating IDPs out of schools to five new sites as the new sites require massive preparation of shelter, WASH, and health facilities. Decongestion of camps and further enhancement of the shelter and WASH facilities is a priority in camps which will be maintained in Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states.Some good explanations of beneficiary counts (nutrition, WASH and child protection) - in case examples needed in future. Z - Not in use - IDP, Z - Not in use - Protection, Z - Not in use - Malnutrition, Food Security Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-NGA-17868-NR03omuga@un.org#Vincent OmugaEnglishJulia Wittig2016-06-14T00:00:002016-08-09T00:00:002016-11-29T00:00:002016-12-19T00:00:002017-07-18T00:00:00ProtectionProtection9256165502580614553254884004165847FullyHealthHealth87241106657193898112137152423264560458458FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI24409163234073229383199874937090102FullyNutritionNutrition0000899498994989949FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5209244376964685874350039108782205250Fully2016-02-25T00:00:0042224315-RR-CMR-1800215-RR-CMR-18002_Cameroon_Dec2015_ApplicationAfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20152015-12-15T00:00:002015-12-15T00:00:002016-01-04T00:00:002016-01-11T00:00:007024702.007005094On 15 December 2015 the Humanitarian Coordinator for Cameroon Najat Rochdi submitted an application to the CERF’s rapid response window in response to displacement caused by conflict linked to Boko Haram violence and military operations again the armed group, leading to a sharp increase of humanitarian needs. The upsurge of violence by Boko Haram across the Lake Chad Basin has uprooted hundreds of thousands of civilians from their homes, destroyed their livelihoods and deepened vulnerability. Cameroon is hosting 64,000 Nigerian refugees in its Far North region, which is also the worst affected by the conflict. Tens of thousands of residents in the region have been forced to flee due to insecurity and near-daily suicide bombings and attacks. Education and health among other basic services as well as farming, trade and pastoralism have been badly affected, causing deep deprivation and heightening health and protection risks. The CERF Rapid Response will target newly displaced, vulnerable host community members, and women and children who are exposed to the risks of abuse and forced recruitment by the armed group. The newly displaced require emergency shelters, need to be registered and provided with basic household items. Women and children, who are the worst affected by the crisis, will require basic health, including reproductive health services, protection and emergency education. Boko Haram crisis 2014-15-RR-CMR-18002-NR05najat.rochdi@one.un.org#Najat RochdiEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-04T00:00:002017-05-08T18:56:02Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security527713331186084655144641911937727FullyHealthHealth405049509000607574251350022500FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector93512362171449366681116113332FullyNutritionNutrition5639290785461095456411659525141FullyProtectionProtection216990216992188402188443583Fully2015-12-31T00:00:0042324416-RR-GTM-18429Guatemala RR Application, Jan 2016 (El Nino)AmericasGuatemalaLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-01-19T00:00:002016-01-19T00:00:002016-02-04T00:00:002016-02-09T00:00:004849930.004829690The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has declared the current El Niño effect in Guatemala to be one of the worst in the last few decades. Its impact has been felt most strongly in the northern zone of Central America. In Guatemala, the dry corridor of Eastern and Central Guatemala has had up to 65 days without rain between late June and September which is abnormal. According to reports from the Ministry of Agriculture, losses were documented in both, “primera” (from May to August) and “postrera” (from August to November) harvests. Accumulated losses of harvest from last year, significantly exacerbated this situation leaving affected families with no food reserves since May. Around 175,387 families reported 75 to100 per cent losses of their maize and beans harvests along the dry corridor.
As a result of the accumulated impact of the dry spell in 2014, these affected families have been without food reserves since May this year. Joint EFSA-type, emergency assessments carried out by MAGA, SESAN, WFP and FAO in September, have identified as many as 248,000 families in need of humanitarian assistance. The states with the highest levels of food insecurity are located in Eastern Guatemala: Santa Rosa, Jutiapa, El Progreso, Zacapa, Jalapa, and Chiquimula and some others in Central and Western: Baja Verapaz, Totonicapan, and Huehuetenango. FEWSNET indicates that around 75 municipalities from these States are in IPC phase 3 (Crisis), while around 33 are in Phase 2 (stress). The prolonged food insecurity and lack of food reserves has furthermore had a negative impact causing higher than usual prevalence of acute malnutrition in children under 5.
The humanitarian team aims to deliver a timely, effective and life-saving response in three of the worst affected states of Baja Verapaz, Chiquimula and Jutiapa. Food security (WFP) aims to provide immediate food support to a target 23,000 families (115,000 beneficiaries) while nutrition will treat 6,000 children (UNICEF) and health (PAHO/WHO) will support nutrition efforts. Primary and priority targets for life-saving CERF activities are those families with no food reserves, at least one case of acute severe malnutrition (in children and/or pregnant/lactating women), households headed by widows or single mothers, and families affected by critical health problems (diarrhea, ARIs, and/or chikungunya). This CERF request is for a five-month response, for $4.85 million. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-GTM-18429-NR03EnglishMirna Loiferman2016-05-18T00:00:002016-07-13T00:00:002016-11-04T00:00:002017-06-07T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security171854009857283184834113959622116905MostlyWHO achieved 4.5x times more beneficiaries than planned, reasoning behind the estimated number is not clearHealthHealth20577183503892721416326085402492951MostlyWHO achieved 4.5x times more beneficiaries than planned, reasoning behind the estimated number is not clearNutritionNutrition28881233412131293736686510986MostlyWHO achieved 4.5x times more beneficiaries than planned, reasoning behind the estimated number is not clear2016-02-02T00:00:0042424516-RR-AGO-18644Angola RR Application, Feb2016 (El Nino)AfricaAngolaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-02-11T00:00:002016-02-11T00:00:002016-03-01T23:49:34.82016-03-04T00:00:006683718.004989386The Angola humanitarian team is responding to the persisting impact of the El Niño phenomenon. This is the fourth year with reduced rainfall. This has resulted in about 800,000 people being food insecure compared to over 500,000 people in 2014, based on FAO assessment in December 2015. Agricultural production loss is estimated at over 52,000MT valued at over 10.4 billion kwanzas ($72 million). There is also a reported loss of livestock (360,000 animals) valued at 36 million kwanzas, further exacerbating poverty and the economic status of families. The undernutrition situation is much worse with doubling undernutrition rates of SAM cases (95,877 in total in the 7 provinces); and 45,411 harboured in the municipalities of the 3 border provinces when compared to June 2015.
The food situation has become dire, and 63 per cent of the affected areas are in Cunene, Huila and Namibe provinces, where production losses of cereals and legumes have been nearly 90 per cent. The food and nutrition situation is becoming critical in the Namibe and Cunene Provinces where the population is heterogeneous but their livelihood is based mainly on fishing, cattle rearing and subsistence agriculture. Given to the poor access to safe water, the affected population have agriculture camps spread and desolated without any production capable to sustain the families until the next rainy season. The lack of rains and crop production are exacerbating migratory movements of communities, looking for better conditions for their families and animals around operational water points. All these are happening against the backdrop of an impeding economic depression due to the oil shock from rapidly falling oil prices and income to the government.
The government prompted by the office of the Vice President set up an interagency commission who have assessed the situation. This has been complemented by other mission assessments by FAO and the MOH-DNSP respectively confirming the seriousness or acuteness of the situation in the last quarter of 2015.
The focus of the humanitarian response is the 3 worst affected provinces. The CERF proposal will assist funding in the Food, Nutrition, Health and WASH sectors. FAO will provide seeds and inputs such as hand tools and other resources to the 50,000 vulnerable people. UNICEF and WHO will address the impact of acute malnutrition: UNICEF through treatment through therapeutic foods and WHO for treatment for those children and at risk pregnant and lactating women who are suffering complications. WASH will address access to water through rehabilitation of boreholes. The CERF contribution is $5 million for 5 to 6 months of an initial response. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-AGO-18644-NR01P. Paolo Balladelli#P. Paolo BalladelliEnglishDavid Hartstone2016-06-14T00:00:002016-08-09T00:00:002016-12-30T00:00:002017-06-21T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture476284057288200495724222891800180000PartlyHealthHealth7416074167718606606837875794PartlyNutritionNutrition1853801853819296202219221515240053PartlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene287852452153306299622552255484108790Partly2016-02-26T00:00:0042524616-UF-TZA-18470Tanzania UFE Application, Feb 2016 (Burundi crisis)AfricaUnited Republic of TanzaniaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-12T00:00:002016-02-12T00:00:002016-04-05T16:23:33.8772016-04-06T00:00:0011000000.0010994664The civil unrest in Burundi has led to an outflow of over 230,000 refugees since April 2015 with more than 124,000 refugees arriving in Tanzania. The current average is about 1,500 arrivals per week. The goal of UN agencies’ projects for CERF is to ensure continuation of the provision of basic humanitarian response, establish water supply in new camp locations, continue food distribution, distribute fuel efficient stoves, strengthen SGBV prevention and consular capacity, and ensure safe transport and settlement of refugees in camps. UN agencies are targeting 120,000 beneficiaries in four refugee sites.The UN Country Team requires $183 million for humanitarian action in Tanzania in 2016. According to FTS, no humanitarian has been received for Tanzania in 2016, as of 2 March 2016. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $11 million for 12 projects, if approved.
Tanzania Underfunded Emergencies application
Total envelope: $11 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 12 February 2016
Number of projects submitted: 12 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Burundi political crisis 2015-202016-UF-TZA-18470-NR03mona.folkesson@one.un.org#Mona FolkessonEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-10-17T00:00:002016-12-08T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-10-12T00:00:00Common Services - LogisticsLogistics8731667715408843661541459029998Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security5453044432989625755945441103000201962HealthHealth60005458851058905797642290100266206156ProtectionProtection64803455871103906261642096104712215102Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI383582924267600370552699164046131646Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene699655542112538668374523421207162461022016-03-30T00:00:0042624716-UF-UGA-18474Uganda UFE Application, Jan2016 (DRC and South Sudanese refugees)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-12T00:00:002016-02-12T00:00:002016-03-22T15:44:12.7232016-03-22T00:00:0018000000.0018000027Uganda is host to over half a million refugees, with the largest groups coming from South Sudan, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). In 2015 alone, Uganda received over 112,000 new refugees. Current risk analyses suggest these influxes will continue in 2016, further emphasizing the emergency nature of the refugee response in Uganda. Worst-case scenario planning in 2016 accounts for an influx greater than half of the existing refugee population in Uganda. Inter-agency response plans (RRPs) and contingency plans have been put in place to receive as many as 300,000 new refugees in 2016 in these worst-case situations. Refugees from South Sudan and DRC constitute the most underfunded and most severe humanitarian emergency in Uganda, and the CERF grant has been prioritized to focus on life-saving initiatives for these at-risk populations. The refugee management policy in Uganda is characterised by a non-camp, settlement approach. Refugees are not settled in camps but in village-like settings where they receive small plots for agricultural cultivation, enjoying the right to work and freedom of movement granted under the Ugandan Government’s 2006 Refugee Act and 2010 Refugee Regulations. Within this refugee management context, the CERF allocation will be prioritised for the immediate life-saving needs of its South Sudanese and Congolese refugee populations in the following sectors: 1) Protection (including registration of new arrivals/child protection/SGBV); 2) Food Security; 3) Shelter, Site Preparation, and NFIs; 4) Health & Nutrition; 5) WASH, and 6) Emergency Agricultural Livelihoods.Humanitarian UN agencies in Uganda reported to the CERF secretariat that they require about $343 million for humanitarian action in 2016. Funding requirements for Uganda in the 2016 South Sudan Regional Refugee Response Plan are $164 million, and $22 million in the Burundi Regional Refugee Response Plan (these numbers overlap with the UN figure of $343 million). According to FTS, aid agencies in Uganda had received only $5.8 million in humanitarian funding as of 29 February 2016.
Uganda Underfunded Emergencies country envelope: $18 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 12 February 2016
Number of projects submitted: 8 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-16-UF-UGA-18474-NR03nasiib.kaleebu@one.un.org#Nasiib KaleebuEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-17T00:00:002016-12-01T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-12-22T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture764615660233068224182202644449750FullyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection185380185381308901308931627FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security17781286789264601207898101474309372573973FullyHealthHealth146363115769262132148756271170419926682058FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector223909156406380315233048162790395838776153FullyNutritionNutrition495100495107722654233131459180969FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence386129741581824770082525529413FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene36669781544484575311458672117116601Fully2016-03-17T00:00:0042724816-UF-PRK-18469DPRK UFE Application, Jan 2016 (Protracted Crisis)AsiaDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20162016-02-15T00:00:002016-02-15T00:00:002016-03-08T18:29:35.9232016-03-10T00:00:008000000.008000692The goal of UN agencies’ projects for CERF is to reduce maternal and under-five child mortality and morbidity through critical and life-saving interventions in food security, nutrition and maternal and child health. UN agencies are targeting 2,077,249 beneficiaries, including 1.7 million under-five children, and 260,000 pregnant and lactating women in 11 provinces.The UN Country Team requires about $111 million for humanitarian action in DPRK in 2016 (based on 2015 figures since the 2016 ‘Needs and Priorities’ document has yet to be published). The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $8 million for 6 projects, if approved.
DPRK Underfunded Emergencies application total envelope: $8 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 15 February 2016
Number of projects submitted: 616-UF-PRK-18469-NR02Throne-Holst@un.org#Marina Throne-HolstEnglishdorjee2@un.org2016-10-18T00:00:002016-12-16T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-11-10T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture3822011466015288039780119340159120312000FullyHealthHealth765000187650187650001300058950051660023FullyNutritionNutrition2000035020350200006040080400100750Fully2016-03-05T00:00:0042824916-UF-KEN-18491Kenya UFE Application, Jan 2016 (South Sudanese refugees)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-15T00:00:002016-02-15T00:00:002016-03-22T15:45:04.5032016-03-28T00:00:004000000.003998746In addition to 45,000 South Sudan refugees already present, 48,000 South Sudan refugees have arrived in Kakuma refugee camp in Kenya since December 2013 because of inter-ethnic clashes in South Sudan. Nine-thousand new arrivals are anticipated in 2016 of which 60 per cent are expected to be women and children. Kakuma hosts over 184,000 refugees (South Sudanese and others) and the influx has put a strain on aid services. The goal of UN agencies’ projects for CERF is to ensure that health care, nutrition, HIV/AIDS support, maternal and childcare, sanitation and food activities are provided to the refugees. UN agencies are targeting 102,000 beneficiaries in Kakuma refugee camp.The 2016 South Sudan RRRP lists requirements of $48 million for South Sudanese refugees in Kenya. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $4 million for 6 projects, if approved. Kenya Underfunded Emergencies application Total envelope: $4 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries) Application received: 15 February 2016 Number of projects submitted: 6 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-16-UF-KEN-18491-NR02lenanyokie@un.org#Julius Lesoina LenanyokieEnglishdorjee2@un.org2016-10-20T00:00:002016-12-06T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-04-10T00:00:002017-11-29T00:00:00NutritionNutrition6301063016121139222004326344PartlyHealthHealth85498386311241298103848653129691253820PartlyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security25175188244399920589177063829582294PartlyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector32398123334473125283149694025284983Partly2016-03-16T00:00:0042925016-UF-SDN-18490Sudan UFE Application, Jan 2016 (South Sudanese refugees)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-15T00:00:002016-02-15T00:00:002016-03-17T16:05:50.052016-03-22T00:00:007000000.006991425The political conflict that erupted in South Sudan on 15 December 2013 displaced thousands of civilians in South Sudan and continues to cause an outflow of refugees into neighbouring countries, including Sudan. Sudan continued to face a steady influx of South Sudanese refugees throughout 2015. By the end of December 2015, nearly 195,000 South Sudanese had sought safety in Sudan, fleeing violence and insecurity in their home country. With some 109,000 new arrivals recorded between January and December 2015, Sudan was the country that received the largest influx of South Sudanese refugees in the region.
With CERF funding, aid agencies will respond to the most pressing needs of South Sudanese refugees in Sudan, which includes the development of new sites with basic services to ease overcrowding and raise provision of life-saving services to emergency thresholds within the existing sites in the areas of health, education, nutrition, and protection.
The establishment of the sites will require basic semi-permanent infrastructure, backfilling, construction of drainage and an internal road to facilitate access within. Solar lighting will be installed to enhance protection. Once completed, refugees will be transported to the new sites from those identified as being the most overcrowded.
The existing services in current sites will be expanded to ensure there are no breaks in service provision in health, nutrition and protection, as well as additional support to the education sector that struggles to provide appropriate services to the high number of children in the sites.The South Sudan Regional Refugee Response Plan requires $141 million for South Sudanese refugees in Sudan in 2016. Funding for the South Sudan RRRP is not yet recorded on FTS.
Sudan Underfunded Emergencies allocation
Country envelope: $7 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 15 February 2016
Number of projects submitted: 5 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-16-UF-SDN-18490-NR06merghani@un.org#Randa MerghaniEnglishdorjee2@un.org2016-10-20T00:00:002016-12-05T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-12-28T00:00:00EducationEducation800013081308000130813016260FullyHealthHealth2981399053971830518191934971189429FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector2004070202706021720112203294060000FullyNutritionNutrition1944101944119964139683393253373FullyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection4913049134348043489261FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence180402201537614976867906FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene38811782566347442093683712500Fully2016-03-11T00:00:0043025116-UF-BDI-18467Burundi UFE Application, Jan 2016 (Political Crisis)AfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-15T00:00:002016-02-15T00:00:002016-04-05T16:38:54.8172016-04-06T00:00:0013000000.0012985955Humanitarian agencies are scaling up efforts to reinforce protection and ensure access to basic services to people in need, in a highly vulnerable context. Violence and fear emanating from the political crisis are on the increase. At least 439 people have been killed and nearly 265,000 displaced people since April 2015, and access to essential services has deteriorated. Continued heavy rains are causing localized floods and landslides, leaving at least 52 people dead and 5,068 households displaced, whose houses have been damaged or destroyed between November 2015 and January 2016. These two drivers are exacerbating an already dire situation of many vulnerable Burundians. With this CERF grant and through multi-sector interventions in Burundi’s six most affected provinces, humanitarian agencies aim to help avert acute vulnerabilities caused by the political crisis in the country since April 2015, as well as localized flooding.Humanitarian UN agencies in Burundi reported to the CERF secretariat that they require about $111 million for humanitarian action in 2016. Funding requirements for Burundi in the recently published 2016 HRP, which focuses only on new needs related to the political crisis and floods, are $62 million. According to FTS, no funding has been received for the HRP as of 11 March 2016, and $1.9 million in funding has been received outside of the HRP.
Burundi Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $13 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 15 February 2016
Number of projects submitted: 12 Z - Not in use - IDP Burundi political crisis 2015-202016-UF-BDI-18467-NR02Hanane Babikir#Hanane BabikirEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-18T00:00:002016-12-08T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-07-17T00:00:002017-10-17T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture383230397342298943419785092185150Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection3325022333473222003232252355996Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security293203072060040307203910069820129860Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.HealthHealth167341301828469169171970305140477110946279Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.Protection - Human RightsProtection29001450017400200095001150028900Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI15681193223500322813333435615691159Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.NutritionNutrition158900158901712998802700942899Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.ProtectionProtection370393351070549406494647587124157673Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI23132130444340023642764412087Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene111353234143691094633391428528654Mostlyyes, very good explanation per sector and across. Very convincing. Probably rather conservative estimates.2016-03-31T00:00:0043125216-UF-ETH-18468Ethiopia UFE Application, Jan 2016 (South Sudanese refugees)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-15T00:00:002016-02-16T00:00:002016-03-30T22:43:58.722016-03-29T00:00:0011000000.0010991119Over 730,000 refugees of 19 different nationalities are currently hosted in Ethiopia, making it the largest refugee-hosting country in Africa. The South Sudanese represent the largest refugee community in Ethiopia. As of 15 January 2016, Ethiopia hosts 281,471 refugees from South Sudan, the vast majority of whom are hosted in six refugee camps in the Gambella region. Out of this, 226,638 arrived in Ethiopia as a result of the December 2013 events in South Sudan and its aftermath, and 55,059 had fled to Ethiopia prior to the current crisis. Of the new arrivals, about 33,000 are living with host communities. The goal of UN agencies’ CERF projects is to conduct registration of new arrivals, relocation from entry point to the camps, distribution of food items, provision of primary health care and nutrition services, improvement of WASH facilities, provision of core relief (non-food) items and soap, and shelter. UN agencies are targeting nearly 214,000 beneficiaries in Gambella and Benishangul Gumuz Regional States.The Ethiopia component of the 2016 South Sudan RRP amounts to $284 million. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $11 million for 4 projects, if approved. Ethiopia Underfunded Emergencies application Total envelope: $11 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries) Application received: 16 February 2016 Number of projects submitted: 4 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-16-UF-ETH-18468-NR05Arefaines@un.org#Senait ArefaineEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-10-18T00:00:002016-12-05T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-11-07T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security90249776188007420137802120040000HealthHealth101647474351490829487094871189741338823Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI101647474351490829487094871189741338823NutritionNutrition52947052947529471593968886121833ProtectionProtection101647474351490829487094871189741338823Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI193729422311843117630195250Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene6173234724964564547230315757871722432016-03-23T00:00:0043225316-UF-MLI-18527Mali UFE Application, Jan 2016 (Conflict and Food Insecurity)AfricaMaliWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-16T00:00:002016-02-16T00:00:002016-03-29T17:19:54.9872016-03-30T00:00:0016000000.0015999980People in Mali continue to suffer from the consequences of conflict, food insecurity and malnutrition. Some 2.5 million people are in need of assistance, 1.9 million are food insecure, 2.2 million need health services and 840,000 water and sanitation services. More than 700,000 children under age 5 suffer from acute malnutrition. As of October 2015, there were 62,000 IDPs and 139,000 Malian refugees in neighbouring countries.
The strategy that the Humanitarian Country Team developed to implement this CERF grant of $16 million from the Fund’s window for underfunded emergencies focuses on the north of the country and has two main objectives: The first objective is to respond to the food security and nutrition crisis by preventing and treating malnutrition, providing food aid to 26,000 people during the lean season, and helping 90,000 people restart agricultural activities. The second objective is to respond to urgent needs in several key sectors in the north. This includes providing water and sanitation services to 45,000 people, shelter and non-food items to 8,000 people, improve access to education for 63,000 children and access to health care for 200,000 people, to conduct mine action and to strengthen protection monitoring and child protection. About $8 million will be used for each of the two objectives.The 2016 Mali Humanitarian Response Plan requires about $354 million to provide assistance to some 1 million people in need. According to FTS, the Mali HRP had received $19.3 million in humanitarian funding as of 18 March 2016.
Mali Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $16 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 16 February 2016
Number of projects submitted: 1816-UF-MLI-18527-NR01FrenchJulia Wittig2016-10-25T00:00:002016-12-06T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-10-17T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture950835768452769896372284712492400FullyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection5069205069256692056692107384FullyEducationEducation544301410558404467037745047100887FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security8229729715526856575951616031686FullyHealthHealth1595792212918170813809926466164565346273FullyProtection - Mine ActionMine Action21982149473692919783162813606472993FullyNutritionNutrition32718285330032924363463558968592FullyProtectionProtection6450227910234360115935534066933301293FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1798162034181953181337667184FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene14417140362845315722376935341581868Fully2016-03-23T00:00:0043325416-UF-LBY-18497Libya UFE Application, Jan 2016 (Conflict)AfricaLibyaNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFHuman RightsConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-02-19T00:00:002016-02-19T00:00:002016-04-05T16:26:05.542016-04-04T00:00:0012000000.0011989024There are an estimated 435,000 IDPs in Libya, the vast majority of which have been displaced since the escalation of conflict since mid-2014. The level of displacement has increased almost seven-fold since April 2014, with displacement patterns revealing both cross-regional displacement (populations fleeing from one side of the country to another) and localized displacement, with populations fleeing within their own provinces, particularly in the northwest. An estimated 269,000 IDPs are located in the country’s western region, which includes 120,000 IDPs who fled fighting in the Warshefana suburb southwest of Tripoli in August 2014 and Tobruk, Ajdabiya and Al Bayda. The goal of UN agencies’ projects for CERF is to improve access to health services and essential medicines; respond to protection needs of affected populations; provide household food availability and protecting people from malnutrition risks; provide minimum shelter assistance and essential NFIs; provide safe drinking water and basic sanitation services; improve access to essential services; and providing direct support and protection to meet the humanitarian needs of migrants, refugees and asylum seekers. UN agencies are targeting 350,000 people in Benghazi, Tripoli, Sabha, Al Jabel Al Gharbi.In 2016, Libya will have an HRP, with overall requirements of $166 million, including $138 million for UN agencies. As of 14 March, $4.4 million in funding for the HRP had been recorded on FTS. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $12 million for 12 projects, if approved.
Libya Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $12 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 19 February 2016
Number of projects submitted: 12 Z - Not in use - IDP16-UF-LBY-18497-NR01gehac@un.org#Carlos GEHAEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-20T00:00:002016-12-05T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-10-18T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection9742762717369765486231627733646FullyEarly RecoveryEarly Recovery1898010220292001660789432555054750FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security460754547191546470704449391563183109FullyHealthHealth153295261016414311141503240938382441796752FullyMulti-SectorMulti-Sector1164210635222778963101351909841375FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI29354788772329274777770415427FullyProtectionProtection38813720821108953582866537102365213260FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0000459045904590FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene331354220275337331354220375338150675Fully2016-03-31T00:00:0043425516-RR-LAO-18817Lao PDR RR Application, Feb 2016 (Locusts)AsiaLao People's Democratic RepublicSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRInsect infestationBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-02-23T00:00:002016-02-23T00:00:002016-03-01T17:33:29.5072016-03-07T00:00:00385521.00328811Twelve districts in north-east of Lao PDR are poised to suffer a very serious locust attack against crops in April–June 2016, with seven of those districts most at risk. 78,823 people are considered affected. In response, FAO aims to safeguard the food security and livelihoods of 75,000 people in rural communities in the areas of Lao PDR affected by the outbreak of the Yellow-Spined Bamboo Locust by ensuring food and crop losses to locusts are effectively reduced through control operations against the locust hopper bands.16-RR-LAO-18817-NR01EnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-06-14T00:00:002016-08-10T00:00:002016-12-01T17:33:29.5072017-05-10T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture122005040062600117405166063400126000Fully2016-03-01T00:00:0043525616-RR-MNG-18890Mongolia RR Application, Mar 2016 (Dzud)AsiaMongoliaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaRRHeat/Cold WaveMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-03-01T00:00:002016-03-01T00:00:002016-03-18T16:33:26.082016-03-16T00:00:002525853.002442974Around 60 per cent of Mongolia, or 211 out of the 339 districts, is in dzud or near-dzud condition since December 2015. Dzud is a cyclical slow onset disaster unique to Mongolia. It consists of a summer drought followed by a deterioration of the weather conditions in winter (10 to 350 cm snow thickness, temperatures -40° C to -50° C) and spring during which shortage of pasture and water leads to large scale deaths of animals. Although primarily affecting livestock exposed to extreme winter conditions, dzud events should not be seen as simply winter emergencies or livestock famines; they have profound and far-reaching impacts on Mongolian pastoral herder sector which depends on this vital sector for food and income.
The CERF grant will provide the Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) with the necessary funds to address the most urgent survival and livelihood needs of 4,390 vulnerable herder households in dzud conditions in most-affected provinces. CERF grants will contribute to ensuring that most vulnerable households can survive the winter and are protected from extreme livelihoods collapse; and thus help to avert a larger humanitarian crisis.
CERF funding will be used to provide targeted support at household level that complements the Government’s response activities which currently focuses on infrastructure and social services. The Protection and the Nutrition sector (which includes a food component) will deliver a package of basic relief items designed to ensure the survival of the most vulnerable herders. The agriculture component aims to minimize additional loss of lives and damage to social and economic assets helping to ensure the survival of the most vulnerable herders and their families who are almost totally dependent on livestock for livelihoods. This will be followed by a cash intervention which will ensure that low income households can buy additional food staple, warm clothes, heating and cooking fuels, other products essential for surviving the extreme winter and isolation. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-MNG-18890-NR01lazau-ratz@un.org#Alexandra Lazau-RatzEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-06-30T00:00:002016-08-24T00:00:002016-12-18T16:33:26.082017-05-10T00:00:00NutritionNutrition36555692934735996130972919076FullyProtectionProtection0002938100971303513035FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture30274815784229385024796215804FullyEarly RecoveryEarly Recovery30274815784229385024796215804Fully2016-03-14T00:00:0043630116-RR-FJI-18935Fiji RR Application, Mar 2016 (Cyclone Winston)OceaniaFijiMelanesiaMelanesiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-03-03T00:00:002016-03-03T00:00:002016-03-21T00:00:002016-03-18T00:00:007507962.008022382On 20 and 21 February 2016, category-5 tropical cyclone (TC) Winston cut a path of destruction across Fiji. The cyclone is estimated to be one of the most severe ever to hit the South Pacific and has directly affected an estimated 350,000 people -- approximately 40 per cent of the total population of Fiji. The hardest hit areas are Lau group and Lomaiviti (including Koro) in the Eastern Division, Raki Raki and Tavua in Western Division and Taveuni and Cakandrove in Northern Division.
Immediate response efforts have been led by the Government of Fiji to ensure that preparedness plans were put in place prior to the disaster. The Government of Fiji estimates the total damage bill at more than FJ$1 billion -- almost $500 million. In recognition of the severity of the disaster, on 22 February, the Fiji government requested international assistance and declared a 30-day State of Natural Disaster.
The Fiji Government has a strong national structure for disaster preparedness and emergency operations and is leading the current response. The National Disaster Management Office (NDMO) is coordinating efforts and has activated the National and Divisional Emergency Operations Centres (EOCs).
The humanitarian response in Fiji will be guided by the following strategic objectives as outlined in the Flash Appeal:
1) Rapidly provide life-saving assistance to people affected by the cyclone and re-establish basic services
2) Support restoration of livelihoods and self-reliance
3) Provide safe emergency and transitional shelter, while protecting vulnerable people in all affected communities
The CERF strategy targets over 349,000 million people, requesting $7.9 million to address the most critical needs. To achieve the above objectives the strategy focuses on nine eight key sectors – Shelter, Food Security, Education, Health, WASH, Protection, Logistics and Emergency Telecommunications -- across all 12 hardest hit areas that have been identified by the Government. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-FJI-18935-NR01osnat.lubrani@one.un.org#Osnat LubraniEnglishJulia Wittig2016-06-30T00:00:002016-08-25T00:00:002016-12-21T00:00:002017-05-17T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1021413196234109636106392027543685FullyHealthHealth5890511959517850056595114905171500350000FullyNutritionNutrition40891254214435980001235916573FullyEducationEducation800019481948000223822316417FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene15552289494450112724200423276677267FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security221263133753463194983990359401112864FullyProtectionProtection280772505453131330514133474385127516Fully2016-03-14T00:00:0043725716-RR-SSD-19018South Sudan RR Application, Mar 2016 (Sudanese refugees)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-03-04T00:00:002016-03-04T00:00:002016-03-24T15:59:37.822016-03-23T00:00:005995523.005989321UNHCR has been working to protect and provide basic services to some 103,600 refugees in Unity State, as reflected in the South Sudan Humanitarian Workplan 2016. In Ajuong Thok camp, UNHCR and partners are undertaking multi-sectorial response activities including health, water, shelters and camp management. In Yida, UNHCR has been undertaking protection interventions and facilitating the relocation of refugees to Ajuong Thok, while supporting provision of water and sanitation services. The proximity of Yida to the contested border (Jau area), its militarization and associated protection concerns arising from the mixed character of the influx (civilian asylum seekers, combatants and former combatants), fundamentally compromises the question of its suitability as a refugee site. The Government of South Sudan and UNHCR had previously developed a phased closure plan for Yida which began in 2013 and was due to be finalized by mid-2017. However, the process was put on hold due to the outbreak of major conflict across the country in December 2013.
In mid-November 2015, however, a Government decision was taken to bring forward the closure of Yida to June 2016. This decision is noted as final, and Government representatives travelled to Yida in January 2016 and communicated the decision directly to refugees. This has triggered a rapid response request, as operationalization of the new site in Pamir must be accelerated in an unforeseen manner, and relocation of refugees must be sped up.
With Ajuong Thok nearing its full capacity of 40,000 refugees, preparation of the new site in Pamir is urgently needed to so that refugees can relocate there and mitigate a potentially dire deterioration in the humanitarian circumstances of refugees in Unity. Yida is currently hosting about 70,000 refugees with nearly 70% under the age of 18, including nearly 1,000 unaccompanied and separated children, particularly vulnerable to a range of protection issues including forced recruitment and SGBV which are increasingly prevalent in the context of the wider conflict in South Sudan. When Yida closes, lack of alternative space would leave refugees either stranded in Yida without the necessary protection and assistance, or result in major overcrowding of Ajuong Thok. This current application is for UNHCR to relocate to the new site in Pamir and to provide basic services for around $6 million.16-RR-SSD-19018-NR07throp@un.org#David ThropEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-07-08T00:00:002016-08-26T00:00:002016-12-24T15:59:37.822017-06-16T22:13:37Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector374424516195403233587390135852016-03-16T00:00:0043825816-RR-LSO-19019Lesotho RR Application, Mar 2016 (El Niño and Drought)AfricaLesothoSouthern AfricaSouthern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-03-04T00:00:002016-03-04T00:00:002016-04-05T00:03:06.5432016-04-08T00:00:005045384.004782918The Government of Lesotho (GoL) declared a State of Emergency (22 December 2015) in light of the drought which is expected to worsen over the course of 2016. The GoL, in collaboration with UN agencies and NGOs, conducted a joint rapid community assessment in January and early February 2016, which found the current number of people who are at risk of food insecurity and who are unable to meet their survival needs until June 2016 is 534,508 people (more than 25% of the population). The severity of the situation is likely to surpass the 2012 crisis when 725,000 people were affected.
The impact of El Niño-induced drought is affecting multiple sectors: water scarcity and rain deficits which have led to delays or failure of the planting season, causing a sharp decline in food production. Water shortages have also made basic services unable to function normally (e.g. health centres and schools). It has also severely impacted crop and livestock production, health and nutrition and the overall food security of households; all further compounded by vulnerability factors such as HIV prevalence at 23% and high chronic malnutrition at 33% together with general poverty.
The CERF allocation of $5 milllion will be used to address the most critical needs identified as gaps in the government appeal document in the key sectors targeting 130,450 people in Lesotho. CERF funds will be used for immediate cash assistance to the most vulnerable families and will be complemented with a household gardening package. Affected health clinics will be reinforced by preventing and treating malnutrition, particularly for children under 5, people living with HIV and pregnant women. The water dimension will be addressed through WASH interventions. Interventions that protect and restore the livelihoods of vulnerable farming families in time for the next planting season will also be addressed.Total funds required by UN agencies and NGOs for the response are $60 million, of which 19% is funded. Food Security El Nino 2015-201616-RR-LSO-19019-NR01karla.hershey@one.un.org#Karla HersheyEnglishJulia Wittig2016-07-20T00:00:002016-09-09T00:00:002017-01-05T00:03:06.5432017-05-17T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene17471126523012318184131683135261475FullyNutritionNutrition3225032252877325623543938664FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security365172750764024388702870167571131595FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture250923059855690241402604550185105875FullyHealthHealth260020500231003122245002762250722Fully2016-04-04T00:00:0043925916-RR-MOZ-19204Mozambique RR Application, Mar 2016 (El Niño and Drought)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-03-09T00:00:002016-03-09T00:00:002016-03-24T18:28:46.312016-03-31T00:00:004736020.004679803Mozambique is facing a severe drought in the southern provinces and parts of central region due to El Niño. In a January 2016 assessment FEWSNET reports high numbers of people affected by drought and food insecurity. Currently there are 380,000 people in need of food assistance (IPC Phase 3) in the southern provinces of Maputo, Gaza and Inhambane, and in the central provinces of Tete and Sofala. Approximately 380,000 people are in need of immediate assistance facing lack of food and water. The impact of drought on nutritional status of children is also serious with initial reports estimating 72,374 malnourished children will be in need of assistance over the next 6 months in the five provinces. A January 2016 assessment by the Ministry of Agriculture and Food Security (MASA) found 260,730 farmers to be affected.
CERF funds will enable provision of food assistance to about 62,400 beneficiaries, nutrition assistance to over 8,320 malnourished children, safe drinking water to approximately 40,000 people and agriculture inputs to 152,500 people in most affected districts in the provinces of Maputo, Gaza, Inhambane, Sofala and Tete.Total requirements for the next six months humanitarian response are $42.5 million. On 9 March, the RC of Mozambique submitted a request in the amount of $4.7 million to the CERF’s RR window, including interventions in the food assistance, WASH and nutrition sectors. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-MOZ-19204-NR03marcia.de.castro@one.un.org#Marcia De CastroEnglishJulia Wittig2016-07-13T00:00:002016-08-29T00:00:002016-12-24T18:28:46.312017-06-14T00:00:00NutritionNutrition324403244351472011071513959FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture0733107331003806538065111375FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security289342175450688300962481654912105600FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene21392161223751422265181814044677960Fully2016-03-24T00:00:0044026016-RR-SOM-19262Somalia RR Application, Mar 2016 (El Niño)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-03-10T00:00:002016-03-10T00:00:002016-04-06T22:52:06.6872016-04-13T00:00:0011000000.0011006301The effects of El Niño on Somalia were mixed with the anticipated heavier than normal rains and consequent riverine and flash floods in central and southern Somalia not materializing. The situation is very different in Puntland and Somaliland where rainfall was well below average during the 2015 Gu (April to June) and Karan (August to September) seasons. By September 2015, they had already experienced two consecutive poor rainy seasons and already experiencing drought conditions. In its August to December 2015 forecast, the Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit projected that about 330,000 people in the seven regions of Puntland and Somaliland would be in IPC phases 4-Emergency and 3-Crisis. By February 2016, the number had risen to 385,000 and yet to be verified assessments indicate up to 500,000 people could be affected in the two regions.
The CERF allocation of $11 million will support the scaling up of time-critical lifesaving humanitarian assistance necessary to avert a deterioration of the drought-induced crisis over the next five months for 224,000 severely food insecure people through life-saving Food Security, Nutrition, Health and WASH interventions in the hardest hit areas of Somaliland and Puntland. Activities include provision of food through unconditional cash transfers, conditional lifesaving cash assistance including cash for work to restore community assets, vaccination of goats to contain the spread of Contagious Caprine Pleuroneumonia disease outbreak, therapeutic feeding support for treatment of moderate acute malnutrition cases among children under five years of age and pregnant and lactating women, provision of emergency health services addressing communicable diseases, maternal and child health, supply of emergency health kits, water trucking, light rehabilitation of strategic water points and distribution of hygiene kits in drought affected areas.Total funds required for the response are $71 million, of which 20% has been funded. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-SOM-19262-NR05kovacm@un.org#Matija KovacEnglishJulia Wittig2016-07-19T00:00:002016-09-15T00:00:002017-01-06T22:52:06.6872017-01-23T00:00:002017-06-16T00:00:00HealthHealth327001673949439278602570153561103000FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene57472724881299606960089240158840288800FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture0603426034204010240102100444FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security8733806016793908983901747934272FullyNutritionNutrition4947049475808361424195046897Fully2016-04-06T00:00:0044126116-RR-SDN-19372Sudan RR Application, Mar 2016 (Conflict and Displacement)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-03-14T00:00:002016-04-22T00:00:002016-05-02T15:39:16.0032016-05-02T00:00:0010003187.009692867On 16 January 2016, different sources including UNDSS confirmed fresh clashes in Jebel Marra. The reported total number of people in need stands at 105,000 and is evolving rapidly. The displacement is of a scale that has not been seen in recent years in such a short period. It is unclear how long this displacement will last or whether people will return to their place of origin; and a decision has not been made on whether the current location of IDPs in Sortony will remain in light of the environmental challenges evident. IDPs come from areas that have been mostly inaccessible for humanitarian actors and humanitarian aid and have benefited from very limited access to basic services. While some have been able to bring household items and some cattle, others have fled without their livelihood items. The Sortony site, next to the UNAMID camp, itself is in an area that has been out of government control and where no infrastructure at all is available, hence a need for strong investment to accommodate the high number of displaced people.
The strategic focus and objective of the CERF request is “to provide emergency relief to people affected by conflict in Jebel Marra in North Darfur”, with a focus on Kabkabiya (Sortony), and, Tawilla ( Rwanda and Argo camp) and to reduce suffering of 86,400 people from IDPs, mainly women and children by providing life-saving assistance in line with Do No Harm principles and practices.
The interventions will be delivered in seven sectors, with two sectors mainstreaming protection (child protection and GBV) in an integrated manner responding to the three HRP strategic objectives-life-saving/emergency reliefs, protection, and food security and nutrition. Response includes WASH, Shelter/NFI, Food Security and Livelihoods, Nutrition, health and Protection, Education, and CCCM. The CERF submission is for $10 million.16-RR-SDN-19372-NR07merghani@un.org#Randa MerghaniEnglishJulia Wittig2016-08-02T00:00:002016-10-10T00:00:002017-02-02T15:39:16.0032017-06-09T00:00:00EducationEducation41062560666648033507831014976MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1297538971687223914102143412851000MostlyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security16504145243102817826171653499166019MostlyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture1175572151897019865121653203051000MostlyHealthHealth1860992602786919616109613057758446MostlyNutritionNutrition10200010200980076001740027600MostlyProtection - Child ProtectionChild Protection41062560666648033507831014976MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene7337469112028827452901356425592Mostly2016-04-28T00:00:0044226216-RR-SWZ-19441Swaziland RR Application, Mar 2016 (El Niño and Drought)AfricaSwazilandSouthern AfricaSouthern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-03-15T00:00:002016-03-15T00:00:002016-04-06T18:59:28.942016-04-04T00:00:003144400.003141908Swaziland is currently experiencing one of the most severe El Niño-induced drought conditions with low rainfall, acute food and water shortages. The current agricultural season (October 2015-April 2016) is deemed to have the lowest recorded rainfall in the SADC region in at least 35 years. The Swaziland Vulnerability Assessment Committee estimates that over 300,000 people--one quarter of the total population--are currently affected by the drought and require food assistance. The effects of the drought are expected to last at least until the 2017 harvest.
Total funds required for the response are $80 million--including immediate and longer term action--of which 20% is funded by the Government.
The CERF allocation of $3 million will be used to support over 71,500 people with food assistance, while the WASH sector will provide emergency water and sanitation access to some 95,000 people. The selection criteria are based on the economic vulnerability of households and communities in the areas marked as most affected by the drought situation as indicated by country assessment reports in the regions of Lubombo and Shiselweni. Food Security El Nino 2015-201616-RR-SWZ-19441-NR01israel.dessalegne@one.un.org#Israel DessalegneEnglishDavid Hartstone2016-07-19T00:00:002016-09-06T00:00:002017-01-06T18:59:28.942017-05-03T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security15029186073363617175207543792971565MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene362855669419543703971974423686190Mostly2016-03-28T00:00:0044426316-RR-AGO-19627Angola RR Application, Mar 2016 (Yellow Fever)AfricaAngolaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRUnspecified Health EmergencyBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-03-21T00:00:002016-03-21T00:00:002016-03-31T17:37:23.982016-04-06T00:00:003000000.003000000The Ministry of Health notified WHO of an urban yellow fever outbreak in Luanda on 21 January 2016 with the first cases being identified in Viana District on 5 December 2015. The yellow fever outbreak in Luanda Province has seen significant increases in the number of reported cases and high mortality rates. The outbreak originated within the Eritrean refugee population and has spread rapidly to other inhabitants. There have been a growing number of districts in Luanda Province that are reporting cases and with high vector density. There is currently a presence of 683 suspected cases, 112 deaths and 90 confirmed cases distributed in 10 of the 12 districts of the Luanda Province. With suspected cases being confirmed in an increasing number of areas there is a heightened risk of yellow fever spreading around Angola and to neighbouring countries. WHO has analysed the situation and took into account the grading criteria of scale, urgency, complexity and context. On the basis of this analysis, it has been proposed to the Director General to declare this yellow fever outbreak in Angola as an internal WHO Grade 2 emergency.
Due to the urgency to vaccinate and contain the outbreak as quickly as possible, the yellow fever International Coordinating Group (ICG) has shipped 6.4 million vaccine doses from their emergency stockpile which are shipped for free to Global Alliance Vaccination Initiative (GAVI) eligible countries. However since Angola is not a GAVI-eligible country, the country has to cover the cost for replenishment of the yellow fever emergency stockpile. There is also a global shortage of yellow fever vaccine. If the number of suspected cases increase over the 6 million threshold than there will be a lack of available vaccines worldwide.
The strategic objective of the humanitarian response strategy is to conduct a reactive mass vaccination campaign that covers all Luanda’s districts. The plan is to cover at least 80% of the population in a short time frame in order to achieve herd immunity and contain the outbreak. Phase I, the first mass reactive campaign, started on 2 February 2016 and has since concluded, having reached 1.57 million people. Phase II has also concluded and has reached 2.3 million people in the Luanda province. Phase III is currently still ongoing with an approximet amount of 1 million people left to vaccinate. $3 million of CERF funds will be used to replenish 2,338,828 doses of yellow fever to the ICG emergency stockpile with which 2,107,049 individuals have been vaccinated in the Luanda Province.16-RR-AGO-19627-NR02paolo.balladelli@one.un.org#Paolo BalladelliEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-07-21T00:00:002016-09-01T00:00:002016-12-31T17:37:23.982017-05-02T22:55:41HealthHealth549413455650100506357702452496211019862107049Fully2016-03-31T00:00:0044626416-RR-KEN-19805Kenya RR Application, Mar 2016 (Measles)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRMeaslesBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-03-24T00:00:002016-03-24T00:00:002016-04-12T22:25:32.8472016-04-15T00:00:001049964.00962943A measles outbreak in Mandera country in northern Kenya began on 16 December 2016. As of end-March 2016, 144 cases had been reported although health teams estimated the actual number to be about 576. Three-quarters of cases are among children under 15 years, and about 636,000 children are estimated to be at risk of infection. The quality of health care is poor in the region due to a shortage of of health workers. Overall immunization coverage in Mandera, in 2014, stood at only 27.7 per cent. Under the lead of the Ministry of Health, aid agencies will conduct an emergency measles vaccination campaign and vitamin A supplementation in Mandera county, estimated to cost $3.5 million. CERF funds, of about $1 million for WHO and UNICEF, would cover parts of this campaign, including emergency measles vaccination and vitamin A supplementation for 280,000 children.16-RR-KEN-19805-NR03nooryussuf@un.org#Abdi Noor YussufEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-07-19T00:00:002016-09-14T00:00:002017-01-12T22:25:32.8472017-10-11T00:00:00HealthHealth131620013162025549902554993871192016-04-12T00:00:0044726516-RR-DJI-19828Djibouti RR Application, Mar 2016 (People Displaced by Drought and El Niño)AfricaDjiboutiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-03-26T00:00:002016-03-26T00:00:002016-04-22T21:47:52.0972016-04-28T00:00:002002037.001972054Since the end of November 2015, Djibouti has been confronted with the arrival of 7,500 nomadic pastoralists from the Somali Region of Ethiopia fleeing from one of the most severe droughts in the last decades. Given the severity of the drought in both Ethiopia and Somalia, it is expected that these numbers will increase considerably over the next three to six months. All arrivals indicate that they intend to stay in Djibouti until the situation improves (in particular grazing areas), which means they will not return before the next rainy season in July at the earliest. Based on historical figures from previous severe droughts, knowledge of pastoral routes and the evolution of the drought in neighbouring countries these movements could increase to 12,000 arrivals in the same locations thus increasing the impact on already vulnerable host communities.
The new arrivals are malnourished, anaemic, have myriad health challenges including measles and have lost their livelihoods due to death of livestock. The influx of these vulnerable people is putting serious pressure on the already fragile health system and availability of water points in Djibouti, particularly in the remote rural areas.
The CERF allocation of $2 million will be used to address food security, prevention / detection / treatment of severe and moderate malnutrition, access to safe drinking water and preventative and curative health services for 18,500 nomadic pastoralists from Ethiopia and vulnerable host community in Djibouti. The livestock interventions will ensure that the same group of people avoid sliding into further humanitarian crisis. It is important to include host communities in the response as they themselves are critically food insecure and vulnerable due to recurrent droughts and non-inclusion could lead to tensions. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-DJI-19828-NR01harbi.omar@undp.org#Harbi OmarEnglishJulia Wittig2016-08-08T00:00:002016-09-23T00:00:002017-01-22T21:47:52.0972017-02-01T00:00:002017-10-17T00:00:00NutritionNutrition158201582193396628994481MostlyThe beneficiary estimation is very vague. No comment on how double counting was avoided. Clearly some double counting.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2003239543981902234042428640MostlyThe beneficiary estimation is very vague. No comment on how double counting was avoided. Clearly some double counting.Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security5823768313506557397411531428820MostlyThe beneficiary estimation is very vague. No comment on how double counting was avoided. Clearly some double counting.HealthHealth4279644210721412261401026220983MostlyThe beneficiary estimation is very vague. No comment on how double counting was avoided. Clearly some double counting.2016-04-22T00:00:0044830216-RR-SSD-19881South Sudan RR Applicaiton, Mar 2016 (Conflict and Displacement)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRHuman RightsConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-03-29T00:00:002016-05-17T00:00:002016-05-20T00:00:002016-05-26T00:00:0014973815.0014834302The humanitarian crisis in South Sudan has worsened in scale, scope and urgency since the beginning of 2016. This CERF Rapid Response allocation will provide a time-critical injection of funds which would enable humanitarian partners to rapidly ramp-up procurement, transportation and distribution of life-saving emergency supplies and scale-up humanitarian assistance and protection activities in the areas hardest hit by recent conflict – particularly in Western Equatoria (Mundri West and East), Western Bahr El Ghazl (Wau), Jonglei (Pibor) and Upper Nile (Malakal) – ahead of the rainy season. The CERF allocation will kick-start rapid action in response to newly arising needs and facilitate partners’ response in areas that have been inaccessible for some time. 250,000 individuals are directly affected in the target states; CERF funding will target 215,000 IDPs and other affected people.On 29 March, Eugene Owusu Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary General and UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator for South Sudan submitted an application to the CERF’s rapid response window. South Sudan crisis 2013-16-RR-SSD-19881-NR09throp@un.org#David ThropEnglishJulia Wittig2016-09-01T00:00:002016-10-25T00:00:002017-02-20T00:00:002017-06-21T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management8455698115436916074941665432090FullyEducationEducation1257901257965410654119120FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI8451695515406915674521660832014FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security426060870651305042117527122569187699FullyHealthHealth372873946576752391654130980474157226FullyNutritionNutrition440904409459157441033514744FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence234000234002388240002788251282FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene634011992683327579663985297818181145Fully2016-05-17T00:00:0045026616-RR-PNG-20038Papua New Guinea RR Application, Apr 2016 (El Niño and Food Insecurity)OceaniaPapua New GuineaMelanesiaMelanesiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-04-01T00:00:002016-04-01T00:00:002016-04-14T21:23:54.7232016-04-18T00:00:004741505.004736155The impact of El Niño in Papua New Guinea has created a series of cumulative shocks to food security. From April to August 2016, growth of staple crops (largely root crops) was stunted, with frosts wiping out crops in higher altitude areas completely. From January 2016, highly concerning field reports came in, including of starving children in the Western Province. This triggered a National Disaster Centre assessment (mVAM) supported by the World Food Programme. The assessment, which consisted of over 3,700 interviews with key informants living in affected areas confirmed that the food security situation had in fact deteriorated significantly over the three months since January. 1.31 million people were experiencing high food insecurity, with over 162,000 people in 6 Local Level Government areas (LLG) facing extreme food shortages and classified as severely food insecure. In addition, indications are strong of extreme food needs in Milne Bay outer islands, where the District Provincial Administrator says 18,700 people may need assistance. Including other pockets of critical need around the country (43,000 people), there are therefore approximately 223,700 people now requiring immediate humanitarian assistance.
The rapid deterioration of the food security situation has created an imperative for an immediate emergency response, with the priority being a rapid-scale up of food distributions and nutrition interventions while there are needs in health WASH, Agriculture and Early recovery. They key objectives for the CERF funds are to: i) Address the immediate food needs of people in areas suffering from extreme food shortages and ii) Ensure that vulnerable groups, particularly children under 5, suffering or at risk for severe acute malnutrition receive nutritional support.
The CERF funds will be used to kick-start a food security and nutrition (SAM) response in the 4 LLGs in Hela and Enga Provinces with an initial 2-month intervention (3-month for nutrition). The food situation in those two provinces is critical, staple crops will take 6-9 months to regrow due to the high altitude, and there are very complex logistics and access issues due to lack of road infrastructure and ongoing local conflicts. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-PNG-20038-NR01roy.trivedy@one.un.org#Roy TrivedyEnglishJulia Wittig2016-08-10T00:00:002016-09-15T00:00:002017-01-14T21:23:54.7232017-04-27T00:00:00NutritionNutrition1084701084783000830019147FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security277323886466596255982664352241118837Fully2016-04-14T00:00:0045126716-RR-MDG-20140Madagascar RR Application, Apr 2016 (El Niño and Drought)AfricaMadagascarEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-04-08T00:00:002016-04-08T00:00:002016-04-28T20:48:14.3272016-04-29T00:00:005999050.005988888A humanitarian emergency is unfolding in Madagascar. A long period of drought, over two successive years, exacerbated and intensified by El Niño in the last six months or so is causing significant losses in agricultural production. The crop year was marked by a prolonged rain deficit (between September 2014 and March 2015) causing a deficit in major food crops in the South, such as maize, cassava and rice compared with a five-year average. The next harvest in May/June 2016 is expected to be equally poor. Further, the period between February and May is the food solder peak, but with the rapid deterioration observed since February 2016, a three-month lean season will likely translate to an acute humanitarian emergency, with the humanitarian impact continuing well beyond June 2016.
The lack of water is not only impacting agricultural and lifestock, but has also caused a spike in the cost of water. In areas where people are most vulnerable and face enormous challenges because of the drought, they may have to pay up to 28 as much for water as the price paid in urban centers like the capital. This increase in the cost of water has a real impact on the ability of households to pay for water, and as a result there is an alarming decrease in the amount of water consumed per person per day.
1.1 million people are food insecure, of whom 665,000 are facing severe food insecurity. In some areas, access to food is declining at an alarming rate. Household food stocks have been exhausted. The number of people who are severely food insecure is 14% higher than in March 2015 and 41% higher than in October 2015. In areas with high rates of severe food insecurity, 31 municipalities have a prevalence of severe acute malnutrition that exceeds the emergency threshold of 2 per cent.
The planned response with CERF fudns includes a response to food insecurity (WFP, FAO), nutrition services (WFP, UNICEF), a WASH response (UNICEF), and a health response (WHO and UNFPA). The requested amount for the CERF submission is $6 million. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-MDG-20140-NR02violet.kakyomya@undp.org#Violet KakyomyaFrenchJulia Wittig2016-08-10T00:00:002016-09-29T00:00:002017-01-28T20:48:14.3272017-06-13T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture597193354693265580133634294355187620HealthHealth166750131714298464168467133069301536600000NutritionNutrition13723274904121313240274204066081873Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene126371095723594177371102928766523602016-04-25T00:00:0045326816-RR-ECU-20419Ecuador RR Application, Apr 2016 (Earthquake)AmericasEcuadorLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20162016-04-26T00:00:002016-04-26T00:00:002016-05-24T00:48:37.5972016-05-25T00:00:007500000.007501349On 16 April 2016, a magnitude 7.8 earthquake struck northwest Ecuador resulting in a state of emergency in six provinces with a population of 7 million. The earthquake caused significant damage to housing and infrastructure leaving thousands of people without safe shelter, water, food, health services. The protection of people without housing who are living in collective centers, spontaneous sites and with host families, is an urgent concern.
The CERF allocation of $7.5 million will support humanitarian partners in Ecuador will provide immediate life-saving assistance to some 91,400 people in the four severely affected cantons of Jama, Muisne, Pedernales and Portoviejo within a period of three months. The immediate assistance will focus on provision of food, water, emergency shelter, sanitation facilities, basic and urgent health care, as well as urgently require protection assistance, including SGBV prevention and support to survivors, child protection and family tracing.Total funds required for the Flash Appeal are $72.7 million, of which 0% has been funded. Z - Not in use - IDP16-RR-ECU-20419-NR01carrera1@un.org#Gioconda CarreraEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-09-01T00:00:002016-10-28T00:00:002017-02-24T00:48:37.5972017-10-12T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security10815160012681610485199003038557201HealthHealth17739262264396517711262374394887913ProtectionProtection8197855016747697077811475131498Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI14127172673139412751162292898060374Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene111122063731749111132063831751635002016-05-24T00:00:0045426916-RR-NGA-20452Nigeria RR Application, Apr 2016 (Lassa Fever)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRUnspecified Health EmergencyBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-04-27T00:00:002016-04-27T00:00:002016-05-13T21:01:15.9372016-05-18T00:00:00399741.00399741The Nigerian Centre for Disease Control (NCDC), an arm of the Federal ministry of Health (FMOH), notified WHO Nigeria about the Lassa fever outbreak on 7 January 2016 requesting support to respond to the outbreak in 10 states. As of 27 April, 270 cases had been reported in 23 states with an extraordinarily high case fatality rate at 50.4 per cent while some 4,535 people have been tested but not yet confirmed.
Response activities are required in all 23 affected states targeting a total population of 110 million people. Particularly vulnerable groups are health care workers who treat the patients and their close relatives who care for them and indeed the whole population living in the area. This would usually include wives, mothers and children who could become infected by coming in contact with infected rats or with body fluids of an ill patient.
The CERF allocation of $400,000 targets support to 300,000 people within four most severely affected and non-endemic states. WHO is the sole recipient of the CERF funds with activities focused on case management, laboratory diagnosis and surveillance including contact tracing. The project will be implemented within 6 months with the Federal Ministry of Health and the state ministries of health.The total requirement for the humanitarian response is $2 million, of which no funding has been received. In addition the Government requires another $8 million to support interventions.16-RR-NGA-20452-NR04omuga@un.org#Vincent OmugaEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-08-23T00:00:002016-10-13T00:00:002017-02-13T21:01:15.9372017-06-13T00:00:00HealthHealth86200816221678227034469545139889307711Fully2016-05-13T00:00:0045527916-RR-GIN-20518Guinea RR Application, May 2016 (Ebola)AfricaGuineaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20162016-05-03T00:00:002016-05-03T00:00:002016-05-27T17:16:48.4732016-06-01T00:00:002999413.002971319The announcement on 17 March 2016 of a new outbreak of Ebola took place two weeks after the declaration by WHO of the end of the Ebola crisis in Guinea. Thus far 8 people have died and 5 are receiving treatment at a center that was reactivated urgently after some months of inactivity. Complicating the situation, the declaration of the outbreak is coming at a time when many of the health responders and other actors were in the process of winding down their operations.
The resurgence of Ebola is caused by structural weaknesses at the community level (surveillance) and lack of close monitoring of families cured of Ebola. Further, late detection of the new contamination chain has contributed to the problem. The toll of the disease and the humanitarian consequences are still present with orphans and windows unable to sustain themselves.
The activities proposed in these 3 projects are aligned to the Response Mechanism developed by the National Coordination for the fight against Ebola in collaboration with international technical partners including the three applicants agencies. Specifically, WHO, IFRC and ALIMA are working towards preventing new infections through epidemiological surveillance, clinical monitoring and the management of cases. UNICEF is focusing on community involvement in prevention through social mobilization but also sanitation in high contamination risk communities. The main objective of the coordinated response to is to achieve 0 Ebola cases in Guinea. This CERF application includes support to 3 UN agencies (UNICEF, WHO and UNDP) in the health sector. UNDP specifically has taken a lead role of payment of the Ebola Response workers in Ebola Treatment Centres through operating NGOs supports NGOs to conduct safe and dignified burials. In this context and to this end UNDP has partnered amongst others with ALIMA and IFRC and
UNDP is willing to be accountable for both organizations and is confident that UNDP can adequately ensure oversight.
This CERF contribution, therefore will support the 3 UN agencies with an allocation of approximately $3 million. Ebola in western Africa 2014-201516-RR-GIN-20518-NR05seraphine.wakana@one.un.org#Seraphine WakanaFrenchJulia Wittig2016-09-07T00:00:002016-10-31T00:00:002017-02-27T17:16:48.4732017-06-07T00:00:00HealthHealth917665281570434683010647822182Fully2016-05-27T00:00:0045627016-RR-VNM-2055016-RR-VNM-20550_Viet Nam_May2016_ApplicationAsiaViet NamSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-05-07T00:00:002016-05-07T00:00:002016-05-25T22:49:20.2372016-06-01T00:00:004010435.003897864The impact of the 2015/16 El Niño phenomenon has left parts of Viet Nam, including the Mekong Delta, South Central and Central Highland regions, suffering the most severe drought in more than 60 years. Since mid-2015, 52 of 63 provinces – more than 83 per cent of the country – have been affected by drought, with 22 provinces currently drought-affected, of which 18 were severely affected and/or had declared a state of emergency as of 19 April 2016. Another eight provinces were at risk of becoming severely affected in the coming weeks. As a result, 2 million people are experiencing acute water shortages and require humanitarian assistance.
In response to the Government’s request for international support to its response, the United Nations prepared and launched jointly with the Government an Emergency Response Plan (ERP) to provide water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH), food security, health, nutrition and early recovery support to the drought-affected population. Of the ERP caseload (2 million), 256,000 people are targeted by the CERF-supported WASH response, 180,000 by the Health Response, 17,500 by the Food Security response and 12,400 under-five children and pregnant and lactating women. The prioritization of sectors and the eight provinces included in the CERF-supported response is based on the results of the joint multi-sector rapid assessment conducted from 21-24 March in six of the then 12 provinces that had declared states of emergency, and has been informed by subsequent consultation with the Government. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-VNM-20550-NR01Pratibha Mehta#Pratibha MehtaEnglishJulia Wittig2016-09-09T00:00:002016-11-01T00:00:002017-02-25T22:49:20.2372017-06-13T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security19635587755020435815785815408FullyHealthHealth213486075982107222196323985458167565FullyNutritionNutrition1446901446915674354935116765636FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene28725598878861242421103428145849234461Fully2016-05-25T00:00:0045729816-RR-TCD-20685Chad RR Application, May 2016 (Lake Chad Crisis)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-05-17T00:00:002016-06-05T00:00:002016-06-09T01:49:59.5072016-06-16T00:00:009999904.009991552Violence attributed to Boko Haram continues to displace people in Chad and beyond. It is estimated that 2.8 million people have been displaced within or across the borders of Chad, Cameroon, Niger and Nigeria, with almost 100,000 displaced persons in Chad. Between 21 July and early September 2015, more than 48,000 new IDPs were registered in the Lake region, bringing the total number of refugees, IDPs and returnees to over 77 000 people. Following the attacks of 10 October to Bagasola, the Government declared a state of emergency in the Lake region.
Following a multisectoral mission organized in January 2016 in the northern basin of the Liwa Daboua-axis, 22 sites have been identified with an initial estimate of over 56,000 displaced people. The situation of displaced people is alarming. Families fled leaving behind their property. They have urgent needs in protection, health, water and sanitation, shelter and essential household items, as well as food security and nutrition.
According to a study that took place in mid-March 2016 the number of people severely food insecure is estimated to be more than 1 million, which represents an increase of 400,000 new people compared to the situation at the same time in November and December 2015. The analysis revealed that there is a hunger gap in various departments in the region of Lake Mamdi and Wayi. The causes of reduced food availability are due to a decline in agricultural production, rising grain prices and declining terms of trade partly linked to Boko Haram crisis and the consequent population displacements.
These are the two triggers that have resulted in a CERF request. The strategic objective of the CERF funding is to provide multisectoral emergency relief and protection to 76,846 vulnerable persons (IDPs and host communities) that are newly displaced in the Lake region, as well as 61,419 people newly affected by food insecurity and malnutrition. The CERF funds will allow provision of immediate assistance to the most vulnerable people, including IDPs, as well as vulnerable host populations that require emergency assistance. The humanitarian team is requesting $10 million from CERF for this immediate response. Boko Haram crisis 2014-16-RR-TCD-20685-NR07sawadogoa@un.org#Abdoulaye SawadogoFrenchFabrizio Cesaretti2016-09-09T00:00:002016-11-10T00:00:002017-03-09T01:49:59.5072017-03-17T00:00:002017-12-28T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management24166199344410027937256685360597705Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security27774201124788628907209934990097786HealthHealth20960221764313618815240244283985975NutritionNutrition2101602101621874138603573456750ProtectionProtection8255918517440733980731541232852Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI24166199344410027937256685360597705Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene15874907124945167371255329290542352016-06-09T00:00:0045929916-RR-LKA-20835Sri Lanka RR Application, May 2016 (Floods)AsiaSri LankaSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-05-26T00:00:002016-05-26T00:00:002016-06-10T20:09:24.222016-06-16T00:00:004637626.004320080On 26 May, Una McCauley, Resident Coordinator a.i. UN of Sri Lanka, submitted an application to the CERF’s rapid response window. A flood emergency began on 15 May 2016 when Sri Lanka was hit by tropical storm Roanu. Widespread flooding and landslides resulted in many parts pf the country, affecting 84,696 households, over 340,000 people. Government assessments conducted on 22 May show that 4,296 houses have been damaged or destroyed and 55,956 families (237,240 people) have been displaced. Aid agencies are requesting CERF funds to support time-critical life-saving assistance for 220,000 people in the WASH, shelter, health and food sectors in the worst affected districts of Colombo, Gampaha, Kegalle and Rathnapura.On 26 May, Una McCauley, Resident Coordinator a.i. UN of Sri Lanka, submitted an application to the CERF’s rapid response window.16-RR-LKA-20835-NR02una.mccauley@one.un.org#Una McCauleyEnglishJulia Wittig2016-09-14T00:00:002016-11-18T00:00:002017-03-10T20:09:24.222017-06-08T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security616913292194616511140282053940000FullyHealthHealth39001665661055674146969566111035216602FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI15967308504681715800339694976996586FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene262305246078690288505771086560165250Fully2016-06-10T00:00:0046030516-RR-SDN-20880Sudan RR Application, Jun 2016 (South Sudanese refugees)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-06-01T00:00:002016-06-01T00:00:002016-07-12T00:00:002016-07-11T00:00:007999561.007951140Since January 2016 over 58,000 people from South Sudan’s Northern Bahr El Ghazal and Warrap states have fled into East Darfur, South Darfur and West Kordofan due to heightened food insecurity and the ongoing conflict. In particular, the number of South Sudanese refugees arriving in Khor Omer in East Darfur increased from 5,000 people in February to almost 29,000 by end of May. In response to the new influx, humanitarian partners under the leadership of UNHCR developed a three-month emergency response plan to address the most pressing needs resulting from the surge of arrivals into East Darfur, South Darfur and West Kordofan.
The CERF allocation of $8 million will prioritize the most pressing needs of more than 41,000 South Sudanese refugees who have arrived in East Darfur and 1,900 anticipated to arrive. East Darfur has been prioritized because the state has received nearly 80 per cent of the new influx into areas where resources and response capacity have been extremely limited. CERF funds will support construction of a temporary camp for refugees, and provide time-critical life-saving services through provision of health and nutrition services, shelter and non-food items, water and sanitation, food assistance and emergency livestock services. To support protection concerns, CERF funding will support initial reception arrangements at the new site, family tracing and reunification for unaccompanied and separated children, assistance to persons with specific needs, support for community based protection networks, and comprehensive GBV prevention and response services.The overall response plan requirement for the new influx of refugees is $40 million based on inter-agency assessments and extensive consultation with field staff and partners, involves camp-based assistance in East Darfur, and rural community-based assistance in West Kordofan and South Darfur. To date, 5% of the $40 million new requirement has been funded. South Sudan crisis 2013-16-RR-SDN-20880-NR09americas@unhcr.org#Lindsey America-SimmsEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-13T00:00:002017-01-13T00:00:002017-04-12T00:00:002017-06-23T00:00:00EducationEducation168650173612844013243060MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security447410440149145931138391977034684MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.HealthHealth1068089431962311569100852165441277MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector38423138698034453000644513425MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI38423138698034453000644513425MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.NutritionNutrition1422101422113612133562696841189MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.ProtectionProtection142814596188771199041661615635033MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene49783135811350543013806716180MostlyThe agencies and OCHA colleagues experienced difficulties estimating refugee figures at the proposal stage. The planning figures were 41,180, but counts from April 2017 revealed that only 28,558 refugees had arrived or were present in camps. Refugees have been highly mobile, coming and going into/out of the camps. This was also due to difficulties in relocating refugees as planned to a new site. So, while some sectors did not reach the targets, other sectors significantly overreached the target. But all explanations are credible.2016-07-01T00:00:0046132416-RR-SOM-20943Somalia RR Application, Jun 2016 (Cholera)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-06-06T00:00:002016-06-06T00:00:002016-06-23T00:00:002016-06-23T00:00:001879029.001879031A major spike in reported cases of acute watery diarrhoea (AWD) and cholera in southern and central Somalia has triggered the need to significantly scale up a response to contain the outbreak. Already 8,838 AWD/cholera cases have been reported in 2016, compared to 5,257 cases that were reported for the entire year in 2015. Overall, $6 million are required for the response to this outbreak of which only $600,000 have been received to date. A total of about $1.8 million in CERF RR support is requested.
This CERF grant will be used to reduce AWD/Cholera related morbidity and mortality among 27,500 cases over a four month period. It will support complementary health, logistics and WASH services in the most affected areas with the highest caseload and notable increase in trends in reported deaths. Activities implemented will aim at interrupting the disease’s transmission, protection of those at risk and treatment of those already suffering from the disease.16-RR-SOM-20943-NR06haggarty@un.org#Alta HaggartyEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-06T00:00:002016-11-25T00:00:002017-03-23T00:00:002017-05-05T00:00:002017-06-30T00:00:00HealthHealth991315506254198548145562310448523Fully2016-06-17T00:00:0046230316-RR-BGD-21056Bangladesh RR Application, Jun 2016 (Cyclone Roanu)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-06-14T00:00:002016-06-27T00:00:002016-07-07T00:00:002016-07-14T00:00:001779750.001799769On 14 June Robert Watkins, Robert D. Watkins UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative Bangladesh submitted an application to the rapid response window of the CERF in response to Cyclone Roanu and subsequent monsoon flooding which has affected 1.3 million people throughout the country. The application seeks CERF funds to support Humanitarian Coordination Task Team (HCTT) members in addressing the humanitarian needs of 166,362 highly vulnerable persons, mostly women and girls who lost all their belongings and livelihoods in the cyclone at the beginning of the 3-month monsoon season. Projects included in the application aim to address critical needs in the food, shelter, WASH and health sectors.16-RR-BGD-21056-NR02robert.watkins@undp.org#Robert WatkinsEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-10T00:00:002016-12-12T00:00:002017-04-07T00:00:002017-06-15T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security501943309349543846531009119440Partlyobvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.HealthHealth19904722462702197501677119233Partlyobvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence055055012200735008570086250Partlyobvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI533335558888640042521065219540Partlyobvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene13266167943006012575173652994060000Partlyobvious difficulties in avoiding double counting without proposing a solution.2016-07-01T00:00:0046430416-RR-MWI-21135Malawi RR Application, Jun 2016 (Conflict and Displacement)AfricaMalawiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-06-17T00:00:002016-06-17T00:00:002016-07-07T21:21:15.7832016-07-13T00:00:001821073.001437503Given the influx of refugee from Mozambique into Malawi as a result of conflict between Government and RENAMO forces, the Government of Malawi has opened a new refugee camp requiring unplanned resources to address a humanitarian situation. The 11,583 refugees fleeing from Mozambique have settled along the border line with some 13,000 effected host community members, particularly in Mwanza District. Over the past months, new arrivals have been registered in other districts, Chikwawa, Nsanje and to a lesser extent Ntcheu as well as spontaneous arrivals at Luwani refugee camp itself. Efforts are made to reach out to these populations of concern while addressing the urgent needs in Luwani required by the opening of a whole new camp. The humanitarian community began relocation of the registered Mozambican refugees to the Luwani refugee camp as of the 15 April, 2016, following the Government’s re-opening of the camp 15 March 2016, attempting to ease the strain on the affected hosting community population. The Mozambican refugees are 63 per cent children under 18 years of age, with a total of 54 per cent female. This triggered a new crisis for immediate and coordinated humanitarian response in order to prevent loss of life in both Kapise transit centre and Luwani newly re-opened refugee camp. In particular for food, shelter/NFIs and health for refugees relocated to Luwani.
The inter-agency response aims to provide protection through life-saving and sustaining assistance, while ensuring the prevention of deterioration of vulnerabilities and promotion of self-reliance for Mozambican refugees through the following broad strategic approach: 1) Relocation to Luwani in safety and dignity; 2) Continued registration and provision of protection and essential assistance at Kapise and Luwani ensure refugees have access to protection; 3) Outreach to persons of concern beyond Luwani and Kapise enables remote protection; and 4) Community-based protection and a solutions-oriented approach underpin the emergency response. The CERF submission will provide immediate assistance of US 1.8 million as other resources are being mobilized focusing on basic lifesaving response including food, shelter/NFI and health by WFP, UNHCR and UNICEF.16-RR-MWI-21135-NR03johanne.fremstad@gmail.com#Johanne FremstadEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2016-10-10T00:00:002016-12-09T00:00:002017-04-07T21:21:15.7832017-10-13T18:18:14Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2334220945432109165237618304HealthHealth6120612579716501262Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI10025721574936625156131352016-07-01T00:00:0046532716-RR-NGA-21156Nigeria RR Application, Jun 2016 (Lake Chad Crisis)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-06-20T00:00:002016-06-20T00:00:002016-07-14T00:00:002016-07-18T00:00:0013375642.0013229882A joint UN multi-sector assessment was conducted in Borno and Yobe States in April covering the newly accessible and other areas and concluded that these people – who have had limited access to assistance over the past two years, face malnutrition. The nutrition situation is compounded by food insecurity, deplorable water and sanitation facilities, limited coverage of health services and inadequate shelter. The assessment showed that around 800,000 IDPs host communities in Borno and Yobe States face emergency conditions and require immediate food assistance. The IDPs include 180,000 in greater Maiduguri, 120,000 in camps and 250,000 in newly liberated areas in Borno State. In Yobe State, more than 250,000 people are severely food insecure. These figures are expected to increase during the coming lean season. Staple food prices in northern Borno State have increased by 50 to100%, and market functionality is limited because of insecurity and restrictions on trade and movement.
It also showed that an estimated 350,000 children under 5 will suffer from Severe Acute Malnutrition (SAM), 244,000 in Borno State alone, in 2016. Without urgent interventions, an estimated 67,000 children 6-59 months with SAM are likely to die in Borno and Yobe States in 2016 or equivalent to 184 daily. The SAM estimated during the HNO/HRP was only 83,079. However, with the new caseload in newly liberated areas, SAM has increased to 398,188. Some 64,000 children 6-24 months urgently need supplementary specialized nutritious foods and 21,000 pregnant and lactating mothers need food supplements.
Many displaced women report that they experienced sexual and gender based violence when fleeing the armed conflict. IDPs/returnees continue to be exposed to protection risks, in particular, the most vulnerable such as older persons, child headed households, women, boys and girls and those with disabilities. IDPs/returnees face further restriction on their freedom of movement, which at times, limits access to basic services and livelihood. Civilians in newly accessible areas have very high psychosocial needs, as IDPs were subjected to serious human rights violations under Boko Haram, including abductions, sexual abuse, forced marriage, forced religious conversions and witnessing grave violence to family members.
This appeal is specially requested to immediately cover those who are in newly liberated areas, who are in dire need of food, nutrition to avoid further deterioration of the food insecurity, global acute malnutrition, exposure to sexual abuse and exploitation, and sexual and gender based violence. The LGAs of implementation will be in Damboa, Dikwa, Monguno, Bama and Maiduguri (in Borno state).
Food Security and Nutrition: Around 118,000 people in newly accessible areas will be covered with either cash based interventions (85,000), general food distribution (13,000) and supplementary feeding for children between 6 and 23 months suffering from or at risk of MAM (20,000). In Protection/child protection: 250,000 are targeted to benefit from protection monitoring of newly accessible communities; (2) 4,000 severely traumatized IDPs, including sexual violence survivors, will benefit from provision of psycho-social support, (3) 650 high risk children. For SGBV: A total of 40,000 individuals are targeted to benefit from the psychosocial services to meet the needs of vulnerable population and distribution of dignity kits to women and girls., 3) community sensitization on referral pathways for GBV and, 4) capacity building for security personnel on GBV and PSEA. This submission will also fund common logistics (UNHAS) and UNDSS.
The submission to Nigeria is US 13 million. Boko Haram crisis 2014-16-RR-NGA-21156-NR05omuga@un.org#Vincent OmugaEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-28T00:00:002016-12-22T00:00:002017-04-14T00:00:002018-01-16T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture375102600763517422983178574083137600Partlyunconvincing total beneficiary figure. was changed by CERF secretariat to reflect only sector with highest figures. no analysis of how double counting was avoided between sectors.Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection41204124140414826Partlyunconvincing total beneficiary figure. was changed by CERF secretariat to reflect only sector with highest figures. no analysis of how double counting was avoided between sectors.Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0132713270001327Partlyunconvincing total beneficiary figure. was changed by CERF secretariat to reflect only sector with highest figures. no analysis of how double counting was avoided between sectors.Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security273902529052680296802739057070109750Partlyunconvincing total beneficiary figure. was changed by CERF secretariat to reflect only sector with highest figures. no analysis of how double counting was avoided between sectors.NutritionNutrition224400224402156002156044000Partlyunconvincing total beneficiary figure. was changed by CERF secretariat to reflect only sector with highest figures. no analysis of how double counting was avoided between sectors.ProtectionProtection5515544366995216474752082116829216350Partlyunconvincing total beneficiary figure. was changed by CERF secretariat to reflect only sector with highest figures. no analysis of how double counting was avoided between sectors.Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence10182112822146425990322715826179725Partlyunconvincing total beneficiary figure. was changed by CERF secretariat to reflect only sector with highest figures. no analysis of how double counting was avoided between sectors.2016-07-12T00:00:0046630616-RR-COD-21185DR Congo RR Application, Jun 2016 (Yellow Fever)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRUnspecified Health EmergencyBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-06-22T00:00:002016-07-01T00:00:002016-07-13T20:56:17.5732016-07-14T00:00:001611901.001604808On the 20th of June 2016, an official declaration of the yellow fever “outbreak” by the DRC Health Ministry was declared to the world. The surveillance system of disease control pointed out that the threshold related to a yellow fever outbreak had been reached. The trend in confirmed and suspected cases is also still on the increase. Latest on June the 23rd 2016, a total of 1307 suspected cases of yellow fever including 75 deaths were reported by the national surveillance system. Of these cases, 68 were confirmed as being yellow fever in 24 health zones in the following five provinces: Bas-Uélé, Kwango, Tshuapa, Kongo Central and Kinshasa. The dynamics of transmission, cross-border population movements are almost impossible to control and easier the spread of the epidemic and the conjunction of the ongoing cholera and measles outbreaks that considerably reduce the capacity of the MoH to fully cover the yellow fever response.
The project aims to support government effort that aim to reduce morbidity and mortality related to the yellow fever outbreak in affected areas, and prevents its expansion to other health districts. Lifesaving activities will include:
WHO will undertake the procurement of supplies that include Emergency Health Kits to be provided to health facilities for case management of around 600 new cases. Reagents will be provided for laboratories for early detection of case with good diagnostic. An emergency training for Health workers will be provided on the management of cases. Other supplies will be providing to initiate surveillance activities where this hasn’t started as well as early detection of cases. UNICEF will undertake social mobilization and risk communication for prevention in those prioritized health zones too.16-RR-COD-21185-NR05macdiarmid@un.org#Charlotte MacDiarmidEnglishJulia Wittig2016-10-13T00:00:002016-12-14T00:00:002017-04-13T20:56:17.5732018-01-08T00:00:00HealthHealth22165092601988481849727151162941375565649110474988LimitedVery difficult to evaluate credibility of the number of beneficiaries as almost all of them are indirect beneficiaries. (reached through media campaigns). Beneficiary population equals total population affected. Unclear how the difference between target and reached beneficiaries came about.2016-07-08T00:00:0046730916-RR-RWA-21371Rwanda RR Application, Jul 2016 (Landslides)AfricaRwandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-07-05T00:00:002016-07-05T00:00:002016-08-05T15:18:27.7632016-08-09T00:00:004408840.004218944From 7-9 May 2016, Rwanda was affected by a series of landslides that have occurred in the Gakenke, Muhanga, and Ngororero districtfs. The landslides were triggered by the heavy and torrential rains in these areas as a result of the phenomenon from the El Nino and the La Nina. The sustained heavy rains have also caused some flooding in these districts. This disaster resulted in the loss of 50 lives, 27 injuries, complete destruction of 2,317 houses, partial destruction of 1,500 houses, damage of 3,447 hectare of agricultural land, loss of livestock, disruption of infrastructure such as water supply system, bridges and roads, and affected approximately 80,000 households.
A CERF allocation of $4.5 million will help address the needs of 50,000 disaster-affected people including displaced families whose houses were completely destroyed, those whose houses were partially destroyed, and those who have lost crops and agricultural lands. The allocation will support activities in five priority sectors including 1) food security and nutrition, 2) shelter/NFIs/community infrastructure, 3) emergency agriculture and livelihoods, 4) WASH and 5) health.16-RR-RWA-21371-NR03george.otoo@one.un.org#George OtooEnglishdorjee2@un.org2016-11-07T00:00:002017-01-09T00:00:002017-05-05T15:18:27.7632017-12-27T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture6216414510361932462171554125902MostlyEarly RecoveryEarly Recovery35935087868040514203825416934MostlyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2011010502306122172352502697357585MostlyHealthHealth33673235660212236115122374830350MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI2099157736762554209046448320MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5875587511750662566251325025000Mostly2016-08-04T00:00:0046831216-RR-IRQ-21399Iraq RR Application, Jul 2016 (Fallujah Crisis)AsiaIraqWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRHuman RightsConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-07-07T00:00:002016-07-07T00:00:002016-07-27T00:00:002016-07-29T00:00:0015000000.0015000602On 7 July Ms. Lise Grande, UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator in Iraq, transmitted an application to the CERF’s rapid response window in response to the crisis in Anbar (Fallujah) and Baghdad governorates as result of ISIS activity and ongoing armed conflict. 85,000 people are estimated to be newly displaced, and up to 150,000 people are potentially affected. Having experienced displacement, war and trauma, populations face high needs in the protection and health sectors, as well as shelter. The current, highly prioritised, humanitarian response plan (HRP) presents needs of over $64 million associated with Anbar and Baghdad governorates as a result of this recent violence. The application to the CERF requests $15 million to support humanitarian response activities in the protection, health, shelter, water, sanitation and health (WASH) and camp coordination and camp management (CCCM) sectors. Z - Not in use - IDP16-RR-IRQ-21399-NR07anderson17@un.org#Craig AndersonEnglishJulia Wittig2016-11-10T00:00:002016-12-28T00:00:002017-04-27T00:00:002017-05-17T00:00:002017-06-15T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management421228097021631942121053117552FullyHealthHealth44410333007771065942108153174095251805FullyProtectionProtection265002557052070270702800055070107140FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0005570503925596255962FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI3129089404023031290178804917089400FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4474844748894965469254692109384198880Fully2016-07-25T00:00:0046930816-RR-NPL-21571Nepal RR Application, Jul 2016 (Karnali Drought)AsiaNepalSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-07-19T00:00:002016-07-19T00:00:002016-08-01T22:04:09.2732016-08-05T00:00:001939578.001942999Nepal, in the Karnali zone is currently facing a devasting drought and serious food insecurity situation. The current humanitarian crisis in the Karnali zone is the result of the worst drought since 1960. The current agricultural drought conditions are classified as ‘extreme’ and ‘severe’ in nearly all parts of the Karnali. Further, and in addition to food insecurity, due to the prolonged drought in Karnali region, the situation of nutrition among children age less than five years and pregnant and lactating women has been deteriorating.
The overall CERF strategy is to provide immediate relief and to help address the effects of the drought and carry over vulnerable households until the next harvest. There are three proposed interventions: food security, nutrition and agriculture. All three interventions help address the short term acute needs of the affected households and people. Through the CERF grant some 50,000 affected people will be assisted. The CERF grant is for approximately US 2 million.16-RR-NPL-21571-NR05dan.ayliffe@one.un.org#Dan AyliffeEnglishMirna Loiferman2016-11-02T00:00:002017-01-04T00:00:002017-05-01T22:04:09.2732017-10-20T20:19:43Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture54701006515535516095781473830273FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security50191174516764445593701382530589FullyNutritionNutrition602210602218884527137115982176203Fully2016-07-29T00:00:0047031016-RR-TLS-21670Timor Leste RR Application, Jul 2016 (Drought)AsiaTimor-LesteSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20162016-07-29T00:00:002016-08-04T00:00:002016-08-08T23:46:52.912016-08-10T00:00:00846000.00846703From May to July June 2016, the severity of the consequences of prolonged reduced especially in the northern and eastern coastal areas of Timor Leste was evident. Rainfall was at 70 per cent of normal, in a country where over 70% of the population relay on subsistence farming, the scale of the impact of El Niño has been significant and felt across all municipalities. Erratic rains resulted in both areas and yield reductions of the maize and rice crops. Rice field preparation was delayed, and in February, the general planting progress status on rice was between 40 to 50 per cent of the normal.
Based on assessment results, the UN Resident Coordinator Office, in close collaboration with the HCT and the Ministry of Interior, finalized an Emergency Response Plan (ERP) on 19 April. The scope of the ERP is to assist 400,000 people in the prioritized, 5 worst affected areas. Priority needs are in the areas of water, food, nutrition, health, livelihoods and education. Interventions on food and water are most urgent.
The strategic objective of the CERF request is to address the immediate food and nutritional needs of people in areas suffering from extreme food shortages. This CERF request prioritizes blanket feeding implemented by WFP in collaboration with Government and other partners to address the risk of severe acute malnutrition among children, as well as pregnant and lactating women. The supplementary fortified food to be provided would ensure that the most vulnerable of the communities get the nutritional intake they need during the three-month intervention. This CERF request is for US846,593. El Nino 2015-201616-RR-TLS-21670-NR01adelina.lourdes@one.un.org#Adelina LourdesEnglishdorjee2@un.org2016-11-11T00:00:002017-01-09T00:00:002017-05-08T23:46:52.912017-12-26T00:00:00HealthHealth3404034043405966013065164692016-08-08T00:00:0047231416-RR-NER-21746Niger RR Application, Aug 2016 (Lake Chad Crisis)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-08T00:00:002016-08-08T00:00:002016-09-07T21:08:14.6532016-09-06T00:00:005000000.004989275Following May and June violence by Boko Haram in neighboring Nigeria, there have been significant new arrivals of refugees and IDPs to the Diffa region of Niger. 76,000 new displaced persons have been reported including 15,010 women at reproductive age, 3,040 pregnant women, 2,140 lactating women and 11,240 adolescent girls within which reproductive health activities will target a total of 26 250 newly displaced persons including 15,010 women of reproductive age and 11,240 adolescent girls. The first joint assessment missions with national authorities and humanitarian partners on the ground identified (i) water and sanitation, (ii) health care including psychological support and response to SGBV, (iii) food, (iv) shelter and (iv) non-food items as urgent needs. The revised HRP estimates 21,889, 872 are required to respond to the needs of newly arrived IDPs and refugees.
The CERF rapid response request submitted 8 August requests $5 million and focuses on five sectors (nutrition, emergency shelter /NFI, WASH, protection and logistics). CERF funding will be used to address the most urgent needs of a 76,000 target population Z - Not in use - IDP, Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Boko Haram crisis 2014-16-RR-NER-21746-NR04dieudonneb@un.org#Bamouni DieudonneEnglishJulia Wittig2016-12-12T00:00:002017-02-07T00:00:002017-06-07T21:08:14.6532017-06-21T00:00:002018-01-08T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection135438820223631330991802248944852FullyProtectionProtection164388851252891853699812851753806FullyCommon Services - LogisticsLogistics0802802000802FullyHealthHealth17290207263801619497379135741095426FullyNutritionNutrition25660175204318027341179624530388483FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1352690822260814468102662473447342FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI29611974493533392226556510500FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene20366155483591421197184583965575569Fully2016-08-31T00:00:0047331316-RR-JOR-21774Jordan RR Application, Aug 2016 (Syrian refugees)AsiaJordanWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-15T00:00:002016-08-15T00:00:002016-08-24T21:53:53.82016-08-31T00:00:0011544000.004308657An estimated 100,000 Syrians are stranded at the north eastern borders in Hadalat and Ruqban. The barren desert landscape, with no relief, vegetation, or open water sources coupled with soaring daytime temperatures and frigid temperatures at night is the most hostile of environments. The nearest settlement is 170km away and access is across 120km of open desert. This creates desperate conditions for this population and makes the delivery of any assistance, all of which needs to be shipped in, incredibly challenging.
The Jordanian authorities have restricted access of this population to the Jordanian territories due to national security concerns, since the majority of the population originates from ISIS-controlled areas in northern Syria. After the VBIED attack on Ruqban on 21 June, the Government sealed the borders and suspended humanitarian assistance delivery before a decision was made on resuming water and food assistance. This CERF request focuses on enhancing security arrangements and delivering priority life-saving assistance; food, water and sanitation, and 24/7 basic primary healthcare for US12 million.
Lastly, since approval of the concept note, only UNICEF and UNDSS have access to the population. Due to the urgency and lifesaving nature of the water trucking response, these projects have been advanced until the remaining agencies have access. Syria crisis 2011-16-RR-JOR-21774-NR02abuata@un.org#Mirna Abu AtaEnglish2017-03-22T00:00:002017-05-16T00:00:002017-07-01T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene117602499036750122402601038250750002016-08-24T00:00:0047531516-UF-YEM-21828Yemen UFE Application, Aug 2016 (Conflict and Displacement)AsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-19T00:00:002016-08-19T00:00:002016-09-07T00:00:002016-09-13T00:00:0013001519.0012988837Already mired in a humanitarian crisis when violence escalated in mid-March 2015, Yemen has 21.2 million people in need of some form of humanitarian assistance. This includes 14.4 million people unable to meet their food needs, 19.4 million who lack clean water and sanitation and 14.1 million without adequate healthcare. The 9th Task Force on Population Movement (TFPM) report showed in May 2016 that around 800,000 individuals, conflict and disaster driven IDPs returned to their villages of origin requiring different livelihood and rehabilitation support. Close to 83 per cent of IDPs in Yemen are sheltered in hosted settings (where IDPs are hosted by families, friends or others, usually without paying rent) and in rented accommodation. About 51% of the population is suffering from food insecurity and malnutrition, in line with Crisis (IPC Phase 3) or Emergency (IPC Phase 4). The Health Resources & Availability Mapping System (HeRAMS) preliminary result showed that only 46 % of health facilities are fully functioning. The goal of UN agencies’ projects for CERF is to deliver an integrated package of assistance to IDPs, host communities and returnees including health and nutrition services, provision of shelter kits and NFIs, rehabilitation of water resources and provision of protection services. UN agencies are targeting 940,000 people in Ibb, Amanat Al Asimah and Lahj Governorates.The Humanitarian Country Team requires about $1.8 billion for humanitarian action in Yemen in 2016. According to FTS, Yemen has received 25% of its requirement as of 31 May 2016. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $13 million for 6 projects, if approved.
Yemen Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $13 million (Round II allocation: $50 million for 6 countries)
Application received: 19 August 2016
Number of projects submitted: 616-UF-YEM-21828-NR06mounier@un.org#Pascal MounierEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-04-17T00:00:002017-06-05T00:00:002017-09-30T00:00:002017-10-05T00:00:002018-01-18T00:00:00HealthHealth190767147593338360183721215901399622737982FullyMulti-SectorMulti-Sector490354526494299471134348890601184900FullyNutritionNutrition1251701251711883273653924851765FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6041674412785900874551646329248FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene11932178982983013723161082983159661Fully2016-09-02T00:00:0047631916-UF-ERI-21832Eritrea UFE Application, Aug 2016 (Gaps in Basic Services)AfricaEritreaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-19T00:00:002016-08-19T00:00:002016-09-16T22:11:13.0732016-09-26T00:00:002000000.002002599The 2015 harvest was poor due to a lack of rains--partly caused by the El Niño weather phenomenon--resulting in a food deficit affecting mainly people in the arid coastal areas and some parts of the highlands. Food insecurity and malnutrition among children, pregnant women and mothers remain a concern. Malnutrition, diarrhoeal diseases and pneumonia are among the three leading casues of child deaths and illness. In remote parts, immunization coverage is low and access to health care limited. The country hosts more than 2,200 refugees at Umkulu refugee camp, who rely on assistance. Aid agencies in Eritrea will use CERF funding to provide assistance to more than 421,000 people in need, with health care and nutrition services for 419,000 affected people in three of the six regions, Northern Red Sea, Anseba and Gash-Barka, and multi-sector assistance for the 2,200 refugees.The country team requires about $35 million for humanitarian action in Eritrea in 2016, which was funded at 6.5 per cent ($2.2m) as of mid-August. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $2 million for 4 projects, if approved.
Eritrea Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $2 million (Round II allocation: $50 million for 6 countries)
Application received: 19 August 2016
Number of projects submitted: 416-UF-ERI-21832-NR02maputseni@un.org#Clever MaputseniEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-04-17T00:00:002017-06-06T00:00:002017-09-30T00:00:002017-11-08T00:00:00HealthHealth114400205000319400108000206000314000633400FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector685505119061443510492239FullyNutritionNutrition96726910165821192898402176838350Fully2016-09-15T00:00:0047832116-UF-RWA-21834Rwanda UFE Application, Aug 2016 (DRC and Burundi refugees)AfricaRwandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-19T00:00:002016-08-19T00:00:002016-09-26T20:40:54.332016-09-26T00:00:005000000.004998778Almost 164,000 refugees live in Rwanda, including more than 132,000 from Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in six camps. The camps are managed by UNHCR and the Rwandan Government, and the refugees living here are dependent on international humanitarian aid. While Rwanda has been hosting Congolese refugees for two decades, Burundians mostly started arriving in April 2015 fleeing election-related violence. Aid agencies in Rwanda will use CERF funding to scale up life-saving protection and assistance for the 132,000 refugees living in camps, including drinking water and sanitation to prevent disease outbreaks, health care including vaccination and reproductive health, food aid and shelter. This is in line with the regional refugee response plan for Burundi and UNHCR's operations plan for Congolese refugees.The country team in Rwanda requires about $152 million for humanitarian assistance to refugees from Burundi and the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2016, and has received $38 million or 25 per cent, as of end-August 2016. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $5 million for 5 projects, if approved.
Rwanda Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $5 million (Round II allocation: $50 million for 6 countries)
Application received: 19 August 2016
Number of projects submitted: 5 (originally 6) Burundi political crisis 2015-202016-UF-RWA-21834-NR04george.otoo@one.un.org#George OtooEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-04-17T00:00:002017-06-01T00:00:002017-09-30T00:00:002017-10-06T00:00:002018-01-18T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security376702725164921352783205067328132249MostlyHealthHealth258582515651014244742892653400104414MostlyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector16437150483148515895156933158863073MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene14300129622726213646129502659653858Mostly2016-09-20T00:00:0048032316-UF-COD-21899DR Congo UFE Application, Aug 2016 (Conflict and South Sudanese refugees)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-20T00:00:002016-08-20T00:00:002016-09-26T20:39:05.592016-09-26T00:00:0010993704.0010995505The Democratic Republic of the Congo remains one of the world’s most complex and most protracted humanitarian crises with 7.5 million people in need of humanitarian assistance due to armed conflict in the east, food insecurity, the lack of basic social services across the country, localized natural disasters and disease outbreaks, including yellow fever.
The Humanitarian Country Team has decided to prioritize $11 million in CERF funds for humanitarian assistance in two areas: Dungu in Haut Uélé for multi-sector assistance to 12,000 South Sudanese refugees and 8,000 people from host communities, and the route from South Irumu in Ituri to North Kivu for aid to more than 70,000 vulnerable people, including those that have been displaced, returnees and host communities. Aid agencies will provide food aid and agricultural assistance, nutrition services, emergency shelter, education and multi-sector assistance to refugees. This is in line with the Humanitarian Response Plan for DRC and the regional refugee response plan for South Sudan.The Humanitarian Country Team requires about $690 million for humanitarian action in the Democratic Republic of the Congo in 2016. According to FTS, the Humanitarian Response Plan has received 43 per cent of its requirements as of 11 September 2016. The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $11 million for 9 projects, if approved.
DRC Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $11 million (Round II allocation: $50 million for 6 countries)
Application received: 20 August 2016
Number of projects submitted: 9 South Sudan crisis 2013-16-UF-COD-21899-NR06macdiarmid@un.org#Charlotte MacDiarmidFrenchJulia Wittig2017-04-18T00:00:002017-06-06T00:00:002017-09-30T00:00:002017-10-16T00:00:002018-01-29T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture013409134090259272592739336FullyEducationEducation2030337420677193941831957740254FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security11481101822166312437110292346645129FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI26528157424227028738167164545487724FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector600633789384677238101058219966FullyNutritionNutrition1655016551775017753430FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI5678442110099834962341458324682Fully2016-09-19T00:00:0048131716-RR-UGA-21908Uganda RR Application, Aug 2016 (South Sudanese refugees)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-22T00:00:002016-08-22T00:00:002016-09-09T18:11:00.5172016-09-19T00:00:0010288476.0010297497Since the onset of fighting in Juba on July 7th 2016, almost 80,000 South Sudanese refugees have fled South Sudan to Uganda (as of 14 August 2016), signifying the worst refugee emergency in Uganda since the initial influx of South Sudanese refugees in 2014. The average daily arrival rate from July 7th to August 1st 2016 was about 2,166 South Sudanese refugees, amounting to a ten-fold increase based upon the daily average of 200 individuals prior to the crisis. These new arrivals join the existing 229,176 South Sudanese refugee population in Uganda for an estimated total of 308,479 South Sudanese refugees and asylum seekers as of August 14th 2016. Refugees from South Sudan now constitute the largest and most severe humanitarian emergency in Uganda, and the CERF Rapid Response grant request for US$7,000,000 has been prioritized to focus on life-saving initiatives for the increasing number of 64,000 new arrivals entering the country since July 7th. CERF funding will be utilised to provide life-saving protection and emergency assistance services in over-crowded temporary reception facilities, to improve the capacity of these facilities, and to provide life-saving protection and assistance in refugee settlements in Arua, Yumbe and Adjumani districts. The following sectors have been prioritised: Protection (Registration, GBV, Child Protection); Food Security; Shelter and NFIs; Health & Nutrition; and Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH). The CERF funded project will also support the response to the recent cholera outbreak among refugees (and one host community member) in Pagirinya reception centre in Adjumani district. South Sudan crisis 2013-16-RR-UGA-21908-NR05nasiib.kaleebu@one.un.org#Nasiib KaleebuEnglishJulia Wittig2016-12-12T00:00:002017-02-10T00:00:002017-06-09T18:11:00.5172017-07-05T00:00:002017-12-28T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security28353152674362034654186605331496934FullyHealthHealth90048319281219767803256488134520256496FullyProtection - Human RightsProtection31172122804345229283217265100994461FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector128754012875415714635189192335321089FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence256884862574313225657598998554172867Fully2016-09-07T00:00:0048332816-UF-TCD-21922Chad UFE Application, Aug 2016 (CAR displacement)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-22T00:00:002016-08-22T00:00:002016-09-23T00:00:002016-09-28T00:00:0010000011.0010000551Across Chad, 3.9 million people are affected by emergencies, including 3.8 million who are food insecure, 728,000 children under 5 who suffer from acute malnutrition and 400,000 refugees. Since December 2013, the escalation of the political and humanitarian crisis in the Central African Republic has forced thousands of people to flee to neighbouring countries. Today, 73,000 Central African refugees, 83,000 Chadian citizens who had lived in CAR but were forced to return and 600,000 people from host communities in south Chad are affected by this crisis and many require humanitarian assistance. With a CERF grant of $10 million for underfunded emergencies, aid agencies in Chad will provide humanitarian relief to 217,000 people in returnee sites, refugee camps and villages that people who have fled from CAR, including all 83,000 returness, all 73,000 refugees, and 70,000 people from host communities. Assistance will include food aid, agricultural livelihoods support, nutrition services, health care, water and sanitation, education, emergency shelter and basic household items. In addition, CERF will support the humanitarian aid service in Chad. All these activities are part of the Humanitarian Response Plan.The Humanitarian Response Plan for Chad in 2016 requires $541 million and was 14 per cent funded at the time of the analysis for this allocation round (it is 19 per cent funded as of end-August). The CERF allocation from the underfunded emergencies window will amount to about $10 million for 7 projects (13 budgets since the submission contains several joint projects), if approved.
Chad Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $10 million (Round II allocation: $50 million for 6 countries)
Application received: 22 August 2016
Number of projects submitted: 13 budgets in 7 projects CAR crisis 2013-16-UF-TCD-21922-NR08sawadogoa@un.org#Abdoulaye SawadogoFrenchdorjee2@un.org2017-04-18T00:00:002017-06-05T00:00:002017-09-30T00:00:002018-01-19T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture181306227243573625046494089965256MostlyCommon Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000MostlyEducationEducation267215122723320339662040547638MostlyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security322303334565575349143903173945139520MostlyHealthHealth20837884311092682168792039113726222994MostlyNutritionNutrition342651690751172371111854555656106828MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI579103316122297389672579MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene12315113042361913357122302558749206Mostly2016-09-20T00:00:0048431616-RR-MMR-21991Myanmar RR Application, Aug 2016 (Floods)AsiaMyanmarSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-08-25T00:00:002016-08-25T00:00:002016-09-07T00:00:002016-09-13T00:00:003565591.003570457This application for $3,565,591,aims to cover priority life-saving activities across the most affected regions of Ayeyarwady, Magway and Mandalay, with specific focus on the most vulnerable population groups, particularly in the sector of food security (life-saving food or cash assistance, support for emergency asset creation, and emergency livelihoods assistance through agricultural interventions; health (life-saving sexual and reproductive health services emergency activities); and protection (prevention and emergency response to sexual and gender-based violence), targeting 81,682 vulnerable people. Myanmar is undergoing a very active monsoon season with heavy and continued rains causing main rivers to overflow. The rains intensified at the beginning of August, causing fresh displacement, as well as destruction of crops and housing. More than 488,000 people have been displaced across 11 states/regions since flooding began by mid-July 2016. The CERF interventions will also assist in avoiding loss of hard-won development gains as a result of the floods in affected areas. CERF funds would be used to complement a release from the country-based pooled fund to NGO partners, demonstrating how these two funds can work hand-in-hand to support different elements of a response.16-RR-MMR-21991-NR04rosa-berlanga@un.org#Narciso Rosa-BerlangaEnglishdorjee2@un.org2016-12-12T00:00:002017-02-07T00:00:002017-06-07T00:00:002017-06-15T00:00:002017-12-27T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security169293238849317166623592352585101902FullyHealthHealth31286503963110985442895527464905FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0825482540231932319331447Fully2016-09-02T00:00:0048531816-RR-CIV-22036Cote d'Ivoire RR Application, Aug 2016 (Displacement)AfricaCote d'IvoireWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-08-29T00:00:002016-08-29T00:00:002016-09-14T19:25:03.772016-09-20T00:00:002114210.001965416This application aims to provide essential life-saving aid to the most vulnerable groups among the IDPs and host families (food, WASH, health, protection), estimated at 20,000 in Western Côte d’Ivoire (departments of Duekoué and Bangolo, Guémon) who have been evicted by Government with little notice from areas they had been living in. Activities include general food distributions (incl. food commodities to prevent moderate malnutrition), improvement of access to clean drinking water (water pump rehabilitation etc.) as well as reproductive health and SGBV victim care. UNICEF, WFP and UNFPA will be able to secure the required resources to launch initial life saving relief interventions in the priority sectors.16-RR-CIV-22036-NR01kats@un.org#Ancel KatsEnglishDavid Hartstone2016-12-16T00:00:002017-02-20T00:00:002017-06-14T19:25:03.772017-07-05T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security96156206158211128637771506330884FullyHealthHealth494176331257441563738789420468FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene8862503713899915455981475228651Fully2016-09-13T00:00:0048632016-RR-CMR-22075Cameroon RR Application, Sep 2016 (Displacement)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-09-01T00:00:002016-09-01T00:00:002016-09-23T23:07:28.222016-09-28T00:00:004204956.004187543Logone and Chari departments in Cameroon and close to the border with Nigeria, are the most affected by the Boko Haram Crisis. Currently host to about 60% of the total of IDPs in the country, there has been an increase in since June due to renewed attacks from the Boko Haram insurgency and ongoing military operations led by the Multinational Force. Consequently, 40,000 new IDPs have been displaced, increasing the total of IDPs in the Department up to 150,000 and adding to the current burden on host communities. The CERF Rapid Response grant will target 40,000 newly displaced and 20,000 vulnerable host communities as well as women and children who are the most affected by the crisis and remain at high risks of sexual violence and forced recruitment. Critical urgent lifesaving needs are required to provide food assistance, access to potable water and basic health services, including reproductive health services, protection and emergency education. Boko Haram crisis 2014-16-RR-CMR-22075-NR06zoungranas@un.org#Samuel ZoungranaEnglishMirna Loiferman2016-12-28T00:00:002017-02-24T00:00:002017-06-23T23:07:28.222017-07-07T00:00:002018-01-08T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection572051162315280153543311664Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security193333372227051964338042344746152HealthHealth12972152282820014628171723180060000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene15585937024955161831081126994519492016-09-23T00:00:0048832516-RR-PRK-22528DPRK RR Application, Sep 2016 (Typhoon Lionrock)AsiaDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-09-20T00:00:002016-09-20T00:00:002016-10-04T21:29:59.5632016-10-06T00:00:005061209.005054519Typhoon Lionrock passed DPRK on 29 Aug 2016 causing heavy rains. In North Hamgyong province, around 140,000 people are estimated to have been severely affected and up to 600,000 in need of some form on assistance. Needs are estimated at $24,598,000. On 20 September the HC/RC submitted an application to the CERF's rapid response window in the amount of $ 5,061,209. CERF funding will be used to kick start the humanitarian response to the aftermath of the floods in North Hamgyong by facilitating immediate support in key sectors: preventing an increase of waterborne and communicable diseases and other immediate health threats through provision of access to basic water, sanitation and health services and medicine; and reducing food and nutritional insecurity through provision of supplemental food and nutrients and tools to urgently restart food production.16-RR-PRK-22528-NR04Throne-Holst@un.org#Marina Throne-HolstEnglishMirna Loiferman2017-01-04T00:00:002017-03-07T00:00:002017-07-04T21:29:59.5632017-10-12T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture151814554360724158004740263202123926FullyUnicef was able to procure a bigger number of relief items and therefore the beneficiaries reached were more than estimated.Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security175585267370231182755482473099143330FullyUnicef was able to procure a bigger number of relief items and therefore the beneficiaries reached were more than estimated.HealthHealth4972510910515883050812121935172747331577FullyUnicef was able to procure a bigger number of relief items and therefore the beneficiaries reached were more than estimated.NutritionNutrition184040184041949294812897347377FullyUnicef was able to procure a bigger number of relief items and therefore the beneficiaries reached were more than estimated.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene218056191083715209587135492312176027FullyUnicef was able to procure a bigger number of relief items and therefore the beneficiaries reached were more than estimated.2016-10-03T00:00:0049032916-RR-TZA-22803Tanzania RR Application Oct 2016 (Kagera Earthquake)AfricaUnited Republic of TanzaniaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20162016-10-07T00:00:002016-10-18T00:00:002016-10-26T17:08:53.6472016-10-31T00:00:001498949.001498097On 10 September 2016 an earthquake of 5.9 magnitude hit North West Tanzania, at about 44 km from Bukoba town in Kagera region. As a result of the earthquake, an estimated 117,721 people are in need of assistance, having lost their homes, most of them living outside without access to adequate shelter. The total humanitarian needs are US$ 9,000,000. The education sector as a whole has been hit hard by the earthquake crisis. In Bukoba Municipal up to 69.5% of primary school and 36% of secondary school children are negatively affected and a high number of classrooms have been damaged affecting the capacity of schools to accommodate the students. The CERF allocation is at US$ 1,498,097 and focuses on supporting the three top priority sectors; Shelter/NFI; Education and schools WASH; and Child Protection targeting a total of 85,917 people. Of the overall people who have lost their houses, about 15% will be provided with temporary shelter by CERF funds. 16,917 Primary and Secondary school children from 25 most affected schools will be provided with safe learning spaces through establishment of temporary classrooms until permanent structures are established. Adequate financial resources are not available within the UNCT to respond to these priorities, therefore a request to the CERF was made in order to kick start the interventions, meanwhile other resource mobilization efforts are initiated.16-RR-TZA-22803-NR04mona.folkesson@one.un.org#Mona FolkessonEnglishJulia Wittig2017-01-30T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-07-26T17:08:53.6472017-10-19T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection63221079740175271619914616547MostlyEducationEducation57030570357200572011423MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI17004162173322117896173693526568486Mostly2016-10-26T00:00:0049133216-RR-CUB-22839Cuba RR Application Oct 2016 (Hurricane Matthew)AmericasCubaLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-10-13T00:00:002016-10-13T00:00:002016-10-31T17:51:31.7372016-11-04T00:00:006390351.005352736Hurricane Matthew, category 4 according to the Saffir-Simpson scale, directly impacted Cuba during eight hours from 4-5 October, 2016. 1,079,000 people were evacuated in six provinces of the country. The impact of the hurricane has been localized but highly destructive. The five most eastern municipalities in the most eastern province of Guantánamo have been badly damaged aswell as severely affecting municipalities in the province of Holguin. Most public infrastructure, social institutions, manufacturing centers that provide basic products at a subsidized price, and housing have been extremely damaged. Over one hundred thousand people have damaged houses and limited access to safe water.
The CERF application aims to provide immediate life-saving assistance to 298,935 people in seven severely affected municipalities within a period of six months. This immediate assistance will focus on provision of emergency shelter, food security, safe water and sanitation services, health care and education in emergency. Select16-RR-CUB-22839-NR01ydoime@yahoo.com#Yaima DoimeadiosEnglishJulia Wittig2017-01-30T00:00:002017-02-15T00:00:002017-07-31T17:51:31.7372017-12-07T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture195316088080411185635797676539156950EducationEducation14720693154131261625991521530628Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security209906074981739199785781577793159532HealthHealth4614414028518642943158136015179173365602Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI471412171168853259121411540032285Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1953160888804191856357976765391569582016-10-31T00:00:0049233016-RR-ETH-22863Ethiopia RR Application Oct 2016 (South Sudanese Refugees)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-10-17T00:00:002016-10-17T00:00:002016-10-26T16:36:05.962016-10-28T00:00:009491861.009491863Since 3 September 2016, over 40,000 new refugee arrivals from South Sudan have been recorded in Ethiopia and on average 1,000 people arrive in Pagak entry point per day, the majority of which continue to be women and children (87 per cent). This very sudden and unexpected influx was not planned for since as per the Regional Refugee Response Plan (RRRP) 3,500 new arrivals for 2016 had been projected. To respond to the most critical needs of the new arrivals in Ethiopia and those that are expected to arrive until the end of the year US$ 53.7 million will be required. Thus far, some US$4.4 million have been made available for the response. The requested CERF funding of US$ 9,491,861 will address the most critical needs of the recently arrived 40,000 refugees of the 100,000 new arrivals expected until the end of the year. Refugees will be registered, screened for vulnerabilities and emergency protection services will be provided at both Pagak entry point and the camps, including response to SGBV survivors and essential Child Protection services. The relocation of refugees to camp extensions and eventually a new site will be scaled up to 3,000 refugees per day. Additionally, with Global Acute Malnutrition Rates rising from 8 percent to 11.7 percent over the last month, CERF funds will enable WFP to counter severe and moderate acute malnutrition. The Ethiopian Emergency Response Fund (ERF) has currently depleted its resources but is liaising with donors to seek additional funding and will, once these become available, make funding available to NGOs to complement the CERF funding. South Sudan crisis 2013-16-RR-ETH-22863-NR07Arefaines@un.org#Senait ArefaineEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-01-30T00:00:002017-03-28T00:00:002017-07-26T16:36:05.962017-10-13T22:39:11Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security90249776188007420137802120040000MostlyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector138184254180721568053002098039052MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1527490262430021050243004535069650Mostly2016-10-26T00:00:0049332616-RR-YEM-22865Yemen RR Application Oct 2016 (Cholera)AsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-10-14T00:00:002016-10-14T00:00:002016-10-20T17:26:27.212016-10-25T00:00:002000000.002000000As of 12 October, 15 cholera cases had been confirmed in two governorates of Yemen, and 186 suspected cases had been identified across the country. Altogether, 7.6 million people are at risk of cholera in Yemen, including 4.5 million people in six governorates, Sana’a City, Taizz, Al Bayda, Aden, Lahj and Al Hudaydah, with confirmed or suspected cases. Health and WASH clusters provided an Integrated Cholera Response Plan on 10 October that presents an integrated response to the outbreak of cholera and acute watery diarrhea. It outlines emergency health, WASH and communications activities in 15 governorates, including six governorates where cholera cases have been confirmed or are suspected, and nine governorates at higher risk.
This CERF allocation will provide immediate life-saving response in health and WASH sectors, targetting 155,038 people in six top priority governorates, with the aim to reduce morbidity and mortality resulting to the cholera outbreak. While total requirements for this integrated response plan are $22.3 million, divided into Health, Water and Sanitation and Communication for Development sectors, the total estimated cost of immediate WASH and health activities in the six priority governorates is $10.5 million. The CERF grant of $2 million will be applied against these requirements, leaving $8.5 million in funding urgently required from other donors. OCHA has also activated complementary $2 million allocation from the Reserve emergency window of the Yemen Humanitarian Pooled Fund (HPF) for humanitarian organizations involved in the cholera response.16-RR-YEM-22865-NR07Hassan51@un.org#Ghada HassanEnglishMirna Loiferman2017-01-23T00:00:002017-03-20T00:00:002017-07-20T17:26:27.212017-11-06T00:00:00HealthHealth363132299859311351022662961731121042FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene11293116542294710344118092215345100Fully2016-10-20T00:00:0049433116-RR-HTI-22873Haiti RR Application Oct 2016 (Hurricane Matthew)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-10-17T00:00:002016-10-17T00:00:002016-10-27T23:20:53.6432016-10-31T00:00:006641823.006838529The application aims to address the humanitarian needs following the impact of Hurricane Matthew in the South of Haiti that resulted in widespread damage, flooding and displacement. As of 11 October 2016, the Directorate of Civil Protection of Haiti had confirmed 473 deaths, 339 injuries and 75 people missing. The number of evacuees is estimated at 175,509 people from four departments: Grand’Anse (99,400), Nippes (7,866), Ouest (3,877), and Sud (64,366). They are now living in some 224 temporary shelters. Among the approximate 2.1 million people affected, UNICEF estimates that 894,057 are children. Nearly 1,410,774 people need humanitarian assistance, including 592,581 children. Hurricane Matthew is the largest humanitarian crisis in Haiti since the 2010 earthquake and constitutes itself an unprecedented emergency for Haiti. Humanitarian needs include access to a sufficient supply of quality water, education, shelter, child protection, health and nutrition. Cholera continues to be a large concern and emergency interventions are complementing the existing cholera response where possible.16-RR-HTI-22873-NR05ditaranto@un.org#Enzo Di TarantoEnglishMirna Loiferman2017-01-30T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-07-27T23:20:53.6432017-11-01T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture235800210600446400229500224100453600900000MostlyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2200074000960002400081000105000201000MostlyHealthHealth7066863248133916119667263689383356517272MostlyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector166343250307416650172987260811433798850448MostlyNutritionNutrition1503015031629016293132MostlyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence88355443847827591123711680MostlyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene20638285004913819829273834721296350Mostly2016-10-27T00:00:0049533416-RR-AFG-23148Afghanistan RR Application, Nov 2016 (Returnees from Pakistan)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-11-07T00:00:002016-11-21T00:00:002016-11-22T18:07:25.8832016-12-01T00:00:009736611.009782398Triggered by heightened political pressure and security threats on Afghans in Pakistan, over 480,000 undocumented returnees and registered refugees have returned to Afghanistan from Pakistan since July, representing a ten-fold increase in the number of returnees from the period between January and June. The Afghanistan Flash Appeal launched in September aims to cater the needs of approximately 620,000 returning Afghans expected between September and December, which represent US$144.2 million of the total funding requirement of $152 million. Only $34 million or 23 per cent of the Appeal has been funded so far. Initial Rapid Needs Assessment found shelter, WASH and food to be the greatest needs for the newly-arriving returnees, many of whom lack basic necessities and are in highly vulnerable physical and mental states. This CERF allocation of $9.7 million will provide immediate life-saving assistance to new arrivals and cover the most critical gaps in the areas of high return. The CERF-funded projects will target 385,000 people with food, health, protection, emergency shelter, NFI and cash assistance to be delivered in Torkham Border, IOM Transit Centre, four UNHCR Encashment and Transit Centres in Herat, Jalalabad, Kabul and Kandahar, as well as provinces of Nangarhar, Kabul, Kunar and Laghman. The CERF grant will complement US$5 million allocation from the CHF Emergency Reserve, directed to plug critical gaps in the response mainly in Nangarhar province, together to address the rapidly-increasing humanitarian needs caused by the recent spike in returnee population which was not envisaged by the country’s 2016 Humanitarian Response Plan. Z - not in use - Returnees, Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee16-RR-AFG-23148-NR04mcfaddenm@un.org#Maia McFaddenEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-03-02T00:00:002017-05-02T00:00:002017-08-22T18:07:25.8832017-09-04T00:00:002017-12-27T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security266601930545965256145174577359123324MostlyHealthHealth23071198104288116549272904383986720MostlyProtection - Mine ActionMine Action497972233572132409412178862729134861MostlyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector1082288210119032910449678371182867373196MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI49502345729546742744741814713Mostly2016-11-21T00:00:0049733716-RR-JOR-23191Jordan Berm RR Application II Nov 2016 (Syrian Refugees)AsiaJordanWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-11-10T00:00:002016-11-10T00:00:002016-12-16T00:00:002016-12-22T00:00:005376117.005068863With a rapid growth in the number of Syrians arriving at the north eastern borders of Jordan, an estimated 100,000 Syrians have been stranded at the crossing points in Hadalat and Rukban since June. The Jordanian authorities have restricted access of this population to the Jordanian territories due to national security concerns, and sealed off the borders and suspended humanitarian assistance following a VBIED attack on Rukban on 21 June. On 1 September, the USG met with the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for the Jordanian Armed Forces and managed to secure an agreement to resume humanitarian operations at a new distribution point. The total financial requirement for the emergency response for these 100,000 displaced Syrians from June to the end of the year was estimated at $117 million, of which only $36.7 million has been funded so far. This CERF allocation of US$5.7 million will complement an earlier CERF RR allocation of $4.3 million which funded WASH assistance and security enhancement arrangements in August, and targets the stranded Syrians in dire need of humanitarian assistance with additional security coordination, health, nutrition, protection, shelter and camp management activities. Syria crisis 2011-16-RR-JOR-23191-NR03abuata@un.org#Mirna Abu AtaEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-03-22T00:00:002017-05-16T00:00:002017-09-16T00:00:002017-11-07T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection2231022312322023224553MostlyHealthHealth660413992205964989135171850639102MostlyNutritionNutrition396039648364411271523MostlyCommon Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services799315272232656306147632106944334Mostly2016-12-16T00:00:0049833616-RR-COD-23263DR Congo RR Application, Nov 2016 (South Sudanese refugees )AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-11-17T00:00:002016-12-05T00:00:002016-12-15T00:00:002016-12-22T00:00:004000624.003989371Triggered by fighting between the government forces (SPLA) and the elements of Riek Machar on 10 and 11 September 2016 and subsequent clashes between rebels and loyalist forces of the SPLA in the southwestern states of South Sudan, some 64,369 South Sudanese refugees (as of 22 November) have fled to the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Many of these refugees are stranded in the border area and, based on a multisectoral needs assessment conducted in August, expected to be suffering deplorable conditions with makeshift shelters and limited to no access to WASH facilities and health services. The total humanitarian funding requirement to address the needs of these refugees and their host communities is estimated at US$13,333.333 of which US$4,550.000 has been pledged so far. This CERF allocation of US$4,000.154 aims to provide immediate life-saving assistance to 32,325 people including 20,000 South Sudanese refugees and 12,325 people from host communities over six months, through ensuring relocation of the South Sudanese refugees in the border area to two new refugee sites in Biringi and Meri and delivering emergency shelter, WASH, food security and nutrition, agriculture, health, and protection assistance. The geographic areas to be covered by this allocation will be the Aru (Ituri Province) and Faradje (Haut Uele Province) territories. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-16-RR-COD-23263-NR07macdiarmid@un.org#Charlotte MacDiarmidFrenchJulia Wittig2017-03-20T00:00:002017-05-15T00:00:002017-09-15T00:00:002017-10-10T00:00:002018-01-11T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security72222578178003928847991408792090FullyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture1768201337812397239747948575FullyHealthHealth70184679116971140576031900830705FullyMulti-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector118385883177211240067201912036841Fully2016-12-13T00:00:0050033916-RR-IRQ-23465Iraq RR Application Dec 2016 (Mosul)AsiaIraqWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-12-08T00:00:002016-12-14T00:00:002016-12-23T00:00:002016-12-29T00:00:0022654000.0018353642On 17 October 2016, Iraqi Security Forces (ISF) commenced military operations to reclaim Mosul, a city of 1.5 million people, from the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). Faced by unexpectedly fierce resistance, ISF now predicts that the operations will be prolonged beyond the initially-planned two to three months. As a result, over 56,000 displaced people (as of 15 November) are in need of time-critical assistance to survive severe winter conditions outside of their homes in the coming months. In addition, ISIL snipers are targeting civilians, firing indiscriminately on people trying to leave Mosul, resulting in a spike in civilian casulaties. Over 20 OCHA-led assessment missions have reached newly-taken areas and have identified priority needs for health (especially trauma and maternity care), protection, WASH and food assistance. As the Mosul response was not envisaged in the 2016 Iraq Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP), Mosul Flash Appeal was launched in July 2016 requesting $284 million to address the preparedness needs in shelter, food, WASH, health and protection sectors. The total humanitarian funding requirement to address outstanding acute needs of conflict-affected population in and around Mosul today is estimated at $167.5 million, of which $54.5 million has been pledged so far. This CERF allocation of 18.4 million aims to provide immediate life-saving assistance to displaced families and their host population through activities in health and emergency shelter/NFI sectors. CERF-funded projects are strategically aligned with the forthcoming 2017 Iraq HRP and will be complemented by the Iraq Humanitarian Pooled Fund. An estimated 471,000 people will directly benefit from the projects under this application, which will be implemented in accessible areas of eastern Mosul City, the Mosul corridor and parts of Ninewa, Salah al-Din and Erbil Governorates over six months. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Z - Not in use - IDP16-RR-IRQ-23465-NR08koide@un.org#Madoka KoideEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-03-30T00:00:002017-05-24T00:00:002017-10-21T00:00:002018-02-05T00:00:00HealthHealth25547735102893190304283361843907Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI3502848165831934080052191929911761842016-12-23T00:00:0050133816-RR-HTI-23486Haiti RR Application Dec 2016 (Post Hurricane Matthew Shelter/Education)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20162016-12-12T00:00:002016-12-15T00:00:002016-12-22T00:00:002016-12-23T00:00:003509796.003544711The main objective of this application is to enable life-saving activities targeting 31,000 people facing forced eviction from temporary shelters following Hurricane Matthew in Haiti. A total of 15,000 individuals will receive shelter and basic assistance, and 16,000 excluded students will resume access to education. The total estimated cost of this application is US$ 3,509,796 out of which US$ 2,964,970 will go to IOM and US$ 544,826 to UNICEF. The grant will support the rapid restoration of emptied school buildings and the identification of and tailored assistance to particularly vulnerable evictees, including unaccompanied children, victims of sexual and gender-based violence and disabled persons. Those evicted from shelters and the most vulnerable people in zones of return will receive shelter assistance (linked to the level of damage sustained) and a multipurpose cash grant to cover basic needs.16-RR-HTI-23486-NR06vedaste@un.org#Kalima VedasteEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-03-30T00:00:002017-05-24T00:00:002017-09-22T00:00:002017-11-04T00:00:002017-12-11T00:00:00EducationEducation835161689678649773942218389MostlyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI19196282820119104347625714458Mostly2016-12-21T00:00:0050234016-RR-BGD-23507Bangladesh RR Application Dec 2016 (Myanmar Refugees)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20162016-12-14T00:00:002016-12-22T00:00:002016-12-30T00:00:002017-01-05T00:00:002118379.003090269Since November 2016, a sudden surge of at least 22,000 undocumented Myanmar nationals (UMNs) (as of 3 December) have crossed the border from the Rakhine State of Myanmar into Cox’s Bazar district of Bangladesh. Teknaf and Ukhia Upazilas, which currently host a large number of both registered refugees and UMNs, have received the highest influx. A Multi-Cluster/Sectoral Initial Rapid Assessment conducted by IOM, WFP and NGO partners from 24 November to 1 December identified priority needs of the newly arrived, including Protection, Food Security/Nutrition, WASH, Health and Shelter. On 4 December, key humanitarian organizations present in Cox’s Bazar were granted access to the affected areas by the national authorities. At the request of the Government, humanitarian partners agreed to adopt a ‘discreet’ and ‘low-profile’ approach in delivering assistance to this population, by focusing on strengthening existing basic services without building new infrastructure. This CERF allocation of US$3.1 million – against the overall funding requirement of $7.5 million - aims to provide immediate life-saving assistance to 22,000 displaced people who newly arrived in Cox’s Bazar through activities in emergency shelter, food security, nutrition, protection, WASH and health (including reproductive health) sectors to be implemented over four to five months. The CERF-funded projects will be strategically aligned with the Joint Humanitarian Contingency Plan of the UN in Bangladesh, which was released on 26 November to address the humanitarian needs arising from an estimated influx of 50,000 people directly affected by the current crisis in northern Rakhine, and the Humanitarian Response Plan in development. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee16-RR-BGD-23507-NR03Englishdorjee2@un.org2017-04-03T00:00:002017-06-02T00:00:002017-09-30T00:00:002017-10-18T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection4194041944459044598653FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security95815883154641072678361856234026FullyHealthHealth73766649140259852179602781241837FullyNutritionNutrition47010470154923806929813999FullyProtection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence10189190631548151113011320FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6270457210842676852671203522877FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene6270457210842676852671203522877Fully2016-12-29T00:00:0050334117-RR-MNG-23749Mongolia RR Application Jan 2017 (dzud)AsiaMongoliaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaRRHeat/Cold WaveMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20172017-01-11T00:00:002017-01-11T00:00:002017-01-18T00:00:002017-01-20T00:00:001107614.001107613On 19 December, the National Emergency Commission in Mongolia reported "white dzud", a harsh winter condition resulting from heavy snow fall and impossibility of livestock to access edible mass, in 110 districts of 15 provinces and one district of Ulaanbaatar city (mostly along the northern belt of the country). Multi-sectoral needs assessments and analysis conducted by the Government and humanitarian partners recorded a series of negative coping mechanisms among the affected households whose livelihood entirely depends on animal husbandry, including reduced food intake, buying food on loan, children dropping out of schools, animal theft and other community conflict, and prioritizing well-being of animals over basic family needs. Acknowledging the limited national capacity to respond to this crisis, the Deputy Prime Minister on 23 December sent a letter to the RC requesting international assistance to the affected vulnerable herder communities to prevent the collapse of their livelihoods. Out of 37,000 herder households living in the affected districts, an estimated 13,000 households are likely to require some form of assistance. Of these, humanitarian organizations are aiming to strengthen the coping capacity of the most vulnerable 8,000 households through targeted assistance in agriculture, early recovery, health and nutrition, protection and education sectors. This CERF allocation of US$1.1million, against the total funding requirement of $6.7 million for the next six months, will provide emergency agriculture (livestock) and multi-purpose cash assistance to 3,500 herder households (12,600 people) in 36 most-affected districts of 13 provinces in the country over a six-month period. The CERF response will cover the most time-critical elements of the overall humanitarian response spearheaded by the Government and supported by the UN, Red Cross, INGOs and other partners. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action17-RR-MNG-23749-NR01tsetsegmaa.amar@one.un.org#Tsetsegmaa AmarEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-04-26T00:00:002017-06-19T00:00:002017-10-18T00:00:002017-10-27T00:00:002018-01-26T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture29055168807322984196649414567Fully2017-01-17T00:00:0051135017-UF-NGA-23979Nigeria UF Application Feb 2017 (conflict displacement)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-02-13T00:00:002017-02-13T00:00:002017-03-21T00:00:002017-03-27T00:00:0021996506.0021997157The Boko Haram-triggered crisis in north-east Nigeria shows no sign of abating, while escalation of violence in other parts of the country also requires swift humanitarian response. It is projected that in 2017, 8.5 million people in north-east Nigeria’s Borno, Adamawa and Yobe States will require humanitarian assistance. Famine-like conditions are forecast for 120,000 people and 5.1 million people in all are expected to be food insecure by mid-2017. Some 450,000 children in the North-East suffer from severe acute malnutrition.
The Nigeria 2017 HRP requirement is US$ 1.1 billion. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the 2016 HRP was 42% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 2.6 million people in the Borno, Adamawa and Yobe states (North East). These areas are among the most affected by displacement due to Boko-Haram-related violence. IDPs and people in host communities require emergency education, food assistance, health and nutrition supplies, protection services, shelter and WASH responses.
Nigeria Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $22 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 13 February 2017
Total # of projects submitted: 13 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action Boko Haram crisis 2014-17-UF-NGA-23979-NR01haggarty@un.org#Alta BellEnglishJulia Wittig2017-10-10T00:00:002017-12-08T00:00:002018-03-31T00:00:002018-04-30T00:00:002019-04-03T16:51:06EducationEducation379070379073907003907076977Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI17779156453342418787151573394467368Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture74645555801302257769237790115482245707Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security70284318801021647420855818130026232190HealthHealth3306662970246276904098123470387568501384540NutritionNutrition3929903929937757201908239665278964Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection8164081645725169589414058ProtectionProtection28951172214617223420248934831394485Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence14901791107240124269362140028409390649514Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene699235494012486382083644941465772714402017-03-17T00:00:0051335417-UF-LBY-24004Libya UF Application Feb 2017 (Protracted Crisis)AfricaLibyaNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-02-14T00:00:002017-03-02T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-04-06T00:00:006000000.005997815Political instability and conflict between opposing parties each backed by different militias and tribes in Libya since 2014 have resulted in a prolonged vacuum of effective governance and collapse of the security system and rule of law, with grave social and economic consequences. Without a state-level agreement on the use of resources and roles and responsibilities or a common strategy for humanitarian response, people living in or returning to conflict-affected areas are faced with extensive infrastructural damage, limited public services and security risks due to widespread contamination by explosive hazards.
The 2017 Libya Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) aims to provide life-saving humanitarian assistance to 941,000 people out of 1.33 million people in need with a funding requirement of US$151 million. Under the HRP, the Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) will support actions to enable safe and dignified access to essential health services and other basic social services, as well as protection of most vulnerable Libyans, migrants, refugees and asylum seekers. So far, only $9.1 million (6 per cent) of the HRP’s total funding requirement has been received as of 3 March 2017.
This CERF allocation of $6 million will address the most critical priorities as agreed by the HCT and will jump-start time-critical humanitarian assistance in health (including reproductive health), food security, WASH and protection (including child protection, S/GBV and mine action) sectors in Benghazi, Ubari and Sebha governorates of Libya with multi-sectoral assistance targeting the most vulnerable groups. With most of UN agencies and their international partners operating remotely, the CERF-funded projects will largely be implemented by local partners including government agencies, the Libyan Red Crescent Society and NGOs that are well-established in Libya and in the project areas. The HCT will maintain regular and close coordination with the sectoral and local partners to monitor the ground humanitarian situations and provide strategic and operational support for project implementation.
Libya Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $6 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 14 February 2017
Total # of projects submitted: 1017-UF-LBY-24004-NR01jazairi@un.org#Leila JazairiEnglishJulia Wittig2017-10-10T00:00:002017-12-08T00:00:002018-03-31T00:00:002019-04-05T22:28:11Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI22424291653320843633571712250Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security4906835413260452977111224025500HealthHealth278143618463998256743476660440124438Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector280388501165323055006731118964Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene187993994858747136132892842541101288Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence000246387341119711197Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture2864118040442441110035417585Protection - Mine ActionMine Action0000000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection3670200056703219947416698362017-03-30T00:00:0051635717-UF-CMR-24089Cameroon UF Application Feb 2017 (conflict displacement)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-02-17T00:00:002017-02-17T00:00:002017-04-05T00:00:002017-04-07T00:00:0010000000.0010005413Boko-Haram related violence in north-eastern Nigeria, cross-border raids and suicide bombings in Cameroon has forced nearly 192,000 Cameroonians and 85,000 Nigerian refugees to flee their homes in search of security and protection in the Far North of Cameroon.
The number of internally displaced persons has more than doubled since early 2016, reaching about 200,000 in October 2016. This has resulted in a sharp deterioration in access to basic services which was already weak and in some cases non-existent. For example, 25 health centers are closed due to their destruction and / or occupation and 144 schools did not reopen at the start of the school year In the Far North, almost 45% of the population does not have access to drinking water and only 14% benefit from infrastructure that meets hygiene and sanitation criteria. Food insecurity remains alarming, with about 1.5 million people who are food insecure in the Far North, with 180,000 at the emergency level. Severe acute malnutrition has reached emergency thresholds in the department of Logone and Chari.
CERF funds from the Under Funded Emergency Grant will be used to meet the urgent needs of those affected in the Far North by the conflict related to the Lake Chad Basin crisis. The CERF strategy is to focus the response in the departments of Logone and Chari, which currently accounts for nearly 40% of the internally displaced persons of Cameroon. The response will also cover the border areas of the departments of Mayo Sava and the Mayo Tsanaga for a Protection response which has to extend beyond Logone and Chari, in particular as DTM should not be restricted to a single department. The main objective of the response is to save lives through priority interventions covering the sectors of Food Security, Water, Hygiene and Sanitation, Shelter and Property Non-Food, Protection, Health and Nutrition. The proposals made in this strategy aim to provide holistic assistance to targeted populations through joint projects with the same geographical focus and the same targeting.
Cameroon Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $10 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant Package received: 17 February 2017
Total # of project submitted: 9 Boko Haram crisis 2014-17-UF-CMR-24089-NR01cherif1@un.org#Imane CherifFrenchMateusz Buczek2017-10-10T00:00:002017-12-11T00:00:002018-03-31T00:00:002018-04-30T00:00:002019-04-02T22:31:12Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security404281922859656429222182264744124400NutritionNutrition203820203822130602130641688ProtectionProtection162931150401313332145260165962311222624554Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI19309113533066220097118033190062562Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene407402810068840393403232071660140500HealthHealth4940028500779005130060800112100190000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture332701637049640351701819053360103000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2832424309526333263951536841751368082017-03-31T00:00:0051735217-UF-NER-24178Niger UF Application Feb 2017 (conflict and food insecurity)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-02-21T00:00:002017-02-21T00:00:002017-03-21T00:00:002017-03-27T00:00:0010000000.0010058848Niger remains in a cycle of chronic humanitarian crisis. The Boko Haram driven conflict in the Diffa region has aggravated the vulnerability of many people
who were already living on the edge of survival before the crisis broke out. Approximately 1.9 million people in Niger will need humanitarian assistance in
2017, including 1.5 million in the nutrition sector and 1.3 million in the food security sector.
A $10 million allocation will focus on the needs of 250,000 people related to food insecurity including agriculture, access to basic social services (education, health, WASH), protection and logistics. The response will target the most vulnerable people among those affected in order to save lives primarily in the regions of Diffa, Tillabery, Tahoua and Maradi.
Niger Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $10 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Application received: 21 February 2017
Number of projects submitted: 10 Boko Haram crisis 2014-17-UF-NER-24178-NR01saidousidibe@un.org#Halima SidibeEnglishMirna Loiferman2017-10-12T00:00:002017-12-08T00:00:002018-04-30T00:00:002019-04-08T20:04:06Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000EducationEducation94310943197870978719218Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI139087718216261636891972556547191Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security100607776178361022171921741335249Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture369073431071217375973495372550143767HealthHealth1440009600024000014994099960249900489900Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1099190482003913805150742887948918ProtectionProtection454493718582634473043870386007168641Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene22679155633824223702171824088479126Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence20261675370123781967434580462017-03-17T00:00:0051935317-RR-MOZ-24650Mozambique RR Application Mar 2017 (Cyclone Dineo)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20172017-03-13T00:00:002017-03-13T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-04-06T00:00:002000074.002000095On 15 February 2017, Category 3 cyclone Dineo made landfall over Inhambane province of Mozambique. The cyclone affected 112,513 families (550,691 people), of which 7,651 families are considered particularly vulnerable, and caused widespread damages to the province’s infrastructure and agriculture. Over 33,000 houses were destroyed while another 71,294 houses as well as 389 government offices, 70 health facilities and 2,000 classrooms suffered partial damage. Some 27,000 hectares of crops and over 135,000 fruit trees were lost. Access to potable water and sanitation facilities, basic healthcare services and education of children have been disrupted.
The provincial authorities with support from international and national humanitarian partners conducted a multi-sector rapid needs assessment from 20 to 23 February. The assessment identified priority needs of the affected communities which informed the following response planning: 1) immediate assistance to the most vulnerable with food, shelter and NFI support and emergency agricultural inputs; 2) restoration of basic services through establishment of temporary facilities for education and health care; and 3) reconstruction of classrooms and health units with resilience measures.
Based on preliminary findings, the Government estimated the total funding required to respond to and restore the damages caused by the cyclone at US$16.5 million, towards which it allocated $2.3 million from the National Contingency Plan. In response to the Government request, Mozambique Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) launched a flash appeal on 28 February seeking $10.2 million to complement the national response with activities in education, health, shelter/NFI (partially to address WASH needs), food security, protection and early recovery sectors targeting 150,000 people. Only $400,000 of the appeal has been funded as of 13 March.
This CERF allocation of $2 million will address the most critical priorities as agreed by the HCT in support of the flash appeal to will jump-start life-saving humanitarian assistance in health (including reproductive health/GBV), education, food security, shelter/NFI (including WASH) sectors in Inhambane province in the next three to six months.17-RR-MOZ-24650-NR01claudio.julaia@one.un.org#Claudio JulaiaEnglishdorjee2@un.org2017-06-30T00:00:002017-09-07T00:00:002017-12-31T00:00:002018-01-25T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI12857127102556711372196983107056637MostlyFood Security - AgricultureAgriculture027085270850476104761074695MostlyEducationEducation56350563558650586511500MostlyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7193540812601748161691365026251MostlyHealthHealth11416176740190901118017103547221564412465Mostly2017-03-30T00:00:0052235917-RR-MDG-25219Madagascar RR Application Mar 2017 (cyclone)AfricaMadagascarEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20172017-03-31T00:00:002017-03-31T00:00:002017-04-18T00:00:002017-04-19T00:00:004999896.004999601Cyclone Enawo, a category 4 on the Saffir-Simpson scale, struck the Sava region in northeastern Madagascar on 7 March. Widespread flooding was recorded throughout the eastern half of Madagascar in the wake of the storm.Following the evaluation missions organized under the auspices of the National Bureau of Risk and Disaster Management (BNGRC) with the HCT, it was estimated that some 434,000 people were affected, including a total of 247,219 displaced persons. The number of deaths is 81, with 18 people missing, and 253 others injured. This initial assessment revealed severe impact of the cyclone in Antalaha district and in the Maroantsetra district, both in the northeast region of the country.
For the next three months, the total humanitarian needs are estimated at $ 20.1 million. So far, only $691,000 were received. Under this application, the Madagascar HCT is requesting $4,999,896 to kick-start activities of five out of the ten sectors prioritized in the response. With the CERF allocation the HCT intends to cover the Shelter, WASH, Health, Food Security and Common Logistics needs for up to 150,000 beneficiaries living in Antalaha and Maroantsetra districts.17-RR-MDG-25219-NR02rakotoson@un.org#Rija RakotosonFrenchMirna Loiferman2017-07-25T00:00:002017-09-27T00:00:002018-01-18T00:00:002019-05-08T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI28823032591428113597640812322Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security21023151463616922401131803558171750HealthHealth413803212073500430703343076500150000Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene39978413838136156398483441047421861032017-04-12T00:00:0052536117-RR-SSD-25251South Sudan RR Application Apr 2017 (Famine Prevention and Rising Conflict)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-04-20T00:00:002017-04-20T00:00:002017-05-02T00:00:002017-05-10T00:00:0015520071.0015524589More than 3.6 million people have been displaced by conflict in South Sudan, including 1.9 million who are internally displaced and 1.7 million who have fled as refugees to neighbouring countries. New clashes since the beginning of 2017 have uprooted tens of thousands of civilians. Worst affected areas include Greater Equatoria (including Kajo-Keji, Lainya, Magwi, Torit and Yei, where some 144,000 people were displaced as of the end of February 2017), Unity (including Koch, Leer, Mayendit, Panyijar, 263,000 displaced), and in Upper Nile (including Fashoda, 66,000 displaced). At the time of writing, additional displacement is taking place due to a major offensive underway in Jonglei and recent clashes in and around Wau.
Additionally, food insecurity and malnutrition have reached unprecedented levels, with localised famine declared in Leer and Mayendit counties of Unity on 20 February. Insecurity and lack of access have left 100,000 people facing starvation, and a further 1 million others classified as being on the brink of famine. Country-wide, some 4.9 million people are now estimated to be severely food insecure, and this number is expected to rise to 5.5 million at the height of the lean season in July. Livelihoods have been decimated, with livestock looted, killed and disease prone and crops destroyed or planting delayed due to violence, displacement and unfavourable weather.
The CERF Rapid Response request, submitted 20 April 2017, is triggered by rapidly escalating food insecurity and malnutrition in South Sudan - including in locations where famine or elevated risk of famine has been declared - as well as urgent humanitarian needs in areas of new/active conflict. This application requests US$15.5 million from CERF - as a contribution to a total requirement of US$54 million - in order to reach an estimated 369,000 of the most severely-affected people in 10 highest-risk locations with an inter-cluster response. The contribution will save lives by in supporting the urgent scale-up of front line response, particularly through vital funding for procurement, transportation and distribution of emergency supplies, including inter-cluster rapid response survival kits. It will also enable programme delivery by facilitating the scale up of common services, including transportation of cargo and humanitarian personnel. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action South Sudan crisis 2013-17-RR-SSD-25251-NR01throp@un.org#David ThropEnglishRinzin Dorjee2017-08-10T00:00:002017-10-03T00:00:002018-02-02T00:00:002019-05-09T18:05:42Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture46351137051183408961181681190642308982HealthHealth379434515283095413514580987160170255NutritionNutrition98410984110749143499154248164089Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene89066338921229586225047715109965232923ProtectionProtection131842013184210892010368119288251130Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management39004082798238073282708915071EducationEducation5181170552516343915193491087426Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI47222459499317149396539121033081964792017-05-01T00:00:0052836517-RR-ZWE-25764Zimbabwe RR Application Apr 2017 (Floods)AfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20172017-04-28T00:00:002017-05-03T00:00:002017-05-09T00:00:002017-05-11T00:00:001688953.001585201On 20 March 2017, the Government of Zimbabwe launched an international appeal for Humanitarian Assistance requesting USD$189 million to respond to a national flood disaster declared on 2 March. This was after a record high rainfall exacerbated by cyclone Dineo on 16 February 2017. The flooding crisis particularly affected 36 out of the 60 districts in the country, causing damage to local infrastructure, livelihoods, roads, and homes in 36 districts in the country. Overall, some 251 people were killed; 128 others injured and over 2,600 houses destroyed, leaving hundreds of people homeless and living in temporary camps as Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs). Some 388 schools were affected, with a likely impact on an estimated 67,000 enrolled in the affected areas. The Government further estimates that over 100,000 people are in need of access to safe drinking water as the floods have compromised the hygiene practices and water quality, especially in the congested IDP camp thereby increasing the risk of water and vector-borne diseases. The emergency needs have surpassed the resources in the normal agency programming and partners have had to redirect resources from the drought response to respond to the flood emergency. The request to the CERF rapid response window,, for approximately US 2 million, will therefore be used to address the critical life-saving needs in shelter, education, WASH and protection for approximately 55,000 people who were affected by the flooding.17-RR-ZWE-25764-NR01andrea.danti@one.un.org#Andrea DantiEnglishJulia Wittig2017-08-15T00:00:002017-10-10T00:00:002018-02-09T00:00:002018-02-05T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI29752060503536412280592110956Fullyvery credible, well explained beneficiary count.ProtectionProtection1609549971085984203682635233460Fullyvery credible, well explained beneficiary count.EducationEducation73550735576650766515020Fullyvery credible, well explained beneficiary count.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene719915834230337775222473002253055Fullyvery credible, well explained beneficiary count.2017-05-09T00:00:0053036717-RR-SDN-25600Sudan RR Application May 2017 (South Sudanese refugees)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-05-04T00:00:002017-05-15T00:00:002017-06-02T00:00:002017-06-07T00:00:0010479979.0010469531Outflow of South Sudanese refugees into neighbouring countries, triggered by the breakout of violence in December 2013 and aggravated as the conflict spread and food security deteriorated, has continued into 2017 and new arrivals in Sudan reached over 108,000 as of 30 April. This unanticipated rate of new arrivals far exceeds the trends of previous years as well as the earlier planning figure of 60,000 new arrivals for the whole of 2017, and has overwhelmed the response capacity of Sudanese government and humanitarian partners that are also supporting nearly 300,000 South Sudanese refugees already staying in the country.
This CERF grant of US$10.5 million will target 60,000 newly arrived South Sudanese refugees in key locations of South Kordofan and White Nile states with urgent WASH, health, nutrition, food, and shelter/NFI assistance over a six month period. This will involve establishing critically-needed basic services in South Kordofan including a reception centre, and expanding life-saving basic service provision in White Nile including through the expansion of two existing refugee hosting sites.
The CERF-funded response will be closely aligned with the overall strategy of the Regional Refugee Response Plan (RRRP), which was revised in April 2017 and now targets some 477,000 individuals including an additional 120,000 new arrivals projected by the end of 2017. CERF will contribute to the projected $40 million funding requirement for this new caseload, which brought up the overall financial requirement for the 2017 South Sudan refugee response in Sudan to $205.5 million. The total RRRP requirement is currently less than 10 per cent funded. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee South Sudan crisis 2013-17-RR-SDN-25600-NR01gaanders@unhcr.org#Miranda GaanderseEnglishMirna Loiferman2017-09-11T00:00:002017-11-14T00:00:002018-03-22T00:00:002018-04-04T00:00:002019-04-03T20:17:53HealthHealth25482181404362223522167464026883890NutritionNutrition900009000804487711681525815Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene14733258454057816362363405270293280Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI36416221986235006474997419836Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security18915672025635200851428034365600002017-06-01T00:00:0053136617-RR-YEM-26002Yemen RR Application May 2017 (Famine Prevention)AsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-05-12T00:00:002017-05-12T00:00:002017-05-19T00:00:002017-05-23T00:00:0024800588.0024953107Nearly two years of war have exacerbated chronic vulnerabilities in Yemen, leaving an estimated 18.8 million people in need of humanitarian or protection assistance – a nearly 20 per cent increase since late 2014. This includes 10.3 million people in acute need who urgently require immediate, lifesaving assistance in at least one sector in 2017. The conflict has intensified since March 2017, especially on the western coast of Yemen, furthering worsening humanitarian conditions. The March 2017 Integrated Food Security Phase Classification report indicated an increase in the total number of food insecure people in Yemen to 17 million. Among these, some 10.2 million people are in IPC Phase 3 “crisis” and 6.8 million people are in IPC Phase 4 “emergency”. Additionally, a cholera outbreak is spreading in Yemen requiring further scale up of essential medical services to respond.
Following consultation with the Emergency Relief Coordinator and CERF secretariat in late April, the RC/HC for Yemen submitted a CERF rapid response request on 12 May for $25 million to expand urgent food, health and nutrition activities, as well as bolster common services in logistics and security. The CERF funds will enable partners to reach 1.4 million people with food aid, severe and moderate malnutrition assistance in 59 priority districts recording the highest food insecurity and malnutrition indicators. The CERF-funded intervention will also aim to mitigate excess mortality and morbidity through the health minimum service package and nutrition surveillance in 3 prioritized districts of Sa’ada, Al Hodydah and Hajjah governorates. The direct assistance will be provided over a two to four-month period while the common logistics and security services will be implemented for six months. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action17-RR-YEM-26002-NR01mounier@un.org#Pascal MounierEnglishRinzin Dorjee2017-08-23T00:00:002017-10-27T00:00:002018-03-28T00:00:002018-04-13T00:00:002019-05-09T22:32:40HealthHealth63870404511043216174146838108579212900NutritionNutrition0104098104098121109100015221124325222Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2970303810286780582924863589816514671329525Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services00000002017-05-19T00:00:0053737217-RR-BGD-26523Bangladesh RR Application Jul 2017 (landslides)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20172017-07-03T00:00:002017-07-05T00:00:002017-07-13T00:00:002017-07-17T00:00:001000000.001005783In mid-June, Bangladesh was hit by the deadliest landslides-related disaster in its history. The disaster affected about 80,000 persons across the five districts and killed 160 persons, including 115 persons in Rangamati District alone. According to the Chittagong Divisional Health Office Control Room Report, a total of 187 injured persons were admitted in local level hospitals. Based on a multi-sector needs assessment and with the support of the national authorities, the HCT developed a Humanitarian Response Plan valued US$10 million in order to complement the assistance provided by the Government of Bangladesh (GoB).
One of the three strategic objectives of the HRP is the provision of immediate life-saving assistance. Following a thorough consultation and prioritization process, the UNCT presented a CERF RR application aiming to provide life-saving assistance to 37,737 persons living in the most severely impacted district of Rangamati in the Chittagong Hill Tracts (CHT) and, specifically in three of its ten sub-districts. These persons lost everything to the landslides and are currently living in life-threatening situations, especially women and girls. This application would allow the most affected and most vulnerable persons to benefit from emergency shelter, WASH and protection assistance. It will help them to survive the impact of the landslides and, the on-going monsoon season. This application is for US$1 million.17-RR-BGD-26523-NR02loiferman@un.org#Mirna LoifermanEnglishKristine Hansen2018-01-11T00:00:002018-03-12T00:00:002018-04-13T00:00:002019-04-08T00:00:00HealthHealth00010584196563024030240FullyIncreased number of beneficiaries reached versus number targeted in view of unexpected significant influx of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar into Cox Bazar, adding to agencies' targeted case load under the CERF-funded projects.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene786710220180876889112411813036217FullyIncreased number of beneficiaries reached versus number targeted in view of unexpected significant influx of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar into Cox Bazar, adding to agencies' targeted case load under the CERF-funded projects.Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI62769602158789568110252059336471FullyIncreased number of beneficiaries reached versus number targeted in view of unexpected significant influx of Rohingya refugees from Myanmar into Cox Bazar, adding to agencies' targeted case load under the CERF-funded projects.2017-07-13T00:00:0053937417-RR-SDN-26610Sudan RR Application Jul 2017 (Jebel Mara)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-07-10T00:00:002017-07-19T00:00:002017-08-01T00:00:002017-08-09T00:00:004999988.004987029For the past seven years, several areas in the Jebel Marra region remained inaccessible to humanitarian partners due to insecurity and restrictions by authorities. However, during the past year, the conflict has reduced, and access to several areas has gradually opened, a few partners have since visited different areas in Jebel Marra to conduct assessments and have begun efforts to scale up assistance. The urgency of implementing this rapid response plan is driven by indicators of extremely high levels of malnutrition and mortality in Jebel Marra revealed in assessments done by the Ministry of health and some partners, Severe acute malnutrition (SAM = 5.4) and Global Acute Malnutrition rates (GAM = 15.8) are above emergency levels as well as the overall mortality rate (CMR = 2.43) per 10,000 inhabitants/per day. At the end of April 2017, a FEWSNET food security monitoring report revealed that the food security situation among new IDPs in parts of Jebel Marra has already deteriorated to Crisis (IPC Phase 3 - Integrated Food Security Phase Classification) and is likely to deteriorate to Emergency (IPC Phase 4) by May/June through September 2017 due to displacement, restrictions on movement and trade flows and limited access to normal livelihoods activities. CERF funding will be paramount in reducing mortality and morbidity and specifically child mortality associated with malnutrition and childhood illnesses in the targeted areas of Darfur which have not seen humanitarian interventions for over seven years.This CERF request is based on a rapid lifesaving response components of the Multi-Sector Rapid Response Plan to tackle urgent humanitarian needs associated with critical-level acute malnutrition and mortality among children under five in Jebel Marra localities, Central Darfur state. All CERF proposed activities constitute a minimum package aiming to ensure swift reduction in acute malnutrition and mortality among under-5 children through access to Nutrition, Health, WASH, Protection, Food Security and Livestock services.
The total requirement for the response is :US$ 23,523,943
The total amount received for the response is: US$ 11,116,508
The total amount of CERF funding requested is: US$ 4,991,75417-RR-SDN-26610-NR02merghani@un.org#Randa MerghaniEnglishMateusz Buczek2017-11-17T00:00:002018-01-16T00:00:002018-05-01T00:00:002018-06-01T00:00:002019-04-02T23:21:10Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture19940298204976017730267104444094200HealthHealth278192396251781289552585854813106594NutritionNutrition45837989655733458361030056136111869Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1463269422840537795659160370887752017-08-01T00:00:0054137617-RR-NGA-26745Nigeria RR Application Jul 2017 (Severe Food Insecurity)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-07-27T00:00:002017-07-27T00:00:002017-08-14T00:00:002017-08-17T00:00:009869108.009889471The ongoing armed conflict in North East Nigeria which started in 2009 has caused 8.5 million people to require a range of humanitarian assistance in the states of Borno, Yobe and Adamawa. Borno state is the most affected. The conflict has led to massive displacement and severe food insecurity and undernutrition. It has destroyed livelihoods and food reserves, disrupted markets and commercial activities, and impeded access to health, nutrition, sanitation and education services. The latest Cadre Harmonise of June 2017 estimates some 5.2 million people in the IPC 3, 4 and 5 categories from June through September with more than 50,000 people in famine like conditions. The 2017 HRP requirment is US $1.05 billion. As of 18 July, $442.1 million had been contributed and/or pledged (42 per cent of the requirements)
The $10 million CERF allocation will support “humanitarian hubs” from which first line responders, both UN and NGOs, can establish a permanent and secure humanitarian presence. It will also complement food assistance through the provision of integrated life-saving WASH, health and nutrition interventions focusing on newly arrived IDPs and returnees in the same areas facing famine conditions. The areas of intervention will primarily focus on Bama (Bama IDP camp and Banki), Gwoza, Mobbar and Kala/Balge, Kukawa and Damboa. The multi-sector response targets 1,305,154 people including 874,970 IDPs, 41,247 people in host populations, and 17,714 other affected people. The requested support will be complementary to bi-lateral and in-kind government contributions, as well as the Nigeria Humanitarian Fund (NHF). AA - ad-hoc AA or early action Boko Haram crisis 2014-17-RR-NGA-26745-NR02haggarty@un.org#Alta BellEnglishMirna Loiferman2017-11-16T00:00:002018-01-18T00:00:002018-06-09T00:00:002018-06-30T00:00:002019-04-11T22:54:28HealthHealth3101792558195659984735844459649195481485546NutritionNutrition1633401633415694350005069467028Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene20650162203687024240190504329080160Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0000000Common Services - Emergency TelecommunicationsEmergency Telecommunications00000002017-08-11T00:00:0054938917-UF-SDN-27345Sudan UF Application Sep 2017 (displacement)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-09-14T00:00:002017-09-14T00:00:002017-10-26T00:00:002017-10-24T00:00:0014000000.0014169983Sudan continues to confront significant humanitarian needs with 4.8 million people requiring assistance, inclusive of 2.3 million people internally displaced, 3.6 million people facing food insecurity, and 2.2 million children suffering from acute malnutrition. More than 182,000 South Sudanese refugees have arrived in 2017 beyond projections. Eased restrictions on operations has improved access in Darfur and Government parts of the Two Areas. New areas in Jebel Marra, South Kordofan and Blue Nile are opening to humanitarian access which will require increased response.
A $14 million allocation will focus on the needs of 267,000 people in areas with high numbers of IDPs, refugees and vulnerable host populations including newly accessible areas in South Kordofan, Blue Nile and East Jebel Marra. CERF will support life-saving interventions in Food Security and Livelihoods, Education, Emergency Shelter/ Non-Food Items, Health, Nutrition, Protection, and WASH. The Sudan Humanitarian Fund is simultaneously preparing a call for proposals for $7 million and the CERF prioritisation will be considered when identifying the urgent needs to be covered for the grant.
The Sudan Humanitarian Country Team requires about $804 million for humanitarian action in in 2017. According to FTS, Sudan received 19% of the HRP requirement as of 21 July 2017 when the UFE country selection analysis took place and is now 37.5% funded, still below the current global funding average of 44% for 2017 HRPs.
Sudan Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $14 million (Round II allocation: $45 million for 4 countries)
Application received: 14 September 2017
Number of projects submitted: 10The CERF UFE allocation was well prioritized with a limited number or projects and a targeted geographic locations.17-UF-SDN-27345-NR03elhassan2@un.org#Tarig ElhassanEnglishMateusz Buczek2018-04-19T00:00:002018-06-07T00:00:002019-01-31T00:00:002019-05-09T21:00:06EducationEducation1665528416939152793161559532534Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI12692163212901315367176633303062043Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security488973530584202549804229397273181475HealthHealth2701810815613517425992105318131310266484Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector111069574206801110665101761638296NutritionNutrition2380702380724758159474070564512Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence170200370323581421137711747Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene835246830015182494694785441732383250622017-10-20T00:00:0055139517-RR-COD-27368DR Congo RR Application Sep 2017 (Displacement)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-09-15T00:00:002017-09-15T00:00:002017-10-06T00:00:002017-10-10T00:00:0014013950.0013958355This CERF submission is intended to address the urgent humanitarian needs arising from the sharp deterioration of the situation in areas affected by violence in the Kasai region, the Bantou-Batwa inter-communal conflict in the East and the activities of armed groups in South Kivu. Currently there are 1.4 million IDPs throughout nine provinces of which CERF support will reach approximately 647,000.
CERF-funded assistance will meet the vital needs of those affected through:
1) Immediate improvement of the living conditions, such as supply of essential household items and shelter, access to water and hygiene facilities, and access to health care.
2) Protection and respect for human rights, through school reintegration, prevention and management of gender-based violence, and profiling and registration of refugees and displaced persons.
3) Reduction of the excess mortality and morbidity through food assistance and support to emergency food production, and provision of a multisectoral package for cholera respons. DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201817-RR-COD-27368-NR03macdiarmid@un.org#Charlotte MacDiarmidFrenchKristine Hansen2018-01-10T00:00:002018-04-12T00:00:002018-08-05T00:00:002018-08-16T00:00:002019-04-24T00:00:00Multi-SectorMulti-Sector75735515261272618355356862140415267676PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security457011626161965430117051713533331PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.HealthHealth686788147469784915463020PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.ProtectionProtection16984872792242640254771109188363959606599PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture30927113304225733773162505002392280PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management113797221186001092281331905537655PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene424884082283310460294422490253173563PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.EducationEducation38383934777218452177573620943981PartlyIn the application/chapeau, the HCT planned to deliver life-saving assistance to 809,470 beneficiaries while at the reporting stage, only 606,599 people were reached through the various interventions. it thus appears that there have been some issues at the application stage in terms of deciding on the number of total targeted beneficiaries, perhaps related to double counting. Importantly, agencies and partners largely reached, or in some projects surpassed, the planned number of beneficiaries.2017-10-04T00:00:0055238317-RR-CUB-27383Cuba RR Application Sep 2017 (Hurricane Irma)AmericasCubaLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20172017-09-16T00:00:002017-09-25T00:00:002017-10-02T00:00:002017-10-04T00:00:0010371886.007999469Hurricane Irma, the strongest Atlantic hurricane on record, directly impacted Cuba from 8 - 10 September 2017. The impact of the hurricane was highly destructive, with approximately two million people evacuated during the storm, an estimated 200,000 houses severely damaged and health and educational institutions, food and medical warehouses, and manufacturing centers have been extremely affected. There are severe limitations in potable water accessibility and proper sanitation. The harvest of crops has been lost. Livestock and fish farms have suffered severe damages and most economic sectors, particularly agriculture, energy and tourism are severely damaged.
On 16 September, the Cuba Plan of Action was launched requesting $55.8 million to meet the urgent needs of 2,151,080 affected people. On the same day, the Resident Coordinator a.i. submitted a request for a CERF rapid response grant of $10.4 million on behalf of the UNCT in Cuba to assist 558,801 people in 14 severely affected municipalities over a six-month period. In view of the Emergency Relief Coordinator’s decision on $10 million for humanitarian assistance in response to Hurricane Irma covering both Cuba ($8 million) and the other affected Caribbean States ($2 million), CERF secretariat asked on 18 September that the application be reduced to $8 million. On 20 September, the RC a.i. submitted a revised application of $8.5 million noting the severe scale of needs, which the UNCT subsequently was requested to further reduce to meet the $8 million allocation. The final revised application was submitted on 25 September, requesting a total of $ 8 million from CERF.
The immediate assistance provided by humanitarian partners will assist 558,801 people through the provision of emergency shelter materials, food assistance, agriculture and livelihoods, safe water and sanitation services, health care and education in emergency. The health sector will be assisting a broader geographic area and additional beneficiaries through the support to key national health system facilities.17-RR-CUB-27383-NR01yaima.doimeadios@one.un.org#Yaima DoimeadiosEnglishJulia Wittig2018-01-12T00:00:002018-03-12T00:00:002018-07-02T00:00:002019-04-03T17:06:12EducationEducation212331198224312037112462161744048Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI561129241348525123283623348568337Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture011408911408904898448984163073Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security5118322183927302252676218938271614544636HealthHealth4208015872320080339319158070197389398192Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene33700143847177547341291401781743073518542017-09-29T00:00:0055338517-UF-CAF-27399CAR UF Application Sep 2017 (displacement)AfricaCentral African RepublicMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-09-18T00:00:002017-09-18T00:00:002017-10-17T00:00:002017-10-19T00:00:0010000000.009995626The Central African Republic (CAR) is experiencing a dramatic escalation of conflict and violence with 2.4 million people in need of humanitarian assistance. One in every five CAR citizens is either internally displaced or has fled to neighbouring countries; 600,000 and 500,000 people, respectively. Some 2 million people are food insecure, of which 55 percent are in crisis and emergency phases. Twenty-three percent of the health structures have been destroyed and two thirds of the population have no access to health care.
A $10 million allocation will focus on the needs of 180,000 people in six humanitarian hotspots of Alindao, Bangassou, Batangafo, Kaga-Bondoro, Bria and Zemio IDP sites. CERF will support life-saving interventions in Food Security and Livelihoods, Health, Nutrition, WASH, Protection, Child Protection, Gender Based Violence and Emergency Shelter/ Non-Food Items as well as enabling Logistics operations and Humanitarian Air Services. The CERF response will be closely aligned with a $3 million emergency allocation from the CAR Humanitarian Fund, ensuring complementarity and maximizing the impact of limited resources available to save lives.
The CAR Humanitarian Country Team requires about $497 million for humanitarian action in in 2017. According to FTS, CAR received 24% of the HRP requirement as of 21 July 2017 when the UFE country selection analysis took place and is now 30% funded, still below the current global funding average of 44% for 2017 HRPs.
CAR Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $10 million (Round II allocation: $45 million for 4 countries)
Application received: 18 September 2017
Number of projects submitted: 8 CAR crisis 2013-17-UF-CAF-27399-NR02salvator@un.org#Salvator BijojoteFrenchMateusz Buczek2018-04-19T00:00:002018-06-07T00:00:002018-09-30T00:00:002019-05-10T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1054565421708710000108952089537982Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence394843196271446462654224288507159953Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security55243468899249923671866317655HealthHealth17272797452424603546600610530Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture24009600120003600144001800030000NutritionNutrition8833130022183510164133972356145396Common Services - Emergency TelecommunicationsEmergency Telecommunications00000002017-10-17T00:00:0055439017-UF-AFG-27432Afghanistan UF Application Sep 2017 (displacement)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-09-18T00:00:002017-09-29T00:00:002017-10-26T00:00:002017-10-27T00:00:0010024310.009996905The continued deepening and geographic spread of the protracted conflict in Afghanistan continues to generate significant humanitarian needs. Some 7.4 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance. 1.6 million people are severely food insecure and at least 1.3 million children are expected to reach high levels of starvation this year. In 2017, 229,000 people have been displaced due to internal conflict while over 377,000 documented and undocumented Afghans returned to date and up to 773,000 Afghans are estimated to return soon.
A $10 million allocation will focus on the needs of 344,000 people comprises returnees along the Afghanistan-Iran border at Malak border, flood-affected IDPs, returnees and host communities in Nimroz province; people in need of winterization assistance across 21 high altitude provinces; and food insecure and natural-disaster affected people in 10 priority provinces. CERF will support life-saving interventions in Food Security and Livelihoods, Child Protection, Emergency Shelter/ Non-Food Items, Health, Nutrition, Protection, and WASH. The CERF support was prioritised by the country team with a view of the second Afghanistan Common Humanitarian
Fund allocation of 2017 for $25 million, which focused on improving humanitarian action and responsiveness in 45 hard-to-reach areas.
The Afghanistan Humanitarian Country Team requires about $550 million for humanitarian action in in 2017. According to FTS, Afghanistan received 27% of the HRP requirement as of 21 July 2017 when the UFE country selection analysis took place and is now 34% funded, still below the current global funding average of 44% for 2017 HRPs.
Afghanistan Underfunded Emergencies Application
Country envelope: $10 million (Round II allocation: $45 million for 4 countries)
Application received: 18 September 2017
Number of projects submitted: 617-UF-AFG-27432-NR01oppermann@un.org#Jens OppermannEnglishMirna Loiferman2018-04-18T00:00:002018-06-26T00:00:002018-10-30T00:00:002019-05-08T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI17962136223158417339130133035261936ProtectionProtection660062821288226512628527918161Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene15034130442807811761109572271850796Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7119515512274684049531179324067HealthHealth17857140892517156860857517500Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture3480346134809373343944325777641587012017-10-20T00:00:0055538617-RR-ATG-27500Antigua Barbuda RR Application Sep 2017 (Hurricane Irma)AmericasAntigua and BarbudaLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20172017-09-22T00:00:002017-10-02T00:00:002017-10-06T00:00:002017-10-17T00:00:002168604.002154461Hurricane Irma—the most powerful hurricane ever recorded over the Atlantic—began its destructive path across the small island developing states of the Caribbean on September 5th. For four days, it battered the region. Irma first bore down on Antigua and Barbuda with Category 5 strength in the early hours of September 6th, destroying over 90% of the housing stock in Barbuda, severing communication with its sister isle Antigua and rendering the island uninhabitable for its 1,780 residents.
Across the territories, WASH facilities have been damaged, depriving residents of consistent access to clean water, functional sanitation facilities and adequate hygiene resources. Further, roofless and damaged structures with stagnant water are creating ideal conditions for mosquitos (which in turn serve as vectors for malaria, dengue fever, Zika and Chikungunya. Scattered debris, such as fallen trees, downed powerlines, broken windows and damaged cars, can be transformed into harmful projectiles by subsequent hurricanes.Finally, compromised access to shelter, telecommunications and basic services have increased vulnerability to crime and violence, including sexual and gender-based violence. The ERC allocated $10 million for humanitarian assistance to cover both Cuba ($8 million) and the other affected Caribbean States ($2 million).
Total amount required for the humanitarian response: US$ 27,000,000
Total amount received for the humanitarian response: US$ 4,015,000
Total amount of CERF funding requested: US$ 2,168,60417-RR-ATG-27500-NR01shari.inniss-grant@one.un.org#Shari GrantEnglishJulia Wittig2018-01-11T00:00:002018-04-03T00:00:002018-07-30T00:00:002018-08-14T00:00:002019-04-03T22:51:23Early RecoveryEarly Recovery01791790134134313EducationEducation69780697869780697813956Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI64717082355694194526394994HealthHealth112811877131581410123461644729605Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence080080001800180026002017-10-06T00:00:0055638717-RR-DMA-27733Dominica RR Application Oct 2017 (Hurricane Maria)AmericasDominicaLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20172017-10-05T00:00:002017-10-05T00:00:002017-10-17T00:00:002017-10-19T00:00:002999532.003011838On September 18th Hurricane Maria, a Category 5 storm, caused widespread damage and destruction in Dominica, one of the poorest countries in the Caribbean. The entire island of 71,293 has been affected, with up to 65,000 people suffering direct damage to housing and livelihoods. Dominica’s substantial indigenous population; its resident 15,000 children and 34,882 women and girls have unique vulnerabilities to natural hazards—they face heightened risk in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria. Several communities in the western and southern parts of the country remain cut off and are still awaiting assistance. The Flash Appeal requires $31.1 million to address the most urgent needs of the most affected people from September until December 2017. It has received less than $1 million and is only 3% funded (source: FTS on 6 October 2017).
The CERF request is for $3 million to address the needs of 71,293 people. CERF funds will be critical in reestablishing health and education services, ensuring access to safe water and sanitation, outbreak prevention and control, providing shelter and protection services. The CERF allocation will address two Flash Appeal priorities which are 1) to provide timely life-saving assistance to people affected by Hurricane Maria and 2) support the restoration of basic services and livelihoods across the country.17-RR-DMA-27733-NR01shari.inniss-grant@one.un.org#Shari GrantEnglishMirna Loiferman2018-01-22T00:00:002018-04-03T00:00:002018-07-17T00:00:002018-07-23T00:00:002019-04-03T20:51:06HealthHealth12644237673641111079238033488271293Early RecoveryEarly Recovery0332133210240324035724Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI424663108744169011312218EducationEducation2717027172718027185435Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2415918318385610391222Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture21404584672420524690674213466Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene22785013729121974837703414325Common Services - LogisticsLogistics00000002017-10-17T00:00:0055738817-RR-BGD-27808Bangladesh RR Application Oct 2017 (Rohingyas from Myanmar)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-10-09T00:00:002017-10-13T00:00:002017-10-17T00:00:002017-10-23T00:00:0012010342.0012010342Since 25 August 2017, more than half a million Rohingya refugees have fled Myanmar and sought refuge in Bangladesh and the influx shows no sign of slowing. All existing camps are overcrowded, under-capacitated basic social services in existing camps are overstretched to the maximum extent, limiting dangerously access for most of the people. A revised Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) for the Rohingya Refugee Crisis was released on 4 October 2017 requesting $12 million. It covers the period of September 2017 through February 2018. The plan targets 900,000 Rohingya refugees including 300,000 who were in Cox’s Bazar before the August influx and 300,000 members of the host communities, which are also directly affected by the consequences of the Rohingya Refugee Crisis in Cox’s Bazar.
Under this application, funds are sought to cover immediate life-saving needs and support time-critical interventions for 196,000 refugees (53% women, 47% men, 54% children) on the Kutupalong extension site. In line with the HRP and the CERF prioritization-related discussions, a significant portion of this CERF RR application is dedicated to WASH and Health sectors to provide direct life-saving emergency assistance and to prepare for severed life-threatening risks related to highly probable water-borne disease/cholera outbreak. Complementary immediate and prioritized life-saving interventions in Shelter, Food Security and Protection sectors are also part of this second CERF application. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee17-RR-BGD-27808-NR05henry.glorieux@one.un.org#Henry GlorieuxEnglishFabrizio Cesaretti2018-01-26T00:00:002018-04-02T00:00:002018-07-17T00:00:002019-04-02T00:00:00HealthHealth5483537208920435093052882103812195855FullyProtectionProtection5483537208920435093052882103812195855FullyWater, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene439354183585770439984373587733173503FullyFood Security - Food AssistanceFood Security26401223394874025639208154645495194FullyShelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI308362202652862295152775357268110130Fully2017-10-17T00:00:0055839117-UF-TCD-27880Chad UF Application Oct 2017 (Displacement)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-10-10T00:00:002017-10-10T00:00:002017-10-30T00:00:002017-11-02T00:00:0010999908.0010994963The deterioration of the socio-political and security situation in the Central African Republic over the last decade has led to the influx of thousands of refugees and Chadians returnees living in the border regions. In total, the southern area of Chad, namely Moyen Chari, Logone Oriental and Salamat have seen their populations grow by nearly 145,000 people living in camps or hosted by the local population. As a result, minimum humanitarian standards are no longer met in several sectors such as food security, health and nutrition, protection, education and shelter. HCT requires 11 million to support 145,556 people (72,559 returned, 16,937 refugees and 56,060 hosts) to implement a response consisting in a multipurpose cash intervention coupled with a strengthening of health, nutritional and educational structures. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee CAR crisis 2013-17-UF-TCD-27880-NR02sawadogoa@un.org#Abdoulaye SawadogoFrenchMirna Loiferman2018-04-19T00:00:002018-06-11T00:00:002018-09-30T00:00:002018-10-15T00:00:002019-04-22T22:34:10HealthHealth220584097563033229594263765596128629Multi-SectorMulti-Sector13942144252836715103168853198860355NutritionNutrition4498142464046208547059345EducationEducation1635018416534128793712916294502017-10-27T00:00:0055939217-RR-LBY-28296Libya RR Application Nov 2017 (UNDSS)AfricaLibyaNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20172017-11-06T00:00:002017-11-06T00:00:002017-11-14T00:00:002017-11-16T00:00:00357812.00357812The humanitarian situation in Libya continues to deteriorate as 1.6 million people are affected by conflict. It is estimated that over 1 million people are in need of urgent health interventions, more than 1 million need protection assistance, 670,000 need WASH intervention, 637,000 need food assistance, 584,000 need shelter/NFI assistance and 403,000 need education support.
Developments in 2017 have generated momentum for the return of the UN to Libya, including the Strategic Assessment Review in May, the Executive Committee meeting in July, and the Security Council Resolution in September that encourage the UN to re-establish a present in Tripoli and other parts of the country through a phased return and as security conditions allow. This re-establishment of present requires substantial engagement of UNDSS. In particular, US$ 357,812 are needed for UNDSS to deploy two Field Security Coordination Officers and provide dedicated security support for the expanded lifesaving humanitarian operations in Tripoli, Benghazi and newly opened areas in Libya. This will enable the implementation of the humanitarian response required by the ongoing humanitarian needs. The UNDSS activities will also support UN agencies to implement the CERF underfunded emergency grants approved in 2017.17-RR-LBY-28296-NR02gehac@un.org#Carlos GehaEnglishKristine Hansen2018-02-16T00:00:002018-04-12T00:00:002018-08-14T00:00:002019-04-03T00:00:00Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0000000FullyN/A in view of the nature of the project (security) with no direct beneficiaries targeted2017-11-13T00:00:0056339718-RR-ZMB-28517Zambia RR Application Jan 2018 (Refugees from DRC)AfricaZambiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-01-09T00:00:002018-01-24T00:00:002018-02-02T00:00:002018-02-08T00:00:0010009973.006559772Escalating violence in the Haut-Katanga and Tanganyika provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo caused an outflow of people into neighboring Zambia beginning in August 2017. As of 31 December 2017, a total of 12,765 people had entered the Luapula Province at an average rate of 110 persons per day. The refugees are currently hosted in the Kenani temporary transit centre in Nchelenge District which has overreached its capacity of 10,000 people. In December 2017, the Government of Zambia identified land for the resettlement of refugees. Based on trends of a daily average of 110 people registering at the Kenani Centre since September 2017, it is projected that 25,000 people would register by 31 March 2018. This CERF application is based on the projected figure of 25,000 refugees.
With these CERF funds, the UNCT in Zambia will establish a new refugee settlement in Mantapala and ensure a decongestion of the Kenani Transit Centre. CERF funds will be used to support the most vulnerable in the new site by providing essential WASH, nutrition, food aid, education, child protection, health and multi-sector services, as well as safe transportation to the transit centre and new settlement site. The CERF funds will support the needs of 25,000 beneficiaries over a six-month period.
Total amount required for the humanitarian response: US$ 25,908,748
Total amount received for the humanitarian response: US$ 0
Total amount of CERF funding requested: US$ 6,487,187 (The initial amount requested was $10 million; however, the CERF Secretariat asked the HCT to further prioritize the activities as the amount and proportion request was high in comparison with other CERF allocations to similar emergencies. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-RR-ZMB-28517-NR01paul.chitengi@one.un.org#Paul ChitengiEnglishKristine Hansen2018-06-05T00:00:002018-07-03T00:00:002018-11-30T00:00:002019-04-24T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection31202483560328683213608111684FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.EducationEducation2611026112405024055016FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security40462510655640872632671913275FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.HealthHealth40362713674942503593784314592FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.Multi-SectorMulti-Sector44223210763244773316779315425FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.NutritionNutrition17363642100182236421864286FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene34002331573134092398580711538FullyYes, following a reduction in the number of targeted beneficiaries as the numbers never reached the project levels included in the application, agencies requested re-programming and amendments of beneficiary figures, which resulted in a more accurate reporting.2018-02-01T00:00:0056441218-RR-COD-28606DR Congo RR Application Jan 2018 (L3 emergency)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-01-18T00:00:002018-01-18T00:00:002018-04-09T00:00:002018-04-12T00:00:0020102922.0019981998This CERF rapid response application of US$20 million is triggered by the IASC System-Wide Level 3 activation in the DRC on 20 October 2017 for a period of six months, focusing on the Kasais, Tinganyika and South Kivu provinces and a limited number of neighboring districts. The three operational plans issued by the HCT in December 2017 target some 3.5 million people in need of humanitarian assistance in the three provinces, for which US$418 million is required. Violence in the Kasais, Tanganyika and South-Kivu has displaced more than 2.5 million people. Close to 4.3 million people in these three areas are estimated to be facing Crisis or Emergency levels of food insecurity. This is taking place within one of the world’s largest and most complex humanitarian crises, with at least 8.5 million people across the DRC in need of assistance and protection, close to 2 million children at risk of severe acute malnutrition and outbreaks of diseases, including cholera affecting tens of thousands each year.
Following discussions between the HCT and the CERF secretariat in view of the rapid response allocation of US$14 million in September 2017 just before the L3 activation, the ERC agreed to an additional allocation in support critical activities identified in the L3 benchmarks. As such, this CERF allocation will have a direct and catalytic impact on the scale-up of the response and operational capacity in the L3 areas to deliver a more coordinated and informed response. Under this CERF application, some $20 million are sought to support enhanced coordination and IM capacity; joint analysis and rapid assessments; common logistics services; as well as rapid multi-sectorial assistance within the sectors of Food, WASH, NFIs, Health (including SRPH and Cholera prevention/treatment), and protection (child protection, SGBV). On 14 March, the final proposal of the application from UNFPA, as agreed by the HCT, was submitted to the CERF secretariat to reinforce accountability of the humanitarian community in the DRC vis-à-vis the crisis affected people in the L3 areas by establishing an inter-agency AAP mechanism. UNFPA requested $299,970 for six months implementation of which $272,728 was finally approved by the ERC. CERF funds will enable immediate life-saving assistance and support time-critical interventions for 412,674 of the most vulnerable people in the L3 areas over six months. DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-RR-COD-28606-NR02Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirFrenchPhilippe Decker2018-07-10T00:00:002018-10-15T00:00:002019-01-31T00:00:002019-03-01T00:00:002019-07-10T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security22856205644342022458315255398397403Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture102533792140451819385622675540800Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene437194646090179473625033297694187873Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence33387799351133221673787868104605217927HealthHealth76597829791595768297989894172873332449Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI108079559203661122299772119941565Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection98199120189396694749014184331232018-04-09T00:00:0056639818-RR-YEM-28632Yemen RR Application Jan 2018 (Conflict)AsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-01-22T00:00:002018-01-29T00:00:002018-02-02T00:00:002018-02-08T00:00:0049999290.0049909290The conflict and resulting humanitarian emergency, which began in 2015, worsened in November 2017 with the blockade of airports and seaports, and the sudden escalation of fighting in the western part of the country. Today 22.2 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance in Yemen, of which 11.3 million are in acute need. CERF will contribute nearly US$50 million to support immediate needs related to the deteriorating situation.
This CERF Rapid Response allocation targets 1,576,012 people of which half are IDPs and focuses on two priority themes: 1) the acute needs of 1,370,000 people severely food insecure and malnourished in 27 prioritized districts that will be addressed through an integrated WASH, Health, Nutrition, FSAC, Protection interventions; and 2) 20% of funds will support the emergency response in the districts recently affected by the sudden escalation of the conflict in Hodeida. CERF funds will also support enabling services, including Logistics and Safety and Security.18-RR-YEM-28632-NR01martiny@un.org#Yannick MartinEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-06-05T00:00:002018-07-06T00:00:002018-12-07T00:00:002019-01-15T00:00:002019-05-29T00:00:00HealthHealth191436121243312679185055140386325441638120NutritionNutrition6603006603063344101008164352230382Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security4890163709788599944215664047038262691686263Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene109702105484215186105484101262206746421932ProtectionProtection6468027720924009702041580138600231000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI00000002018-02-02T00:00:0057239918-RR-UGA-28663Uganda RR Application Feb 2018 (Refugees from DRC)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-02T00:00:002018-02-02T00:00:002018-02-16T00:00:002018-02-20T00:00:006100007.006098619This CERF rapid response application of US$6.1 million is triggered by the sudden influx of Congolese refugees into western and south-western parts of Uganda. Since 1 December 2017, nearly 16,000 Congolese refugees have arrived in Uganda of which some 80 percent are women and children, travelling by boats across Lake Albert. Peaking in December, over 500 people – some 10 times the average – were crossing into Uganda on a daily basis. The influx necessitates the opening of landing sites, transit centres, establishment of new refugee settlements and expansion of existing settlements. The CERF funds will enable agencies to provide urgent critical life-saving protection, shelter/NFIs, WASH, food, health and nutrition assistance for 30,600 newly arrived refugees and projected arrivals, focussed on the five districts of Hoima, Kisoro, Kanungu, Bundibugyo, and Kyegegwa in west and south-western Uganda. The figures of targeted beneficiaries are based on the 6,600 new arrivals in December 2017 and projections for new arrivals between January and March 2018.
As the new influx of refugees is putting immense pressure on the host communities’ infrastructure and services, CERF funds will also provide assistance to 9,000 members of the host communities through the preservation of the asylum space with a community-based approach. While the settlement approach is unique and commendable, it typically incurs higher up-front costs than that of a camp environment, when basic life-saving provisions are to be established.
Under this CERF application, some US$6.1 million are sought to provide urgent critical life-saving multi-sectoral assistance within the sectors of protection, shelter/NFIs, WASH, food, health and nutrition for 30,600 newly arrived refugees as well as 9,000 host community members for a period of three months. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-RR-UGA-28663-NR01lily.adhiambo@one.un.org#Lily AdhiamboEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-06-20T00:00:002018-07-19T00:00:002018-11-16T00:00:002018-11-30T00:00:002020-03-23T00:00:00ProtectionProtection6927806714994720983971560630600Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security6927806714994720983971560630600Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene101248690188141156877921936038174Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI109698791197601096988711984039600HealthHealth120307227192571165186922034339600NutritionNutrition1111316851279812039350015539283372018-02-15T00:00:0057340218-UF-ERI-28520Eritrea UF Application Feb 2018 (Drought)AfricaEritreaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-02-12T00:00:002018-02-12T00:00:002018-03-14T00:00:002018-03-15T00:00:005000000.004994295Recurrent drought and the residual effects of the border conflict with Ethiopia are underlying causes for vulnerability in Eritrea. Two-thirds of the population is engaged in subsistence farming and pastoralism for livelihoods, rendering them vulnerable to climate variability. The relative poor performance of the 2017 agricultural season and the disruption of market access to commodities, will affect food security in 2018. As a result, more than one million people are in need of humanitarian assistance. Vulnerable groups include small-scale farmers, pastoralists, the urban poor, people living with HIV/AIDS, and refugees. The country hosts 2,288 refugees from Somalia at Umkulu Refugee Camp who are in need of basic services support.
The Eritrea humanitarian requirement is US$ 23 million. At the time of the CERF UFE analysis, humanitarian operations were 48% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 464,115 people in the Northern Red Sea, Gash-Barka, Anseba and Debub. These areas are among the most affected by displacement and IDPs and people in host communities require food interventions in the food security, nutrition, WASH and health sectors as well as multi-sector (nutrition, food and health) assistance to refugees.18-UF-ERI-28520-NR01vedaste@un.org#Kalima VedasteEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2018-10-03T00:00:002018-12-13T00:00:002019-10-30T00:00:002020-03-25T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture253142647051784354411655952000103784Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture16002852445225003148564810100NutritionNutrition55580707662656535662442077986140642HealthHealth475389000013753847543110000157543295081Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector6865271213608467107522882018-03-12T00:00:0057440318-UF-MLI-28522Mali UF Application Feb 2018 (conflict displacement)AfricaMaliWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-12T00:00:002018-02-26T00:00:002018-03-14T00:00:002018-03-15T00:00:008000000.007999800Despite the signature of the Agreement for Peace and Reconciliation in 2015, armed conflicts, intercommunal violence, and terrorism attacks continue to plague Mali. In 2017, 133 access constraints were recorded. More than 97% of these cases occurred in the northern (Gao, Menaka, Kidal or Timbuktu) and central (Mopti) regions. In 2018, 5.1 million people are affected by the crisis with 27% of the Malian population having very limited access to basic services, such as drinking water, health and education.
The CERF allocation will focus on the needs of 152,771 people in five regions (Gao, Menaka, Kidal, Timbuktu and Mopti). CERF will support life-saving interventions in WASH, Nutrition, and Food Security sectors for IDPs and vulnerable people in the host communities. Health and Protection needs will be addressed as cross-cutting issues.
Total requirements: $263,000,000
Amount received: $0
Total amount requested: $8,000,000The quality of the application has improved considerably from last year UFE application. From the elaboration of the strategy through the submission of the application, the HCT was very responsive to CERF comments. The application is focus and the interventions are based on several assessments. The HCT have done a real coordination exercice to avoid gaps and duplication of activities. CERF had minor comments on the application and they were addressed promptly by the HCT.18-UF-MLI-28522-NR01massomacolomina@un.org#Evelyne ColominaFrenchPhilippe Decker2018-10-10T00:00:002018-12-12T00:00:002019-03-31T00:00:002019-06-21T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security6496732413820762467601438428204Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture617323227294006427241733060060000NutritionNutrition63087150632376566156943122604185841Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene215152067142186216102076342373845592018-03-12T00:00:0057540118-UF-TZA-28525Tanzania UF Application Feb 2018 (Refugees)AfricaUnited Republic of TanzaniaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-12T00:00:002018-02-12T00:00:002018-03-09T00:00:002018-03-09T00:00:0010000000.009995458The humanitarian situation in Tanzania is marked by 275,687 Burundian refugees, 82,290 Congolese refugees, and 543 refugees from other nationalities (Rwanda, Uganda, Sudan, Kenya and others) in Tanzania. Since the influx in April 2015, Tanzania has become the host of the largest number of Burundian refugees in the region. Currently, approximately 231,000 Burundian refugees and asylum-seekers remain in the three refugee camps, in need of international protection. Due to the strict encampment policy by the Government of Tanzania, refugees and asylum-seekers are entirely dependent on humanitarian assistance.
The Tanzania requirement to respond to the needs of refugees is US$ 250 million. At the time of the CERF UFE analysis, the humanitarian response was 27% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 231,000 Burundian refugees in Kigoma. Refugees require food security, health, protection and WASH services and critical protection services to children at risk, SGBV survivors, and other persons with specific needs.
Tanzania Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $10 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 12 February
Total # of projects submitted: 7 Burundi political crisis 2015-202018-UF-TZA-28525-NR01heli.oraviita@one.un.org#Heli OraviitaEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-10-03T00:00:002018-12-12T00:00:002019-03-31T00:00:002019-05-21T00:00:00ProtectionProtection0013578001386027438Multi-SectorMulti-Sector61966479201098866012245389105511215397Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection46285785206366417538399045Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security61516427481042646294145578108519212783HealthHealth77344577761351207863163325141956277076Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene690914792011701169622453891150112320222018-03-06T00:00:0057640618-UF-PHL-28524Philippines UF Application Feb 2018 (conflict displacement and returns)AsiaPhilippinesSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-13T00:00:002018-02-13T00:00:002018-03-21T00:00:002018-04-02T00:00:005000335.005031703After the five-month long armed conflict that ended in October 2017 between the Government of the Philippines and a local non-state armed group, over 325,000 civilians from Marawi City and other Lanao del Sur municipalities remain on the Government’s displacement registry. The conflict has left large areas of Marawi City uninhabitable, affecting as many as 60,000 of the city’s 201,000 residents who will not be able to return for several months or years. Additionally, social services, utilities, housing, livelihoods and local economies remain severely impacted.
The Philippines requirement to respond to needs of conflict displaced persons and persons in affected communities is US$ 30 million. At the time of the CERF UFE analysis, the humanitarian response was 23% funded.
This CERF application targets more than 83,000 conflict displaced persons and persons in affected communities in Marawi City and five priority municipalities in Lanao del Sur province to meet their basic needs in food security, health and nutrition; address protection concerns; and support IDP returnees through the provision of assistance at their places of origin.
Philippines Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $5 million (Round II allocation: 100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 13 February 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 818-UF-PHL-28524-NR01maramag@un.org#Gina MaramagEnglishAntje Lehmann2018-10-02T00:00:002018-11-30T00:00:002019-03-31T00:00:002019-05-30T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security11634115502318411768102082197645160Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0147151471504285428519000HealthHealth365330440340933802316833548569578NutritionNutrition131110131111296530971606229173ProtectionProtection366616700203665499250503054950915Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1797602878255447164152186229687Early RecoveryEarly Recovery039863986060146014100002018-03-20T00:00:0057741418-UF-PAK-28523Pakistan UF Application Feb 2018 (IDP returnees)AsiaPakistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-15T00:00:002018-02-15T00:00:002018-03-23T00:00:002018-04-05T00:00:008000000.007993805Since 2008, over five million people have been forced to leave their homes in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) in a series of displacements due to militancy, and government-led security operations against non-state armed actors. From 2015-2017, the improved security situation allowed for 442,067 families to return home. In 2018, the basic needs of 1.26 million people remain to be addressed in the return areas of FATA. As such, the Humanitarian Country Team developed and launched the FATA Transition Appeal 2018-2020 highlighting health, nutrition, food security, shelter/NFIs, education and protection as the priority sectors for assistance in return areas in collaboration with the government. The FATA Transition Appeal requests $120 million in 2018 to support 1.26 million people.
The $8 million CERF underfunded emergency allocation will focus on the needs of 411,141 returnees in Kurram, South Waziristan and Orakzai agencies of FATA. CERF funds will support resumption of agricultural activities to ensure household food security and income-generation; primary education at partially and fully damaged school sites; and provision of life-saving nutrition interventions for acutely malnourished children under 2 years. Protection will be integrated in the proposed activities. The CERF grant will complement Pakistan Humanitarian Pooled Fund funding by assisting vulnerable families in the same geographical areas but with a different set of time bound activities.
Pakistan Underfunded Emergency submission
Total envelope: $8 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 15 February 2018
Total number of projects submitted: 3 joint projects (7 grants in total)18-UF-PAK-28523-NR01iqbalf@un.org#Fatima IqbalEnglishMadoka Koide2018-10-08T00:00:002018-12-18T00:00:002019-04-30T00:00:002019-05-31T00:00:002019-08-06T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture8767015998524765583865153042236907484562EducationEducation12018788128065691262595318759NutritionNutrition2570002570024628417726640092100Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security108291976030589103581890329261598502018-03-23T00:00:0057840718-UF-CMR-28518Cameroon UF Application Feb 2018 (conflict displacement)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-19T00:00:002018-02-19T00:00:002018-03-27T00:00:002018-04-05T00:00:0010016362.009884487Some 2.9 million people in Cameroon, primarily in the Far North region, are in need of humanitarian assistance due to Boko Haram attacks and violent conflict in the Lake Chad basin which has caused internal displacement of 242,000 people. In addition to conflict, calamities, such as food insecurity also contribute to under-development. The departments most affected by the crisis are Logone-et-Chari and Mayo-Sava which host 77% of the internally displaced persons. Cameroon also hosts 329,000 refugees from the Central African Republic and Nigeria. A $10 million allocation from CERF will focus on providing emergency food assistance and reproductive health services as well as emergency protection in Logone-et-Chari, Mayo-Sava, Mayo Tsanaga departments. The CERF contribution will address priority needs of 347,800 people including internally displaced persons; refugees; host communities hosting refugees and / or IDPs and returnees.
Cameroon Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $10 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 23 February 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 10 Boko Haram crisis 2014-18-UF-CMR-28518-NR01jadjombaye@un.org#Kemoral JadjombayeFrenchPhilippe Decker2018-10-15T00:00:002019-02-15T00:00:002019-03-31T00:00:002019-04-30T00:00:002019-07-31T00:00:00HealthHealth936118301417662511883097045215875392500ProtectionProtection1383298478322311213613483437219571442683Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection2201115000370111802180002602163032Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene20489154573594621976165783855474500Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7654340211056722929771020621262Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture9190473513925884658971474328668Multi-SectorMulti-Sector82453752119978755424813003250002018-03-23T00:00:0057940818-UF-COD-28519DR Congo UF Application Feb 2018 (conflict displacement)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-21T00:00:002018-02-21T00:00:002018-03-27T00:00:002018-04-05T00:00:0028000000.0027840104In 2017, the dramatic deterioration of the humanitarian situation in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) led to the declaration of IASC Level 3 emergency for the Kasai region, Tanganyika and South Kivu provinces among other. With 1.9 million people who were newly displaced in 2017, DRC has 4.3 million internally displaced people (IDPs), making it the African country with the highest number of internally displaced persons. DRC also hosts more than 540,000 refugees from Burundi, Central African Republic, Rwanda and South Sudan. Some 13.1 million people require humanitarian assistance in 2018, including around 7.7 million food insecure people.
A $28 million allocation will focus on the needs of 485,756 people affected by the Level 3 crises and surrounding areas (South Kivu, Maniema, Tanganyika, Haut-Katanga, Haut-Lomami, Kasai, and Lomami) and non-Level 3 areas (Ituri and North Kivu). CERF will support life-saving interventions in the Health, WASH, Nutrition, Food Security, Protection, Shelter/NFIs, Education, and Logistics sectors. This UFE allocation is in complement to a $20 million Rapid Response allocation to DRC.
Total requirements: $329,406,707
Amount received to date: $49,231,724
Total amount requested: $28,000,000The strategy was not very focus and some suggested interventions were not life-saving. The HCT seemed to face difficulties in coordinating and prioritizing the CERF intervention. Indeed, the HCT presented two separate strategies (one for the CAR refugees and one for the DRC non-L3 crisis) for this UFE allocation. The CERF Secretariat had to provide a lot of guidance and support to the HCT which was not very responsive and took more than the allowable time to respond to CERF comments. Fortunately, they were able to submit the final proposals before the closure of the submission time. DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-UF-COD-28519-NR01malankubikila@un.org#Cally MalankubikilaFrenchPhilippe Decker2018-10-02T00:00:002019-03-01T00:00:002019-04-30T00:00:002019-05-24T00:00:002019-07-22T00:00:00ProtectionProtection3149711930475080183149711930475080181016036Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection391164174432904237437004607489364EducationEducation391164174432904237437004607489364HealthHealth61027661131271406611371623137736264876Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture26924607318765554766146037200803288458Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6476431810794791652771319323987Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI12850113952424511861105182237946624NutritionNutrition133695692870297135846167175255145552Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4404338657827005089841854927521754522018-03-23T00:00:0058041518-UF-HTI-28521Haiti UF Application Feb 2018 (unmet hurricane needs and disease outbreaks)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20182018-02-22T00:00:002018-03-09T00:00:002018-03-27T00:00:002018-04-05T00:00:009000000.008985177In 2018 an estimated 2.8 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance in Haiti. The key humanitarian challenges are the unmet needs of people affected by Hurricane Matthew in October 2016, food insecurity, cholera epidemic and the Haitian-Dominican migration issue. The resulting diverse humanitarian needs are geographically spread across the entire country with varying levels of severity.
The 2018 Humanitarian Response Plan for Haiti requires $252.2 million to support 2.8 million people in need. At the time of the CERF UFE analysis, the 2017 response plan was 34% funded.
This CERF application targets 1.29 million people in the Nord-Est, Artibonite, Grand'Anse, Sud and Ouest departments aiming to strengthen basic social services; enhancing food and nutrition security; improving protection and shelter conditions as well as access to agricultural inputs, water and health services.
Haiti Underfunded submission
Total envelope: $9 million (Round II allocation: 100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 22 February 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 818-UF-HTI-28521-NR01nijimbere@un.org#Alix NijimbereEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-10-05T00:00:002018-12-12T00:00:002019-04-30T00:00:002019-05-22T00:00:002020-02-07T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture13670205043417414808222133702171195Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2124199341172159202441838300NutritionNutrition52950529557380573811033Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene12392114382383013411124052581649646HealthHealth88346517847901312898783181579169401818252Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI212502732848578230212811051131997092018-03-23T00:00:0058141618-UF-UGA-28526Uganda UF Application Feb 2018 (Refugees)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-23T00:00:002018-02-23T00:00:002018-03-23T00:00:002018-04-05T00:00:0017000000.0016988192Uganda faces a massive refugee presence with continued arrivals from South Sudan and DRC. Uganda now hosts up to 1.39 million refugees. The unprecedented influx of refugees in 2016 and 2017 tripled the refugee population to nearly 1.35 million. Women and children represent 82 percent of the refugee population, with some 757,838 children making up 61 percent of the refugee population in the country. The refugee caseload and new arrivals continues to put pressure on the country’s resources, in particular on land, basic service delivery systems and the humanitarian partners’ capacity to respond to the crisis. Acute needs remain in protection, food assistance, shelter, health and nutrition, WASH and emergency livelihoods sectors.
A $17 million allocation will focus on the needs of over 700,000 people including over 160,000 persons in host communities in the Kyaka II, Kyangwali, Palabek, Palorinya, and Imvepi settlements. With CERF funds, the UN Country Team aims to sustain and improve essential life-saving services for recent refugees who are sheltered in settlements, ensure that essential protection services are provided, and implement emergency livelihoods and community support activities such as cash for work.
The requirement for the response to the humanitarian emergency is US$ 759 million. At the time of the CERF UFE application, the humanitarian response was 40% funded.
Uganda Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $17 million (Round I allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 26 February 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 10 South Sudan crisis 2013-, DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-UF-UGA-28526-NR02michael.wangusa@one.un.org#Michael WangusaEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-10-03T00:00:002018-12-12T00:00:002019-03-31T00:00:002020-03-12T00:00:00ProtectionProtection6142918475224618140278190043230321476502Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture161688132209293897194861133344328205622102Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI174048110764284812174048111766285814570626HealthHealth192006115170307176186007138556324563631739Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene17446231544060030900240835498395583NutritionNutrition00003062263062263062262018-03-23T00:00:0058240018-RR-PSE-28903oPt RR Application Mar 2018 (UNRWA)Asiaoccupied Palestinian territoryWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-02-28T00:00:002018-03-01T00:00:002018-03-09T00:00:002018-03-15T00:00:0015000000.0015005129This CERF rapid response request of US$15 million was triggered by the US Government’s decision communicated mid-January 2018 to significantly reduce its funding to UNRWA’s operating budget and to put on hold any contribution to the Agency’s 2018 emergency appeals for the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) and Syria. The abrupt suspension of US funding left UNRWA without funds to pay for planned food commodities, putting at stake the implementation of life-saving food security activities with an immediate impact on more than one million vulnerable Palestine refugees in Gaza and the West Bank.
While funding gaps and pipeline breaks do not constitute eligible triggers for CERF rapid response funding, the ERC decided on 14 February to exceptionally allocate funding under the rapid response window in view of the high risks associated with the reduction or suspension of assistance. Using CERF funds to help mitigate a potentially catastrophic deterioration in the humanitarian and security situation in oPt was backed by the Secretary-General’s stating his support for the use of the CERF in view of the exceptional circumstances. In parallel, the ERC has agreed to a $15 million CERF loan to UNRWA to support its emergency programs in the region until other funding received.
Under this CERF application, some US$15 million are sought to provide life-saving food assistance through in-kind, cash distribution and cash for work opportunities for a total of 619,030 Palestine refugees for a period of five months. Through the CERF allocation UNRWA aims to respond to time-critical humanitarian requirements preventing the imminent deterioration of a humanitarian situation; promote early action to reduce suffering of vulnerable Palestine refugees affected by the humanitarian crisis in Gaza and West Bank, ultimately preventing loss of life; and provide vital humanitarian assistance in the form of food and cash to people in need who have no other means to meet their basic requirements for a period of five months in Gaza and two months in the West Bank.
Through CERF funds, 619,030 vulnerable Palestine refugees across Gaza and the West Bank will be supported with critical quick-impact life-saving activities. These refugees are part of the UNRWA caseload included in the HRP. The implementation period will be February-June 2018 for food security activities in Gaza; while in West Bank, CERF funds will be used to cover food security needs for a period of two months (March-April). Beneficiaries targeted by these interventions have no other means of meeting their basic needs other than the humanitarian assistance provided by UNRWA. Women represent 50 per cent of targeted beneficiaries both in Gaza and in the West Bank18-RR-PSE-28903-NR01ritsema@un.org#Sheri Ritsema-AndersonEnglishMateusz Buczek2018-06-11T00:00:002018-08-10T00:00:002018-12-09T00:00:002019-04-15T20:16:58Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1432901662253095151432901662253095156190302018-03-09T00:00:0058341118-RR-ETH-28650Ethiopia RR Application Mar 2018 (displacement)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-03-02T00:00:002018-03-02T00:00:002018-04-03T00:00:002018-04-05T00:00:009930695.009930695This CERF rapid response application of US$10 million is triggered by an upsurge in conflict around the border areas of Oromia and Somali regions since September 2017 that has left more than 1 million people displaced. Most parts of the two regions are already facing prolonged chronic drought conditions that have deteriorated pastoralist and agro-pastoralist communities’ basic assets, livelihoods, services and prompted an unprecedented level of internal displacement. IDP sites in both Oromia and Somali regions have critically low access to water and sanitation. Coupled with the driest season in the year, needs for water have been increasing in both regions, and due to the prolonged situation of displacement, there is a need for immediate action.
The Government of Ethiopia has requested humanitarian partners to focus their efforts particularly on the WASH and Emergency Shelter/Non-Food Items sectors as the priority needs – an analysis supported by OCHA. CERF funds are thus targeted towards interventions within these two prioritised sectors while also, under the guidance of the Humanitarian Coordinator and Ethiopian Humanitarian Country Team, supporting the Federal Government of Ethiopia and the Somali and Oromia Regional governments in implementing registration and intention surveys to support progressive resolution of protracted displacement.
Under this CERF application, some US$10 million are sought to support immediate life-saving interventions for IDPs and host communities while contributing to the implementation of longer-term solutions for the displaced and their host communities aligned with the internationally agreed IDP Guiding Principles. The CERF funds will support Emergency Shelter and Non-Food Items through in-kind as well as unconditional cash assistance and provide WASH services through water trucking, Emergency WASH Mobile Teams and expansions of water systems for the IDPs and hosting communities over a period of six months.18-RR-ETH-28650-NR01mander@un.org#Tim ManderEnglishMirna Loiferman2018-07-10T00:00:002018-09-13T00:00:002019-01-03T00:00:002019-04-26T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1119728108319305512130387840209143402198Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI2621513584416205926150982221243722864312018-04-02T00:00:0058440418-RR-BDI-29151Burundi RR Application Mar 2018 (Refugees from DRC)AfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-03-05T00:00:002018-03-13T00:00:002018-03-19T00:00:002018-03-21T00:00:002350000.002350572Since 24 January 2018, more than 8,200 Congoleses fled violence in South Kivu and seek refuge in Burundi. Refugee camps, transit centers and reception facilities currently do not have the capacity to accommodate this sudden influx of people and around 7,000 additional are expected to arrive in the following weeks when the border between DRC and Burundi will reopen.
This CERF allocation will ensure a rapid response to 15,000 new refugees by covering their urgent needs in shelter, food, provision of water and prevention of SGBV in the reception centres in Rumonge and Nyanza-Lac, transit camps and refugee camps in Ngozi, Ruyigi, Muyinga and Cankuzo provinces.
Total amount required for the humanitarian response : $7,750,000
Total amount received: $350,000
Total amount of CERF funding requested: $2,350,000The application is well-focused, the interventions are based on priorities identified by the HCT and meet the life-saving criteria. The CERF Secretariat had few comments on the application. The HCT was very responsive in addressing the comments. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-RR-BDI-29151-NR01simba@un.org#Lucien SimbaEnglishPhilippe Decker2018-06-26T00:00:002018-08-24T00:00:002018-12-19T00:00:002019-01-15T00:00:002019-04-16T00:00:00Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence138017053085469293791407117156NutritionNutrition574057459805981172Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security47473651839845843390797416372Multi-SectorMulti-Sector44713331780241673031719815000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene571542579972532638749200191722018-03-16T00:00:0058541018-RR-MRT-28922Mauritania RR Application Mar 2018 (Drought)AfricaMauritaniaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-03-05T00:00:002018-03-05T00:00:002018-03-28T00:00:002018-04-03T00:00:004000000.003975873Some 602,000 Mauritanians are affected by a severe drought that started in 2017 with poor distributions of rain in space and time. The drought resulted in a significant decrease of agricultural production, pasture and water availability for livestock in most of the agro pastoral areas of the country. The resulting deterioration in food security and nutrition since last year has placed vulnerable communities at higher risk in the face of the impending lean season aggravated by what is forecasted to be additional failed rains.
The RC for Mauritania requested a CERF rapid response allocation to intervene in this time critical moment. The $4 million contribution from CERF will alleviate human suffering by enabling people’s access to food and reducing severe and acute malnutrition through life-saving activities, while protecting people’s livelihoods and productive assets. The CERF request will target the most vulnerable 63,700 people living in the priority six departments in three regions (Gorgol, Guidimakha and Assaba) in between March and August 2018. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action18-RR-MRT-28922-NR01blandine.bihler@one.un.org#Blandine BihlerEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2018-07-02T00:00:002018-10-03T00:00:002019-01-31T00:00:002019-05-29T00:00:00Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture010102101020113921139221494NutritionNutrition7174541012584716574501461527199Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security90913843129349092503514127270612018-03-28T00:00:0058640918-RR-PNG-29464PNG RR Application Mar 2018 (Earthquake)OceaniaPapua New GuineaMelanesiaMelanesiaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20182018-03-13T00:00:002018-03-13T00:00:002018-03-26T00:00:002018-03-27T00:00:009186710.009186710This CERF rapid response application requesting some US$9.9 million is triggered by the 7.5 magnitude earthquake that hit the Highlands Region of Papua New Guinea (PNG) on 26 February 2018. The earthquake and subsequent aftershocks have led to the destruction of food gardens; damage to water storage facilities and contamination of water sources; and landslides have blocked riverbeds and initial areal assessments confirm the forming of dams, which could cause flash floods and up to 54,260 households are estimated to be in need of emergency shelter. The two main health facilities in the quake-affected area are damaged and power disruptions remain widespread. Many schools have been affected and education programmes in Southern Highlands and Hela Provinces are reported to have been suspended indefinitely.
CERF funds are sought in support of the Government’s request for international assistance on activities under the Food, Shelter/NFI, Health, WASH, Protection, Logistics and Security sectors. As of 6 March, over 100 people were known to have died and many more injured and the earthquake and aftershocks have significantly affected children, women and girls, young people, persons living with disability and other vulnerable populations. Given the remoteness of the areas of impact, figures are expected to continue to increase as more areas become accessible. According to preliminary estimates and based on latest earthquake intensity mapping produced by the National Disaster Centre, around 544,000 people in five provinces were affected, exposed to strong to violent shaking, and more than 270,000 people are in immediate need of life-saving assistance.
Under this CERF application, some US$9.9 million are sought to provide urgent critical life-saving assistance for the first four months of the response targeting 172,846 beneficiaries, focusing on the seven most affected Local Level Government units in the two most affected provinces of Hela and Southern Highlands. CERF funds will support activities within the sectors of Food, Shelter/NFI, Health, WASH, Protection, Logistics and Security.18-RR-PNG-29464-NR01mary.konobo@undp.org#Mary KonoboEnglishPhilippe Decker2018-06-28T00:00:002018-08-28T00:00:002018-12-26T00:00:002019-04-22T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security8833880217635815381251627833913HealthHealth189713496553936189713496653937107873NutritionNutrition2065102065120223227394296263613ProtectionProtection187415293671677190676163480701152378Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI7685645514140922273781660030740Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene225177001492531113276797379300171831Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0000000Common Services - LogisticsLogistics00000002018-03-23T00:00:0058740518-RR-TCD-29154Chad RR Application Mar 2018 (Refugees from CAR)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-03-14T00:00:002018-03-14T00:00:002018-03-20T00:00:002018-03-26T00:00:006285554.006765609Since 26 December 2017, an influx of refugees from Central African Republic (CAR) entered in southern Chad, specifically in the region of Logone Oriental. This influx is due to recurrent clashes between armed groups in the north-west part of CAR. By end of February 2018, a total of 20,000 CAR refugees had arrived in Chad. These refugees are currently hosted in villages near the border and their presence is placing undue stress on the limited basic services available to the local Chadian population. Humanitarian actors have expended existing resources to respond to the needs of these refugees; however, the security situation in CAR remains volatile and unpredictable particularly in the Ouham-Pende region. The number of refugees is likely to increase and their presence in Chad could be prolonged due to the recurrence of fighting. This CERF application of $28.4 million is to respond to the needs of 20,000 CAR refugees, including a projected figure of 5,000 refugees for the next three months and 20,000 members of the host population.
Total amount of the requirement: $28,405,371
Total amount received: $370,321
Total amount requested: $6,822,009The CERF Secretariat commends the HCT for its good work on this application. The HCT followed CERF guidelines from the drafting of the concept note through the submission of the application. The CERF review was quick due to the good quality of the application. There was no need to send any documents back to the field. The proposals went directly to final budget review. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee CAR crisis 2013-18-RR-TCD-29154-NR01sawadogoa@un.org#Abdoulaye SawadogoFrenchFabrizio Cesaretti2018-06-22T00:00:002018-10-02T00:00:002018-12-20T00:00:002019-06-22T00:00:00Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector11627100682169512451125422499346688Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security11858102662212412825115742439946523Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture11858102662212412825115742439946523NutritionNutrition3332776310917575925768210791Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene53113264857548763120799616571EducationEducation33984034382292122935731HealthHealth125699481220501308298682295045000ProtectionProtection53113264857555873112036707452822018-03-20T00:00:0058841318-RR-SOM-28714Somalia RR Application Mar 2018 (Drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-03-21T00:00:002018-04-03T00:00:002018-04-12T00:00:002018-04-18T00:00:0013892172.0012135443Despite the early and massive scale up of humanitarian assistance in Somalia in 2017, parts of northern Somalia experienced less than 40 percent of rainfall signalling a fourth failed season with consequent poor harvests and loss of livestock assets. Without assistance, the prospects of a fifth below average upcoming season are likely to lead to a reversal of the gains made in food and nutrition security. The humanitarian response requires nearly US$ 100 million; US$ 13 million from CERF is requested to jumpstart early action required to mitigate the effects of the deterioration of both food security and malnutrition among communities that continue to demonstrate worrying food security and/or nutrition outcomes (GAM of over 15%) and whose conditions are expected to deteriorate between February and June 2018. Over 183,000 IDPs and people from host communities are expected to benefit from this intervention.18-RR-SOM-28714-NR01kovacm@un.org#Matija KovacEnglishAntje Lehmann2018-08-27T00:00:002018-09-27T00:00:002019-01-12T00:00:002019-01-25T00:00:002019-05-30T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture25815219914780624803211294593293738HealthHealth3199738013700104483168375113206183216NutritionNutrition1525236101886215960183593431953181Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5016034620847805920044420103620188400Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0000000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security126971490627603132171551428731563342018-04-12T00:00:0058941718-RR-LBY-30399Libya RR Application Apr 2018 (UNHAS)AfricaLibyaNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-04-20T00:00:002018-04-20T00:00:002018-05-02T00:00:002018-05-07T00:00:001000000.001153061This CERF rapid response application of US$1.1 million is triggered by the reduction of the fleet of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL), which is currently operating with only one aircraft prioritized for the SRSG’s missions and with irregular routes to Benghazi and other locations, coupled with the formal lifting of the evacuation status for Libya on 7 February 2018. A window of opportunity now presents itself for the humanitarian community to expand humanitarian operations in Libya and reach more people in need. WFP aims to establish a United Nations Humanitarian Air Service (UNHAS) operation that will enable the broader humanitarian community to regularly access beneficiaries and project sites through safe, secure and reliable air services.
In a memo on 9 February 2018 following the lifting of the evacuation status, the Secretary-General expressed his expectation of a swift return of agencies, funds and programmes (AFPs) to Libya, strongly encouraging AFPs to make full use of the facilities and security arrangements already in place at the UN compound in Tripoli, and to explore possibilities for further expansion on the basis of mandates.
Under the 2018 HRP, humanitarian partners aim to respond to the most basic needs of 940,000 people out of an estimated 1.1 million in need of life-saving humanitarian assistance and protection across Libya. The humanitarian situation remains fragile due to ongoing conflict, political instability, the disruption of markets and local food production, all of which damage livelihoods and their ability to meet basic needs. UNHAS is thus needed to establish initially 4 flights per week, from Tunis to Tripoli and Benghazi and other locations including Sabha, Misrata and Bani Waleed to enable humanitarian partners’ implementation more broadly across the country.18-RR-LBY-30399-NR01engborg@un.org#Kasper EngborgEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-08-07T00:00:002018-10-03T00:00:002019-04-06T00:00:002019-04-09T00:00:002019-07-31T00:00:00Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services00000002018-05-02T00:00:0059141918-RR-PSE-30459oPt RR Application May 2018 (Gaza Fence Crisis)Asiaoccupied Palestinian territoryWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRHuman RightsConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-05-03T00:00:002018-05-03T00:00:002018-05-10T00:00:002018-05-14T00:00:001255250.001260080This CERF rapid response application of US$1.3 million is triggered by the need for an immediate scale-up in emergency health care in Gaza due to the significant increase in Palestinian casualties in the context of mass demonstrations taking place along its perimeter fence with Israel since 30 March 2018.
As of 3 May (date of application), a cumulative total of 44 people had been killed, including five children, and 6,793 people, including at least 701 children, have been injured by the response of Israeli forces, according to the Gaza Ministry of Health (MoH). From the total number of injured, approximately 59 per cent (4,003 people) have been hospitalized in Gaza at MoH and NGO hospitals, including 1,935 due to live ammunition injuries. If the current casualty rate continues and caseload projections become reality, the number of people sustaining injuries requiring hospitalization during this crisis may reach 10,500. The current surge in humanitarian needs takes place against a backdrop of an overall extremely precarious humanitarian situation in the Gaza Strip, expressed through a health system on the verge of collapse.
CERF rapid response funds are sought jointly by the HC on behalf of WHO and UNICEF for a period of four months to provide life-saving treatment for the projected 80,742 Palestinians in Gaza who require, but cannot access sufficient health care because of the crisis. CERF funds will support the strengthening of the trauma pathway in Gaza to reduce mortality, injury complication and disabilities caused by violence during mass demonstrations at the fence. The strengthening of the referral pathway will be achieved through rapid procurement and import of essential medical supplies to Gaza, distribution to critical hospitals providing trauma care, and regular monitoring of supply use and ongoing needs. Funds will also help meet the needs of other emergency cases amongst vulnerable groups, such as women, children and the elderly, who are currently being neglected due to hospital inability to care for both caseloads.18-RR-PSE-30459-NR02ritsema@un.org#Sheri Ritsema-AndersonEnglishMaria Kelly2018-08-13T00:00:002018-10-15T00:00:002019-02-10T00:00:002019-04-26T22:54:26HealthHealth209541343634390189643491153875882652018-05-10T00:00:0059242018-RR-LBN-30469Lebanon RR Application May 2018 (Measles)AsiaLebanonWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRMeaslesBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-05-04T00:00:002018-05-04T00:00:002018-05-14T00:00:002018-05-15T00:00:001159130.001127942On 15 March 2018, the Ministry of Public Health declared a measles outbreak in Lebanon after clustered cases were reported in several areas in the Mount Lebanon and Beqaa governorates. By 21 April, more than 311 cases were reported from all over the country. This measles epidemic comes at a time when Lebanon continues to face extensive humanitarian needs as a consequence of the Syria crisis, which has triggered the arrival of more than one million Syrian refugees in this country of 4 million inhabitants. As of May 2018, 991,000 Syrian refugees are registered as refugees with UNHCR, along with 35,000 Palestine Refugees from Syria and a pre-existing population of more than 270,000 Palestine Refugees in Lebanon. A CERF allocation will enable the country to support mobile vaccination units, mass campaign, compulsory vaccination of children crossing the border and refugee children attending the UNHCR reception center in the Mount Lebanon, Beqaa, Baalbeck-Hermel and Nabatieh governorates. The HCT agreed on one sector of intervention, Health, and UNICEF will be the sole implementer of the response. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee18-RR-LBN-30469-NR01salazar@un.org#Magalie SalazarEnglishMirna Loiferman2018-08-13T00:00:002018-10-19T00:00:002019-02-14T00:00:002019-04-24T00:00:00HealthHealth129463012946312430301243032537662018-05-11T00:00:0059342118-RR-SOM-30443Somalia RR Application May 2018 (Floods)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-05-08T00:00:002018-05-08T00:00:002018-05-22T00:00:002018-05-24T00:00:005127150.005133588This CERF rapid response application of US$5.1 million is triggered by floods and continued heavy rains since mid-April across nine regions in South Central Somalia. The floods have affected 630,000 people and have caused the displacement of an estimated 215,000 others. More than 15,000 hectares of cropland have been damaged, 500 tonnes of household grain lost, and 2,500 latrines destroyed putting the population at risk of water and vector borne diseases in areas that are grappling with cholera outbreaks. The damages to shelters in IDP settlements have further exposed vulnerable communities, especially children and the elderly to hazardous conditions and raised protection concerns.
A CERF rapid response allocation is sought to support the scaling-up of response to mitigate the humanitarian impact of the floods on 101,172 people including 75,000 displaced persons, across the worst affected areas in nine regions over a period of three months. The interventions will target the Food Security and Livelihoods, Health, Shelter, NFI and WASH needs of vulnerable IDPs and host communities as well as essential logistics/UNHAS support.18-RR-SOM-30443-NR02kovacm@un.org#Matija KovacEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-08-24T00:00:002018-11-28T00:00:002019-02-22T00:00:002019-06-12T00:00:00Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI8800217503055019600169503655067100Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security324533982872281339274130275229147510HealthHealth26048168004284823769170744084383691Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2470728648533552571535524612391145942018-05-22T00:00:0059442218-RR-VZR-30453VZ Region RR Application May 2018 (Regional UNHCR/IOM allocation)AmericasVenezuela Regional Refugee and Migration CrisisLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-05-09T00:00:002018-05-22T00:00:002018-05-29T00:00:002018-05-31T00:00:006200000.006203340In response to the increase of the Venezuelan exodus into neighbouring countries and beyond, the ERC has decided to allocate $6.2 million to UNHCR and IOM. This allocation represents 10% of UNHCR’s $46 million one-year plan and 5% of IOM’s $32 million two-year plan for the crisis. This joint CERF allocation will target 195,016 beneficiaries across Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru and Trinidad and Tobago. UNHCR and IOM have coordinated at the regional and country level and agreed on five response objectives: data production and dissemination, access to territory, legal stay arrangements, refugee status, and other/alternative forms of protection, identification and assistance of the most vulnerable, durable solutions including socio-economic integration, communications, capacity building and coordination. The CERF response will address three out of these five objectives and will enable IOM and UNHCR to support Venezuelans multi-cluster needs including DTM, provision of documentation, shelter, health care, direct cash-based assistance, and SGBV. Jointly drafted by UNHCR and IOM, this application was reviewed by the relevant HCs/RCs prior to submission to the ERC for his decision. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - Not in use - Migrants Venezuela crisis 2018-18-RR-VZR-30453-NR01dubini@unhcr.org#Renata DubiniEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-09-10T00:00:002018-11-13T00:00:002019-02-28T00:00:002019-07-19T00:00:00Multi-SectorMulti-Sector54266113617167883347661257561605223284052018-05-25T00:00:0059542318-RR-COD-30550DR Congo RR Application May 2018 (Ebola - Equateur)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20182018-05-15T00:00:002018-05-15T00:00:002018-05-29T00:00:002018-05-31T00:00:001997302.001995504On 3 May 2018, an Ebola outbreak was declared in DRC. This is the ninth Ebola epidemic in the country since 1976. All of the precedent outbreaks were characterized by high levels of infectiousness, high mortality and a sharp deterioration in the socio-economic situation of the populations. The actual outbreak counts five cases and hundreds of contacts. The CERF Rapid Response grant application aims to contribute to the control and reduction of mortality and morbidity related to the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in Equateur Province and to prevent the transmission of the disease. disease. virus in the rest of the Democratic Republic of Congo. The allocation supports the launch of rapid response activities to the epidemic in Equateur Province, with immediate priority given to areas directly affected by the virus that have already reported cases of infection and / or death . In the details, the funding will focus on the immediate implementation of key activities to: 1) contain the epidemic (medical care, surveillance, identification and referral of cases); 2) prevent the spread (secure burials, WASH and community mobilization); and 3) facilitate access of teams and equipment to areas affected by the epidemic, currently isolated by major constraints of physical access. Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201918-RR-COD-30550-NR03macdiarmid@un.org#Charlotte MacDiarmidFrenchPhilippe Decker2018-09-21T00:00:002018-11-20T00:00:002019-02-28T00:00:002019-04-24T00:00:00HealthHealth912012894220148418139682238644400Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1149875061900417426112592868547689Common Services - LogisticsLogistics00000002018-05-25T00:00:0059642518-RR-KEN-30594Kenya RR Application May 2018 (floods in the Horn of Africa)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-05-18T00:00:002018-06-05T00:00:002018-06-07T00:00:002018-06-11T00:00:004945502.004945502This CERF rapid response application of US$5 million is triggered by heavy rain and floods over the months of April and beginning of May causing the displacement of 311,000 people across 36 counties in Kenya and numbers are likely to increase. Based on initial estimates and ongoing rapid assessments, floods have caused the destruction of more than 20,000 acres of farmland; 33 health facilities are either inaccessible or submerged by water; major water distribution systems serving entire towns such as Mombasa and Malinivei have been washed away, potentially affecting an estimated 1.3 million people; and increased water levels have caused the collapse and overflowing of many latrines increasing the risk of water borne diseases in counties already experiencing cholera outbreaks. Protection needs are also of concern especially among the displaced population as children have been separated by their families and there are increased risks of gender based violence among vulnerable groups such as adolescent girls and women and single headed households.
Since the onset of the emergency, the Kenya Red Cross Society (KRCS) has been the main provider of first line response in support of the government of Kenya (GoK). In view of the scale of humanitarian needs, a CERF rapid response allocation for some $5 million is sought by the Kenya Humanitarian Partnership Team (KHPT) to support the scaling-up of response to assist 243,140 flood affected people across the eight most affected counties over a period of 4.5 months. The interventions will target the WASH, Health, NFIs and Protection needs of vulnerable IDPs and host communities.18-RR-KEN-30594-NR01quacquarella@un.org#Giovanni QuacquarellaEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-09-07T00:00:002018-11-14T00:00:002019-03-07T00:00:002019-05-31T00:00:002019-09-04T18:23:17Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection562956291125871090710918367Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0000597659765976Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene372163873475950387354031579050155000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI257572442750184271112484451955102139HealthHealth34668543808904863882780781419602310082018-06-06T00:00:0059742418-RR-TCD-30657Chad RR Application May 2018 (food insecurity)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-05-21T00:00:002018-05-21T00:00:002018-06-05T00:00:002018-06-08T00:00:0010293509.0010216729The 2017/2018 agricultural year was marked by a deficit rainfall in most of the Sahelian belt, resulting in an early and long lean season. In Chad cereal production has fallen sharply while pastoral resources, forage and water, are in critical condition. Coping strategies are getting stretched and nearly one million people need assistance during this upcoming lean season. About $36 million is required to provide immediate emergency assistance to respond early and avert a food security crisis. Of this, the RC/HC and humanitarian partners in Chad are requesting some $10 million from the CERF to scale-up emergency interventions in the sectors of food security, nutrition and WASH. Some 453,267 people including 71,961 children under 5 years and 19,000 pregnant and lactating women are targeted in the regions of Guera, Batha, Ouaddai, Wadi Fira, Kanem, Barh El Ghazal and the Lake.
The CERF allocation is part of a larger regional approach to the drought and worsening food security situation in the Sahel. A total of $30 million has been agreed by the ERC for immediate scale-up activities in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Mauritania. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action18-RR-TCD-30657-NR02sawadogoa@un.org#Abdoulaye SawadogoFrenchMirna Loiferman2018-09-18T00:00:002018-12-12T00:00:002019-03-05T00:00:002019-06-21T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security60724456541063786560049643115243221621Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture04104100145901459015000NutritionNutrition34607034607373541900056354909612018-06-04T00:00:0059842618-RR-BFA-30726Burkina Faso RR Application May 2018 (Drought)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-05-24T00:00:002018-05-24T00:00:002018-06-07T00:00:002018-06-11T00:00:009000000.009015030The 2017/2018 agricultural year was marked by a deficit rainfall in most of the Sahelian belt, resulting in an early and long lean season. In Burkina Faso cereal production has fallen sharply while pastoral resources, forage and water, are in critical condition. Coping strategies are getting stretched and nearly one million people need assistance during the upcoming lean season, almost three times more than last year. In March, the Government, in collaboration with FAO, UNICEF, WFP and other humanitarian partners, developed the Emergency Food Security Response Plan with a cost of some $147 million. The RC and humanitarian partners in Burkina Faso are requesting $9 million from CERF to provide immediate emergency assistance in the areas of food security, through food aid and livestock interventions, and nutrition. 90,650 people are targeted in the Sahel, East and Centre-North regions.
The CERF allocation is part of a larger regional approach to the drought and worsening food security situation in the Sahel. A total of $30 million has been agreed by the ERC for immediate scale-up activities in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Mauritania. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action18-RR-BFA-30726-NR01knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-09-07T00:00:002018-11-15T00:00:002019-04-06T00:00:002019-10-11T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security3026793813964832356105964295282600Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture113838345197281179795752137241100NutritionNutrition37443037443371901272349913873562018-06-06T00:00:0059942718-RR-ETH-30739Ethiopia RR Application May 2018 (Floods in the Horn of Africa)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-05-25T00:00:002018-06-12T00:00:002018-06-20T00:00:002018-06-20T00:00:005343942.005343942This CERF rapid response application of US$5.3 million is triggered by flash flood incidences across Ethiopia since the second week of April 2018, affecting some 347,000 people, of which some 210,000 are displaced, not considering the results of ongoing flood assessments or impact of anticipated rains. According to the Somali region Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Bureau, some 324,000 individuals are affected, of which 187,000 are displaced. The floods have caused damage to 158 waterpoints, 76 health facilities, 123 schools and destruction of over 16,500 homes across the region, while 12,900 hectares of farmland are submerged and 12,500 heads of livestock are killed. In the Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples’ Region (SNNPR), floods have affected 6,900 displaced individuals, all of whom reportedly have lost their homes and household items. In Oromia region, some 15,500 people are displaced along the Dawa River basin.
Most of the displaced are congregated in evacuation centres or along main roads in dire need of Emergency Shelter/Non-Food Items (ES/NFI) and food assistance, while several thousands are stranded, including some 13,000 people in cut-off parts of Somali region. Several assessments conducted in some of these evacuation centres show poor WASH conditions, raising the spectre for disease outbreaks including Acute Watery Disease. Most of the displaced have lost most, if not all, of their household items and are sharing scant resources with other displaced families or host communities.
A CERF rapid response application for US$5.3 million is sought to immediately target 19,000 displaced households, or 104,500 vulnerable IDPs, for six months in the flood affected regions of Afar, Oromia, Somali and SNNP through in-kind and cash ES/NFI assistance as well as immediate repair, rehabilitation and transitional shelter construction support.18-RR-ETH-30739-NR02Arefaines@un.org#Senait ArefaineEnglishMohit Khubchandani2018-09-24T00:00:002018-12-04T00:00:002019-03-20T00:00:002019-07-29T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI19394125123190619394112603065462560Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI97676302160699767567215439315082018-06-18T00:00:0060042818-RR-MLI-30933Mali RR Application Jun 2018 (Drought)AfricaMaliWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-06-08T00:00:002018-06-08T00:00:002018-06-25T00:00:002018-06-27T00:00:007000000.006997663The 2017/2018 agricultural year was marked by a deficit rainfall in most of the Sahelian belt, resulting in an early and long lean season. In January 2018, the Humanitarian Response Plan for Mali noted that 4.3 million people were in need, including almost 1 million were food insecure. According to humanitarian partners, food security indicators have worsened in the months since due to the poor rains and agriculture season. Cereal production has fallen sharply while pastoral resources, forage and water, are in critical condition. Coping strategies are getting stretched and nearly one million people need assistance during this upcoming lean season.
The food security and nutrition clusters require $150 million to assist food insecure people this year. Of this, the RC/HC and humanitarian partners in Mali are requesting some $7 million from the CERF to scale-up emergency interventions to mitigate the situation during the lean season. Some 457,795 people are targeted in the regions of Mopti, Gao and Tombouctou.
The CERF allocation is part of a larger regional approach to the drought and worsening food security situation in the Sahel. A total of $30 million has been agreed by the ERC for immediate scale-up activities in Burkina Faso, Chad, Mali and Mauritania AA - ad-hoc AA or early action18-RR-MLI-30933-NR02cibonga@un.org#David CibongaFrenchPhilippe Decker2018-09-25T00:00:002018-12-13T00:00:002019-03-25T00:00:002019-06-25T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security15000100002500016000140003000055000NutritionNutrition169806016980617673650673227409397215Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture6791255493234070692659133660660002018-06-24T00:00:0060142918-RR-DJI-30969Djibouti RR Application Jun 2018 (Tropical Cyclone Sagar)AfricaDjiboutiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-06-13T00:00:002018-06-20T00:00:002018-06-25T00:00:002018-06-27T00:00:001200000.001196791This CERF rapid response application of US$1.2 million is triggered by Cyclone Sagar, which hit Djibouti on 20 May 2018. The cyclone caused heavy rains and flooding across Djibouti City and surrounding areas including Arta region, that hosts the Damerjog IDP site of 4,500 people. The Government of Djibouti estimates that the cyclone and subsequent floods have affected between 25,000 to 50,000 people who are in need of urgent humanitarian assistance, including an already vulnerable caseload of 5,000 refugees and over 3,800 migrant families.
An interagency assessment on 26 May indicated an urgent need for emergency WASH and Health interventions as the WASH infrastructure has been severely damaged and to avoid a major water-borne disease outbreak. Some AWD cases have already been reported; there is an active Malaria outbreak and the risk of Cholera and Dengue outbreaks is increasing.
An emergency response appeal for Djibouti Cyclone Sagar of some US$ 4.66 million has been organized internally with UN agencies and NGO partners, while UN Agencies and NGO partners have been able to mobilize all their internal funding resources available, up to approximately $1.8 million.
A CERF rapid response application for US$1.2 million is sought to support life-saving WASH and Health assistance to 47,822 vulnerable men, women, girls and boys affected by Cyclone Sagar for a period of six months. Interventions will help increase critical access to safe sanitation, water and hygiene and enhance disease surveillance activities to ensure prevention, rapid identification and response to water-borne and vector-borne disease outbreaks.18-RR-DJI-30969-NR01harbi.omar@undp.org#Harbi OmarEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-09-25T00:00:002018-12-04T00:00:002019-04-09T00:00:002019-07-08T00:00:00HealthHealth1026011880221407740101201786040000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene300045007500300045007500150002018-06-24T00:00:0060243118-RR-GTM-30994Guatemala RR Application Jun 2018 (Volcano)AmericasGuatemalaLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRVolcanoBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-06-15T00:00:002018-06-15T00:00:002018-07-11T00:00:002018-07-11T00:00:001559967.001559967This CERF rapid response application of US$1.7 million is triggered by the eruption of the de Fuego Vulcano in Guatemala on 3 June, expelling a huge pyroclastic flow from the crater. The flow destroyed everything on its path, including houses, infrastructure, vegetation, and people. One community, San Miguel Los Lotes, was totally buried killing more than 110 people with around 800 people missing. An estimated total of 1.7 million people have been affected by the eruption, including 1.1 million people in Guatemala City and surrounding cities due to ash fall. In the sorrunding regions of Guatemala, an estimated 600,000 people are affected. According to government reports, some 13,000 individuals have been evacuated of which around 6,000 individuals are currently staying in more than 23 shelters located primarily in the municipality of Escuintla. Some 19 informal shelters have also been organized by local leaders and churches in which 2,000 additional people are located while 21,000 families are residing with near-by communities.
On 15 June, the RC for Guatemala submitted a CERF request for $1.7 million to provide life-saving humanitarian assistance to some 6,500 vulnerable men, women, girls and boys (a number that increased to 21,700 following revisions made my agencies) in official shelters as well as informal shelters and in near-by communities for a period of three months through Health, Protection, including Child Protection, Food Security and Nutrition, WASH, Education, and CCCM interventions. The activities will be targeted the most vulnerable people in the Departments of Escuintla, Chimaltenango, Santa Rosa, Suchitepequez, and Sacatepequez.Interim report note: UNHCR update notes a delayed procurement and delivery timeframe. In the proposal, UNHCR expected procurement to take one week and distribution to take one month and the entire project activities would be completed within three months. However, the interim report states that supplies were expected to arrive in Guatemala on 22 October, which is about 3 ½ months into the implementation period.18-RR-GTM-30994-NR01barillase@un.org#Edy Manolo BarillasEnglishInga Christina Mueller2018-10-22T00:00:002019-01-07T00:00:002019-04-11T00:00:002019-07-09T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene886164895098347621896818477EducationEducation3530783608339211835107118NutritionNutrition1015117621911380373351137304Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection79612302026852135422064232Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security41256898042859210202000HealthHealth31532851600430083257626512269ProtectionProtection67476114351253141226654100Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management749184325927471918266552572018-07-07T00:00:0060343018-RR-UKR-30772Ukraine RR Application Jun 2018 (New access)EuropeUkraineEastern EuropeEastern EuropeRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-06-18T00:00:002018-06-18T00:00:002018-06-29T00:00:002018-07-02T00:00:006068450.005904612This CERF Rapid Response application of US$6 million is triggered by the recent opening of humanitarian access for UN agencies in the non-Government controlled areas (NGCA) of eastern Ukraine after three years of negotiation. It is critical to quickly demonstrate tangible results to maintain and increase the access into the future for the UN and partners. The cumulative impact of severe restrictions on the movement of civilians across the 457 km “contact line” which divides the NGCA and Government Controlled Areas (GCA), active hostilities and limited humanitarian access have resulted in 2.2 million people in dire need of humanitarian assistance and protection in the NGCA. With the increasingly protracted nature of the armed conflict, living conditions have markedly deteriorated with limited livelihood and economic opportunities exacerbating pre-existing vulnerabilities. While the NGCA has been increasingly isolated, barriers to people’s access to protection and basic services have risen, limiting the population’s ability to meet their basic needs.
In view of the scale of humanitarian needs, a CERF Rapid Response allocation for some US$6 million is sought by the Humanitarian Country Team to jumpstart an emergency response to reach the 134,000 most vulnerable people in the NGCA of Donetsk and Luhansk oblasts over a period of six months. The interventions will target the education, health, livelihood, protection, shelter/NFI and WASH needs of highly vulnerable people who have been isolated for the past three years.18-RR-UKR-30772-NR01bochorishvili@un.org#Ivane BochorishviliEnglishAntje Lehmann2018-10-08T00:00:002018-12-04T00:00:002019-03-29T00:00:002019-06-18T00:00:00EducationEducation2742027423218032185960HealthHealth234613294156402754156061836034000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI30145142815638635242910517261Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4525029565380445740Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection42103864596443040748379433ProtectionProtection146808954171100311742128Protection - Human RightsProtection60855915205655851500Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2750510728513479032683883931210762558662018-06-28T00:00:0060443218-RR-COL-30738Colombia RR Application Jun 2018 (Venezuela regional emergency)AmericasColombiaLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-06-18T00:00:002018-06-18T00:00:002018-07-11T00:00:002018-07-13T00:00:005929493.005929493This CERF rapid response application of US$6 million is triggered by the migration flow from Venezuela which in the first five months of 2018 has seen 700,000 migrants reported by the Colombian migration authority, in addition to the 800,000 migrants that have remained in Colombia since 2017. The people have arrived in need of humanitarian assistance and needs have exceeded the government’s coping capacities. The CERF request is based on the results of the multi-sectoral assessments of the mixed flows of population from Venezuela carried out by the end of 2017 and early 2018, between IOM, UNHCR, WFP and with the support of OCHA.
The assessments reported that 66% of Venezuelans families living in Colombia and for 42% of Colombians who have lived for decades in Venezuela and have returned in Colombia due to situation have not received any health care assistance; more than 90% of infants and children under 2 years of age are not breast-fed; 90% of the population that left Venezuela has declared that the one of the main reason for migrating was lack of food; 46% of households interviewed do not have access to sanitation and water supply systems; one third of the households do not have access to formal education representing a major risk for the children and adolescents that could be recruited by illegal armed groups; and almost 20% of the families feel insecure in the environment where they currently live due to the proximity with illegal armed groups and manifested suffering from xenophobic situations.
On 18 June, the RC/HC for Colombia submitted a CERF request to provide life-saving humanitarian assistance to 63,000 vulnerable men, women, girls and boys for a period of five months through Health, Food Security and Nutrition, Water, Sanitation and Hygiene, Education in Emergency, Protection and Shelter interventions. The activities will be targeted the most vulnerable people, including the Venezuelan population, Colombians returnees, Venezuelan refugees, host communities and mixed families in the border areas (Arauca, La Guajira and Norte de Santander) and other regions, where mixed migrants have arrived (Atlántico, Magdalena, Bolivar, and Nariño).
The DERC and ERC endorsed the allocation of up to $6 million for this response based on a concept note previously submitted by the RC/HC in May. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - Not in use - Migrants Venezuela crisis 2018-18-RR-COL-30738-NR01andres.romero@one.un.org#Andres RomeroEnglishMohit Khubchandani2018-10-19T00:00:002018-12-17T00:00:002019-04-11T00:00:002019-07-11T00:00:00Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection60361219725552782985826315518HealthHealth12460126102507021673227114438469454Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security41843862804642214496871716763Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene17644271603516375634727113306Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence138853991250284930994090Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI19461580914897511231932EducationEducation3220900412035001500500091202018-07-10T00:00:0060543318-RR-ETH-31283Ethiopia RR Application Jul 2018 (Gedeo-West Guji insecurity)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-07-08T00:00:002018-07-11T00:00:002018-07-16T00:00:002018-07-19T00:00:0015000000.0015014257Inter-communal violence along the border of Gedeo (SNNP Region) and West Guji (Oromia Region) administrative zones has led to the displacement of over 818,250 people since April 2018. This influx of IDPs doubled the population of districts already densely populated and overwhelmed public infrastructures and services. This large-scale displacement follows the lean season, when household food resources are most constrained or depleted, and malnutrition levels on the rise – especially amongst the poorest households.
On 8 September, the RC/HC for Ethiopia submitted a rapid response request to scale up emergency response to the displacement crisis. A total of $15 million is requested from CERF to assist the IDPs with lifesaving interventions related to nutrition, health, WASH and non-food items. The ERC agreed to an allocation of $15 million based on information provided in an exchange of emails with the RC/HC and OCHA Ethiopia.18-RR-ETH-31283-NR03Arefaines@un.org#Senait ArefaineEnglishMohit Khubchandani2018-11-15T00:00:002019-01-08T00:00:002019-04-16T00:00:002019-07-17T00:00:00NutritionNutrition287230287232559702559754320Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene136807121320258127142391126272268663526790HealthHealth3882924098542927739210043447435547864824Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI016800016800018200001820003500002018-07-16T00:00:0060643418-RR-NER-31416Niger RR Application Jul 2018 (Displacement)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-07-23T00:00:002018-08-07T00:00:002018-08-08T00:00:002018-10-16T00:00:007207562.007112721This CERF rapid response application of US$6 million is triggered by the sharp increase since April 2018 in the number of attacks by non-state armed groups against the civilian population in the regions of Tillabery and Tahoua and the intensification of intercommunity conflicts over cattle raiding and access to grazing land and water. These situations have led to a major destabilization of the area causing significant movements of populations. Additionally, restricted market access and movements under the state of emergency, the disruption of transhumance patterns and the arrival of herds from Mali and Burkina Faso as a result of insecurity, poor rains and food price increases are also contributing to the deterioration of the humanitarian situation faced by the IDPs, the host populations and the herders. In both regions, 39,258 displaced persons need urgent protection, WASH, shelter/NFIs as well as food assistance. A total of 4,036 households, representing a population of 28,252 people, with 50,450 small ruminants or 5,045 cattles, are also in need of immediate humanitarian assistance to mitigate the impact of the fodder deficit crisis.
A CERF rapid response allocation of $6 million was disbursed in August 2018 to provide immediate assistance within the Food Security and Livelihoods, Shelter/NFI, WASH, and Protection, including SGBV, sectors to meet the needs of 39,258 vulnerable IDPs and host communities and 28,252 herders. On 19 September, the RC/HC for Niger alerted the ERC of difficulties accessing the affected communities due to unusually heavy rains and requested additional CERF funding for a two-month UNHAS helicopter airlift operation to ensure the transport of humanitarian personnel and supplies to affected areas for the implementation the CERF projects. Boko Haram crisis 2014-18-RR-NER-31416-NR01emanuele.cidonelli@un.org#Emanuele CidonelliEnglishPhilippe Decker2018-11-15T00:00:002019-02-28T00:00:002019-05-08T00:00:002019-09-05T00:00:00ProtectionProtection4587662111208568651041079021998Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection4587662111208516069871214723355Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence11086721780149591624114191Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture126608025206851280881192092741612Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7549529512844732356711299425838Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1164887362038411952105742252642910Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene7996621714213825967781503729250Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services00000002018-10-11T00:00:0060743518-RR-AFG-31254Afghanistan RR Application Aug 2018 (Drought)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-08-03T00:00:002018-08-03T00:00:002018-08-15T00:00:002018-08-17T00:00:0012000000.0011937469The CERF rapid response application of US$12 million is to respond to the ongoing drought in 20 provinces of Afghanistan which has negatively impacted the food security of vulnerable households. According to the results of the IPC conducted in late 2017, most of the drought affected areas were at or beyond IPC 3. The impact of the drought has also resulted in a further deterioration of the nutritional status of affected communities, especially children under the age of five, due to their reduced access to safe water and increased likelihood of food insecurity in the coming months. Households relying on farming and livestock have also been directly affected by the below average rainfall, resulting in a negative impact on the agriculture season and the unavailability of vegetation in pastures and farmlands. Finally, the drought has had devastating effect on the pre-existing water sources with many areas experiencing acute water shortages. In the 20 provinces affected by the drought, 662,728 are in urgent need of assistance including 297,500 requiring food assistance, 204,708 in need of targeted WASH interventions, 52,720 children and women require targeted nutritional support and 53,900 individuals require agriculture and livestock assistance.
A CERF rapid response allocation is sought to provide immediate assistance within the Food Security and Livelihoods, WASH and Nutrition sectors to meet the needs of the 662,728 vulnerable individuals.18-RR-AFG-31254-NR01oppermann@un.org#Jens OppermannEnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-02-04T00:00:002019-02-05T00:00:002019-05-15T00:00:002019-08-22T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene81898573281392267916854598133766272992NutritionNutrition2689781269782763654743311060088Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture349482536860316319232750159424119740Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security84730669791517098142664365145791297500Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture00000002018-08-13T00:00:0060843618-RR-COD-31591DR Congo RR Application Aug 2018 (Ebola)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20182018-08-10T00:00:002018-08-10T00:00:002018-08-24T00:00:002018-08-27T00:00:002813099.002808736On 1 August, a new Ebola outbreak was declared in North Kivu, DRC. Since the beginning of the epidemic, a total of 74 cases have been reported, including 16 confirmed cases. This outbreak is in North Kivu province, near to the Ugandan border and 2,500 km away from the last outbreak in Equateur. WHO confirmed the two outbreaks are unrelated.
This CERF Rapid Response application for a total of $ 2.8 million is to contribute to the control and reduction of mortality and morbidity related to the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) epidemic in the provinces of North Kivu and Ituri and to prevent transmission of the virus in the rest of the Democratic Republic of Congo. The allocation supports the scaling up of rapid response activities to the epidemic in North Kivu and Ituri provinces, with immediate priority given to areas directly affected by the virus that have already reported cases of infection. The funding will focus on the immediate implementation of key activities to: 1) contain the epidemic (medical care, surveillance, and identification of cases); 2) prevent the spread of the disease (secure burials, WASH and community mobilization); and 3) facilitate the access to the affected areas. Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201918-RR-COD-31591-NR04Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirFrenchDaniel Edward William Whalley Ham2018-12-04T00:00:002019-02-27T00:00:002019-05-24T00:00:002019-07-31T00:00:002020-02-07T00:00:00HealthHealth20959227084366721280230534433388000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene14559127782733716824138353065957996Common Services - LogisticsLogistics037137103713717422018-08-23T00:00:0060943718-RR-CMR-31414Cameroon RR Application Aug 2018 (Displacement)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-08-14T00:00:002018-08-14T00:00:002018-08-31T00:00:002018-09-05T00:00:005101665.005096994Since 2016, political and social instability, exacerbated by sporadic violence, has had a negative impact on civilians in Cameroon’s South-West and North-West regions. In November 2017, the socio-political crisis degenerated into insecurity and armed violence. Since then, the escalation of tension and upsurge in hostilities between non-state armed groups and defense and security forces have triggered humanitarian needs across the two regions owing to significant internal displacement. The rapid multi-sectoral assessment conducted by the UN agencies in March 2018 in the South-West and another conducted in April 2018 in the North-West region by Plan International showed that at least 160,000 people have been internally displaced in the two affected regions and need immediate humanitarian and protection assistance.
The humanitarian community launched an Emergency Response Plan in May in order to mobilize US$15 million for the crisis in the North-West and the South-West regions. The plan targeted 160,000 IDPs and aimed at covering the needs in Shelter/NFI, WASH, Health, Protection, Food and Agriculture and Education for an initial period of three months. The planning scenario has already been surpassed and needs have grown significantly. CERF funds are required to cover the protection, health, WASH, shelter/NFI, food security and common services of 110,000 beneficiaries for four months in the South-West and North-West regions of Cameroon.18-RR-CMR-31414-NR02martinezv@un.org#Victoria MartinezEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-03-18T00:00:002019-03-25T00:00:002019-06-30T00:00:002019-08-15T00:00:002019-11-25T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI82491035518604809493021739636000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture121452017342560170642666000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security153874836202231538783522373943962Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection23123577588930165002801813907Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence243140666497688299841686623363Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene24277247534903023325268165014199171HealthHealth15331125442787528744170844582873703ProtectionProtection0000000Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services00000002018-08-31T00:00:0061043818-RR-MMR-31712Myanmar RR Application Aug 2018 (Floods)AsiaMyanmarSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-08-24T00:00:002018-08-24T00:00:002018-09-10T00:00:002018-09-12T00:00:002963578.002959446The CERF rapid response application of $3 million is to respond to the impact of heavy monsoon rains that have resulted in flooding in many regions of Myanmar. Widespread flooding has caused the displacement of more than 167,000 individuals. Some 15,000 displaced individuals are still residing in 41 evacuation sites. The flooding has severely affected the agricultural livelihoods with the worst affected areas reporting over 617,000 acres lost or damaged. In the four most affected regions/states, 113,000 individuals are in need of food assistance including 14,000 households who require agricultural support, 47, 522 individuals in need of access to primary health care, 50,000 targeted for WASH interventions and 18,344 individuals targeted for protection services.
A CERF rapid response allocation is sought to provide immediate assistance within the Food Security, Health, Protection and WASH sectors to meet the needs of 113,000 vulnerable individuals. The CERF funds will complement $1 million in funds from the Myanmar Humanitarian Fund, primarily to NGOs, for activities in the Food Security, Shelter/NFI and Education sectors.18-RR-MMR-31712-NR02rosa-berlanga@un.org#Narciso Rosa-BerlangaEnglishMadoka Koide2018-12-17T00:00:002019-03-14T00:00:002019-06-10T00:00:002019-06-21T00:00:002019-07-18T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture222773741859695227384025862996122691HealthHealth427717108213855227209102613747522ProtectionProtection33241095441939343980791412333Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene100001500025000100001500025000500002018-09-07T00:00:0061143918-UF-AGO-31870Angola UF Application Sep 2018 (refugees)AfricaAngolaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-03T00:00:002018-09-03T00:00:002018-09-19T00:00:002018-09-24T00:00:002000000.002000950Since March 2017, over 35,000 Congolese refugees have fled violence and taken refuge in Angola. The escalation of violence in Kasai DRC triggered the internal displacement of some 1.4 million persons and the influx of refugees into Angola. As of 20 August 2018, the number of registered refugees in Angola is 35,837. The total refugee active population (population receiving food assistance) is 22,624. Around 61% of the active population is in Lóvua, while 39% are based in urban areas. An Angola Inter-Agency Appeal, as part of the DRC Regional Refugee Response Plan was launched for the period of January to December 2018 with requirements of $63,881,333. At the time of the CERF UFE analysis, humanitarian operations were 12% funded. This $2 million UFE CERF application targets approximately 22,624 refugees in the Lóvua Refugee Settlement in Lunda Norte Province. This area hosts the most vulnerable refugees who require food security, WASH and health (Primary Care and Sexual and Reproductive Health) responses.
Angola Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $2 million (Round II allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 4 September 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 4 DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-UF-AGO-31870-NR01fatima.santos@one.un.org#Fatima SantosEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-04-08T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:002019-10-25T00:00:002020-02-07T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5731442210153590441781008220235Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security6092466010752637546691104421796HealthHealth56874433101205858453610394205142018-09-18T00:00:0061244718-UF-CAF-31872CAR UF Application Sep 2018 (Displacement)AfricaCentral African RepublicMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-03T00:00:002018-09-12T00:00:002018-10-09T00:00:002018-10-11T00:00:0010000000.009932158This CERF UFE $10 million allocation will focus on the emergency response in the areas most affected by the upsurge of violence and which require rapid intervention in several sectors based on the results of a needs, risks and vulnerabilities analysis by the country. The populations targeted by this allocation, include displaced persons, returnees and host families. The most vulnerable and critical areas are targeted: Bangassou-Rafai-Zémio; Bambari-Ippy-Bria; Bocaranga-Ngaoundaye-Paoua, Markounda; Bambari-Alindao-Mingala and Kaga-Bandoro-Mbrès. A total of 562,994 people (285,717 women, 277,277 men) will benefit from water, hygiene and sanitation, food security, nutrition , protection, CCCM / Shelter / NFI, education and health interventions.
Central African Republic Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $10 million (Round II allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 3 September 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 10 CAR crisis 2013-18-UF-CAF-31872-NR01bruno1@un.org#Maria Rosaria BrunoFrenchDaniel Edward William Whalley Ham2019-04-01T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:002020-02-26T00:00:00EducationEducation4797178497542925843509325Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene429722892171893457633133077093148986HealthHealth22368235024587021720236004532091190NutritionNutrition512505125549059151140516530Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security386714948188153471167042017538990ProtectionProtection15875214533732818555280444659983927Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management6447308953734258562351229368667102018-10-09T00:00:0061344318-UF-BDI-31878Burundi UF Application Sep 2018 (Natural disasters and repatriation)AfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-04T00:00:002018-09-04T00:00:002018-10-03T00:00:002018-10-09T00:00:005000000.004999296The political crisis in Burundi continues to exacerbate the humanitarian emergency resulting in 3.6 million Burundians in need of assistance; while hosting 73,000 refugees. According to the July 2018 IPC results nearly 100,000 Burundians fall under IPC 4. The level of vulnerability is also due to widespread flooding caused by territorial rains negatively affecting the livelihoods of agriculturalists and damaging some 30% of houses requiring immediate repair.
The CERF UEF application of US$5 million for Burundi is to respond to the multifold of emergencies currently facing the country. The proposed CERF response targets 196,000 individuals across the country and includes support for the repatriation of refugees from Tanzania and Rwanda; people affected by natural disasters; and individuals facing high levels of food insecurity. It consists of seven projects by UNICEF, UNFPA, IOM, FAO, WFP and UNHCR in the Protection, Education, Nutrition, WASH, Food Security and Shelter clusters through a combination of both in kind and cash-based assistance.
Burundi Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $5 million (Round 2 allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 4 September 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 6 Burundi political crisis 2015-202018-UF-BDI-31878-NR02simba@un.org#Lucien SimbaEnglishDaniel Edward William Whalley Ham2019-04-02T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:002019-10-31T00:00:002020-02-07T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene77541603391378808209761404143501281381Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security21175207274190221132217344286684768Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI131954360175551373557301946537020Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture500223802288044834323623719666000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence07373352473781090210975ProtectionProtection00000002018-10-02T00:00:0061444818-UF-BGD-31909Bangladesh UF Application Sep 2018 (refugees)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-04T00:00:002018-09-04T00:00:002018-10-09T00:00:002018-10-15T00:00:0018000000.0018002515The current Rohingya refugee crisis affects directly 1,300,000 persons, of which 900,000 are Rohingya refugees from Bangladesh and 336,000 members of the host communities in Cox’s Bazar district of Bangladesh. Despite a large scale-up of interventions to meet the immediate needs of refugees, they continue facing additional threats and face critical humanitarian conditions. Before the on-going monsoon season, the Inter-Sector Coordination Group (ISCG) estimated that 246,600 individuals were at risk of landslide and/or flooding in both Ukhiya and Teknaf sub-districts of Cox’s Bazar.
This CERF UFE $18 million allocation will focus on the needs of Rohingya refugees facing particularly critical life-threatening situations in the Teknaf and Ukhiya sub-districts of Cox’s Bazar in Bangladesh. The prioritized refugee caseload is directly affected by recurrent landslides and floods, notably due to the monsoon, the topography and soil properties of the site. As access to quality water and to notorious food remains poor, the targeted refugees are moreover at constant risk of being victims of disease outbreaks with epidemic potential and other health emergencies. A total number of 246,600 refugees (48% male; 52% female; including 55% children, 42% adults and 3% elderly) will benefit form joint interventions in Health, WASH and Food Security as well as through a multisector project on Shelter and Protection.
Total envelope: $18 million (Round 2 allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 6 September 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 1018-UF-BGD-31909-NR01henry.glorieux@one.un.org#Henry GlorieuxEnglishMadoka Koide2019-04-08T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:002020-03-11T00:00:00HealthHealth53338361838952159219100073159292248813Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene62840462971091376077957314118093227230Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security9485802617511921174781668934200NutritionNutrition34268736041628329242946162385104013Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector3432028080624003718030420676001300002018-10-08T00:00:0061544118-UF-RWA-31913Rwanda UF Application Sep 2018 (refugees)AfricaRwandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-04T00:00:002018-09-04T00:00:002018-09-26T00:00:002018-10-01T00:00:003000000.003000067Rwanda is currently facing multiple emergencies including the drought in the east, floods in the north and west, as well as refugees from DRC and Burundi. There are 160,000 Burundian and Congolese refugees in Rwanda; some of whom have been in the country since the 1990s and others arriving during the post-election violence in Burundi in 2015.
The Rwanda Inter-Agency Appeal, as part of the DRC Regional Refugee Response Plan requires $57 million. The Rwanda Inter-Agency Appeal, as part of the Burundi Regional Refugee Response Plan requires $74 million. The UN’s humanitarian operations in Rwanda were 11% funded at the time of CERF’s analysis.
Rwanda Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $3 million (Round II allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 4 September 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 3 Burundi political crisis 2015-2020, DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-UF-RWA-31913-NR01deborah.gribaudo@one.un.org#Deborah GribaudoEnglishKatia Petion2019-04-08T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:002020-05-29T17:22:58Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security341093092965038339973794271939136977HealthHealth19987141933418020123209874111075290Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene17322165093383116709155183222766058Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence158801513431014153181422629544605582018-09-25T00:00:0061644018-RR-IND-31935India RR Application Sep 2018 (Floods in Kerala)AsiaIndiaSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-09-05T00:00:002018-09-13T00:00:002018-09-21T00:00:002018-09-25T00:00:005947506.004979186The CERF rapid response application of $5 million is to respond to the impact of flooding in the coastal state of Kerela due to excessive rainfall between June and August 2018. The floods have displaced 1.4 million people, taken over 486 lives and affected a total population of 5.4 million people across the state of Kerela. More than 50,000 houses have been damaged and thousands of individuals have lost their livelihoods due to destruction to crops, stored produce and loss of livestock. In the most affected districts, 1.2 million people are in need of assistance including, 1 million requiring WASH and Health assistance, 24,000 individuals needing support for emergency shelter and NFIs and 30,000 in need of support for their agricultural based livelihoods. A CERF rapid response allocation is sought to provide immediate assistance within the Health, WASH, Food Security and Shelter sectors to meet the needs of the 1.2 million vulnerable individuals. The CERF funds will complement the funds already put forward by the Government of India to support the State of Kerela.18-RR-IND-31935-NR01ranjini.mukherjee@one.un.org#Ranjini MukherjeeEnglishDaniel Edward William Whalley Ham2019-01-11T00:00:002019-02-27T00:00:002019-07-24T00:00:002020-02-26T21:58:23HealthHealth1589225614557203771932576847868780431598420Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1555594000095555681494593843235337821089350Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI00000022592Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture07371737102388823888312592018-09-19T00:00:0061745018-UF-COG-31951Congo UF Application Sep 2018 (conflict)AfricaRepublic of CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-05T00:00:002018-09-05T00:00:002018-10-11T00:00:002018-10-19T00:00:003999127.003976882This CERF UFE $7 million allocation will focus on the emergency response of two crisis: internally displaced people in the South region and refugees from Central African Republic in the North region. Based on the needs in the field, the CERF response will target the IDPs in the districts of Kinkala, Mindouli, Kindamba, Vindza, Kimba, Goma Tse Tse in the Pool department and the refugees in the department of Likouala. A total of 86,577 people (48,496 women, 38,081 men) will benefit from health, nutrition, agriculture, and multi-sector interventions.
Republic of Congo Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $4 million (Round II allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 5 September 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 7 CAR crisis 2013-18-UF-COG-31951-NR01elna.yama@one.un.org#Elna Jocelyne Sandra YamaEnglishKatia Petion2019-04-08T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:002020-02-07T18:08:54HealthHealth802513879219049702265113621358117Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture17973675547232116218942914901NutritionNutrition2004141634201996296649628382Multi-SectorMulti-Sector1080481141891810620969120311392292018-10-10T00:00:0061844418-RR-PER-32095Peru RR Application Sep 2018 (Venezuela regional emergency)AmericasPeruLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-17T00:00:002018-10-09T00:00:002018-10-05T00:00:002018-10-10T00:00:001975196.001975196In response to the increase of the Venezuelan exodus into neighboring countries and beyond, the ERC agreed to allocate up to $1.5 million to Brazil, $1.5 million to Ecuador, and $2 million to Peru. The allocations are in addition to $6.2 million already released to UNHCR and IOM in April to jumpstart their regional operations, including in these three countries. The CERF has also provided $5.9 million to the HCT in Colombia to scale up response efforts to assist arriving Venezuelans.
With this allocation, the UN Country Team in Peru will provide humanitarian assistance to 61,114 Venezuelan migrants and asylum seekers entering the country in vulnerable conditions through the Binational Border Service Centre on the Peruvian side of the northern border (CEBAF Peru), and in Tumbes Region. According to UNCT members, the arrival is the most vulnerable phase in the migration route and people in this stage require urgent response. Health, protection, food assistance, nutrition, and hygiene needs will be addressed covering existing critical gaps, in coordination with state and international present services. The intervention will help Venezuelan migrants and asylum seekers to continue their route and, if staying in the country, to have better conditions to start their social integration. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - Not in use - Migrants Venezuela crisis 2018-18-RR-PER-32095-NR01rebaza@un.org#Ana Maria Rebaza DelgadoEnglishAntje Lehmann2019-01-11T00:00:002019-03-15T00:00:002019-07-05T00:00:002019-07-10T00:00:00HealthHealth1614440060141000129501395019964Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0003282386844196641966Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection12875164942936912538147342727256641NutritionNutrition469536668361478772011198820349Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene638126018982613981731431223294Multi-SectorMulti-Sector8752104051915790331466723700428572018-10-04T00:00:0061944218-RR-ECU-32097Ecuador RR Application Sep 2018 (Venezuela regional emergency)AmericasEcuadorLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-17T00:00:002018-09-18T00:00:002018-10-08T00:00:002018-10-05T00:00:001499917.001499915In response to the increase of the Venezuelan exodus into neighboring countries and beyond, the ERC agreed to allocate up to $1.5 million to Brazil, $1.5 million to Ecuador, and $2 million to Peru. The allocations are in addition to $6.2 million already released to UNHCR and IOM in April to jumpstart their regional operations, including in these three countries. The CERF has also provided $5.9 million to the HCT in Colombia to scale up response efforts to assist arriving Venezuelans.
The CERF rapid response application of US$1.5 million is to respond to the needs of Venezuelan migrants and asylum seekers arriving in Ecuador. The political, humanitarian and economic crisis in Venezuela has caused thousands of individuals to flee into neighbouring South American countries. In 2018, Ecuador has received 657,557 Venezuelans, of which 22% remain in Ecuador and the remainder transit to other countries such as Colombia and Peru. Many of the arriving Venezuelans lack proper shelter, food and medical services and are exposed to various protection concerns including trafficking and sexual exploitation. The CERF allocation seeks to ensure that the lifesaving needs of the Venezuelan migrants are met by guaranteeing access to health, food and essential basic services. It consists of 8 projects implemented by WFP, UNICEF, UNFPA, WHO and UNWOMEN in the Food Security, Protection, Health, WASH and Nutrition clusters. The response will focus on the main points of entry notably in San Miguel and Rumichaca and assist 60,750 individuals. The allocation complements the CERF regional response funding availed to IOM and UNHCR and allows for other urgent projects to expand in the transit site areas. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - Not in use - Migrants Venezuela crisis 2018-18-RR-ECU-32097-NR01galarza@un.org#Pablo GalarzaEnglishAntje Lehmann2019-01-24T00:00:002019-03-18T00:00:002019-07-08T00:00:002019-07-15T00:00:002019-08-07T00:00:00HealthHealth1019697401993621495377585925379189Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2339462052959921573226114418473783Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene332026857301774022210212504355220Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence39149115302168228344515981Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection223312423572168224239247492018-10-03T00:00:0062045218-UF-SDN-32210Sudan UF Application Sep 2018 (food insecurity and malnutrition)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-20T00:00:002018-09-20T00:00:002018-10-17T00:00:002018-10-18T00:00:0020000000.0019997876Sudan continues to confront significant and protracted humanitarian needs. 7.1 million people require humanitarian assistance, including at least 2 million IDPs. The economic situation is leading to higher needs, with up to 6 million people facing food insecurity in the coming months. Sudan also hosts over 760,000 South Sudanese refugees.
The Sudan HRP requirement is US$ 1.2 billion. At the time of the CERF UFE analysis, the HRP was approximately 30% funded.
This UFE CERF application targets approximately 736,482 people in South Kordofan, Blue Nile, North Darfur, Central Darfur, Red Sea, and White Nile. These areas are among the most affected by displacement and IDPs and people in host communities require food security and livelihoods, health, nutrition, WASH, and education responses.
Sudan Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $20 million (Round II allocation: $100 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 20 September 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 818-UF-SDN-32210-NR01elhassan2@un.org#Tarig ElhassanEnglishTeodor Stefan Gherman2019-04-08T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002019-11-30T00:00:002019-12-19T00:00:002020-06-04T16:11:48EducationEducation206691042217112039611832157943290Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture253325910884440263666152087886172326Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security54674461921008667804155664133705234571HealthHealth9692524654834347393167237020330187673660NutritionNutrition254305025430529494968159363108617413Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene418553299674851438543763981493156344Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector285201125539775271522047447626874012018-10-15T00:00:0062144518-RR-LBY-32227Libya RR Application Sep 2018 (Measles)AfricaLibyaNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRMeaslesBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-09-21T00:00:002018-10-01T00:00:002018-10-08T00:00:002018-10-09T00:00:002500000.002500000Since July 2018, Libya is experiencing a steady increase of number of measles cases. As of mid-September, there were a total of 591 cases notified with two deaths. High-level of immunization coverage is essential to interrupt the spread of the disease and save lives. The national health authorities could not mobilize local resources to carry out an outbreak response national campaign due to the political fragmentation, ongoing conflict, insecurity and weaken health system. As the number of cases is increasing with new cases being reported every week, a CERF intervention is necessary. A CERF allocation will enable the country to procure the vaccines, vitamin A and the commodities. CERF will also support the transportation of the goods to the country. UNICEF will coordinate with WHO and the national authorities for the implementation of the national campaign under the coordination and oversight of the health sector working group. Of the 2,750,000 children in need, CERF intervention will cover 1,965,250 most vulnerable children from 6 months to 15 years in the Western and Southern parts of the country. The HCT agreed on one sector of intervention, Health, and UNICEF will be the sole implementer of the response.18-RR-LBY-32227-NR02engborg@un.org#Kasper EngborgEnglishMohit Khubchandani2019-02-28T00:00:002019-03-15T00:00:002019-07-08T00:00:002019-09-16T00:00:00HealthHealth9939490993949971301097130119652502018-10-04T00:00:0062244618-RR-BRA-32278Brazil RR Application Sep 2018 (Venezuela regional emergency)AmericasBrazilLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-09-24T00:00:002018-09-24T00:00:002018-10-08T00:00:002018-10-09T00:00:001500000.001502535In response to the increase of the Venezuelan exodus into neighboring countries and beyond, the ERC agreed to allocate up to $1.5 million to Brazil, $1.5 million to Ecuador, and $2 million to Peru. The allocations are in addition to $6.2 million already released to UNHCR and IOM in April to jumpstart their regional operations, including in these three countries. The CERF has also provided $5.9 million to the HCT in Colombia to scale up response efforts to assist arriving Venezuelans.
The CERF rapid response application of $1.5 million is to respond to the needs of migrants and asylum seekers arriving in Brazil. As of August 2018, more than 150,000 Venezuelans had entered Brazil, half of whom stayed in Brazil and the remaining had transited to other neighboring countries. In recent months, the number of Venezuelans entering through the Northern border has seen an increase and this has placed a strain on the national public services and resulted in increased tensions amongst the host community. The arriving Venezuelans have faced difficulties accessing emergency shelters, food and non-food items, health and insufficient assistance and referral services to facilitate support managing cases of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV). The allocation will support the provision of lifesaving assistance through the implementation of 4 projects in the food, shelter, protection, health and nutrition clusters by IOM, UNICEF, UNFPA and UN Women. The allocation will support 27,000 individuals over a period of six months. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - Not in use - Migrants Venezuela crisis 2018-18-RR-BRA-32278-NR01larissa.leite@one.un.org#Larissa Vieira LeiteEnglishSamir Mahmoud2019-01-11T00:00:002019-03-14T00:00:002019-07-30T00:00:002019-07-30T00:00:002020-05-19T18:38:24Multi-SectorMulti-Sector574641121554281613582573Protection - Human RightsProtection02782780171217121990Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence3601733010931393391251305823989Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection4438044384984049849442Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security597708130553778513222627Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI2982815792871964831062HealthHealth8990899965137110220012018-10-04T00:00:0062344918-RR-ZWE-32288Zimbabwe RR Application Sep 2018 (cholera)AfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-09-24T00:00:002018-10-02T00:00:002018-10-10T00:00:002018-10-15T00:00:003484051.003099371On 6 September, the Ministry of Health and Child Care of Zimbabwe declared a cholera outbreak in the city of Harare. This declaration followed the confirmation of cases in Glenview and Budiriro suburbs of Harare. As of 21 September, a cumulative 5,891 suspected cases (including 83 confirmed cases) were reported in Harare’s high-density areas and other parts of the country, with 38 deaths (36 of which in Harare).
CERF funding is needed to ensure immediate rapid scale-up of cholera outbreak response activities, increasing access to life-saving treatment, awareness of cholera prevention among the affected and at-risk communities while resource mobilization efforts continue. CERF funds will target children, women and men of Harare city, directly benefiting 50,000 people at risk of immediate contamination and 600,000 people at risk of infection, mainly in 10 districts of Harare.18-RR-ZWE-32288-NR01Kanako.Mabuchi@one.un.org#Kanako MabuchiEnglishKatia Petion2019-01-24T00:00:002019-03-14T00:00:002019-07-10T00:00:002019-07-23T00:00:002020-03-10T00:00:00HealthHealth144064149106293170172820163198336018629188Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene663499287515922483366108527191893351117Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security24691678414722882425471388602018-10-08T00:00:0062445418-UF-LBY-32468Libya UF Application Oct 2018 (displacement)AfricaLibyaNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-10-01T00:00:002018-10-15T00:00:002018-10-24T00:00:002018-10-30T00:00:008100000.008105330Conflict in Libya has led to civilian casualties, damage to infrastructure, displacement and deterioration in basic services provision. An estimated 1.1 million people require life-saving assistance and protection, many of whom are migrants, refugees and asylum seekers.
The CERF-funded response will target some 217,000 IDPs, IDP returnees, refugees, migrants and host communities in 11 locations in the East, South and West of Libya. Ten projects will be implemented by FAO, IOM, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNICEF, UNMAS, WFP and UNHCR in the Food Security, Health, Protection, WASH, Emergency Telecommunications and Logistics clusters.
Libya Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $8 million (Round 2 allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 1 October 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 1018-UF-LBY-32468-NR03engborg@un.org#Kasper EngborgEnglishTeodor Stefan Gherman2019-04-02T00:00:002019-08-19T00:00:002020-02-29T00:00:002020-05-18T17:56:22Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security776512787205527448125602000840560HealthHealth37120107711144831232306303086260231091Protection - Mine ActionMine Action160003800054000160003800054000108000ProtectionProtection9313160442535712741132222596351320Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1271412205249199612147872439949318Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture90018742774800561136141352018-10-23T00:00:0062545118-RR-LAO-32635Lao PDR RR Application Oct 2018 (Floods)AsiaLao People's Democratic RepublicSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-10-05T00:00:002018-10-05T00:00:002018-10-17T00:00:002018-10-22T00:00:003526592.003509410The CERF rapid response application of $3.5 million was triggered by the impact of flooding that occurred in August and September 2018. In mid-July the tropical storm Son-Tin flooded 55 districts in 13 out of the 17 provinces in Laos, resulting in a dam outburst in Attapeu Province on 23 July. Following this incident subsequent flooding occurred affecting 116 districts and 2,442 villages in all provinces, resulting in far more widespread and varied effects than the dam outburst. As of 28 September, 133,405 households (648,605 persons) have been affected including 56 fatalities and the evaluation of 17,000 individuals. The flooding has resulted in extensive infrastructure damage including the destruction and/or damage of 2,214 homes, 7,877 wells, 227 schools, 16 hospitals, 487 km of roads and 47 bridges.
As a response to the flooding, the CERF allocation will help support flood affected households in the sectors of Food Security, Livelihoods and Health implemented by UNDP, FAO, WFP and WHO. The allocation will directly assist 136,565 individuals, including 44, 205 with food assistance and livelihoods support and 136,565 with health care including detection of Beriberi cases. The funding will also allow for the repair of more than 17,000 hectares of farm land and removal of UXO unearthered due to the flooding. The CERF allocation will help to kick start the Government of the Lao People's Democratic Republic's $42million Disaster Response Plan aimed at assisting 600,000 individuals.18-RR-LAO-32635-NR01jakob.schemel@one.un.org#Jakob SchemelEnglishMadoka Koide2019-02-13T00:00:002019-03-18T00:00:002019-07-17T00:00:002019-07-31T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security646310024164876249101531640232889Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture12148188403098812023195343155762545HealthHealth6735610446517182165123105806170929342750Early RecoveryEarly Recovery10103156702577392691507824347501202018-10-16T00:00:0062645318-RR-IDN-32543Indonesia RR Application Oct 2018 (Sulawesi earthquake and tsunami)AsiaIndonesiaSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20182018-10-07T00:00:002018-10-07T00:00:002018-10-19T00:00:002018-10-19T00:00:0014679220.0014425020On 28 September, a series of strong earthquakes struck Indonesia’s Central Sulawesi province; the strongest was a 7.4 magnitude earthquake only 10 km deep and with its epicentre close to the provincial capital, Palu. The earthquake triggered a tsunami whose waves reached up to three metres in some areas, striking beaches in Palu and Donggala. The earthquakes, tsunami and resulting liquefaction and landslides have caused significant damage and loss of life in affected areas. As of 7 October, 1,763 people are known to have died following the earthquake and tsunami in Central Sulawesi. A further 2,632 people have been seriously injured and are hospitalized, and 265 people are still missing, according to figures released by Indonesia’s national disaster management agency, BNPB. On 1 October, the Government of Indonesia announced that it would accept offers of international assistance.
In response to the Government’s decision to accept international assistance in identified areas, as well as the sector-specific requests by the line ministries, the Humanitarian Country Team (HCT) in Indonesia developed and launched the Central Sulawesi Earthquake Response Plan on 5 October 2018. The Response Plan (RP) is focused on providing targeted technical assistance in support of the Government-led response in the areas prioritized and requested by Government, including Early Recovery, Education, Food Security, Health, Logistics, Protection, Shelter and Camp Management, and Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH). Targeting some 191,000 of the most vulnterable people among the 537,000 people directly affected by the earthquake, tsunami and landslides / liquefaction, the plan requests US$ 50.5 millon to fund urgent action over the next three months.
On 7 October, the RC for Indonesia submitted a CERF rapid response application for $14.7 million. The CERF funding will be used to kick-start the most urgent, life-saving activities included in the HCT Response Plan launched on 5 October 2018 in the priority areas identified by the Government of Indonesia – Shelter & Camp Management, Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH), Health, Protection, Logistics, Food Security and Early Recovery. At the request of the Resident Coordinator, and as endorsed by the HCT, the funds requested from CERF are to be used in the first three months of the response to target the needs of the most vulnerable people affected by the earthquake, and resulting tsunami and landslides. CERF funds will benefit an estimated 191,000 individuals, including 93,020 women and girls.18-RR-IDN-32543-NR01saiz-omenaca@un.org#Victoria Saiz-OmenacaEnglishMadoka Koide2019-02-14T00:00:002019-03-21T00:00:002019-07-19T00:00:002019-07-22T00:00:002019-10-03T00:00:00Early RecoveryEarly Recovery33825074845624794604708315539Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI7226820015426560782341384129267Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture17783118552963817782118552963759275HealthHealth1160047726919327311132874297185625378898Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1011043310543109387331167122214Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence686492977934986392114419751990Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene37075662551033303648165799102280205610Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management429686391910688739948650711050192119062018-10-17T00:00:0062745518-UF-PRK-32725DPR Korea UF Application Oct 2018 (health)AsiaDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20182018-10-09T00:00:002018-10-19T00:00:002018-10-24T00:00:002018-10-26T00:00:0010000000.0010003768More than 40 per cent (10.3 million) of the population require humanitarian assistance. One in five children is stunted. Over 9 million people lack access to essential health services. A severe shortage of basic drugs persists. The
humanitarian response focuses on the vulnerable, children, and pregnant and lactating women. Some 77 per cent of health assistance and 74 per cent of
nutrition assistance is aimed at children under-five.
On 9 October, the RC DPRK submitted an underfunded emergencies application for $10 million to strengthen the health status of the most vulnerable people in need of assistance, particularly under-five children, pregnant and breast-feeding women, and people suffering from multi drug-resistant tuberculosis. Some 495,760 people are targeted in six provinces through six projects by UNICEF, FAO, WFP and WHO will be implemented in the Health, Nutrition, WASH and Food Security sectors.
Democratic People's Republic of North Korea Underfunded Emergencies submission
Total envelope: $10 million (Round 2 allocation: $80 million for 9 countries)
Grant package received: 9 October 2018
Total # of projects submitted: 618-UF-PRK-32725-NR01prorovskaya@un.org#Olga Prorovskaya EnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-04-01T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:002020-01-31T00:00:002020-07-24T19:22:57Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture557816736223145806174192322545539HealthHealth13574865031200779141419169765311184511963NutritionNutrition126268272912899713209455656187750316747Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene31170311731170311762342018-10-23T00:00:0062845718-RR-NGA-32765Nigeria RR Application Oct 2018 (Cholera)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-10-11T00:00:002018-10-26T00:00:002018-11-02T00:00:002018-11-05T00:00:002451454.002252605As of 15 October 2018, Nigeria has been experiencing its largest Cholera outbreak in recent years with a total of 40,771 suspected cases including 812 deaths and more than 25 per cent of the cases occurring among children aged 5 to 14 years. This overall situation stands in contrast with the total of 18,243 suspected cases reported in the country over the last 3 years between 2015 and 2017.
In the north-east, where the HRP is currently implemented, the states of Borno, Adamawa and Yobe (BAY) have reported a total of 10,468 suspected and confirmed cases of cholera as of week 41. Since the declaration of the outbreak on 5 September in Borno State, more than eighteen Local Government Areas (LGAs) are currently affected. Yobe state has also declared a cholera outbreak in six LGAs. In Adamawa state, 2,498 cases have been reported from 5 LGAs.
In north-west and north-central Nigeria (non-HRP states) the situation is equally alarming. Eight states are more particularly affected by the outbreak with a total of 29,056 suspected and confirmed cases including 570 deaths. The affected states are Bauchi, Zamfara, Katsina, Kano, Sokoto, Niger, Kaduna and Plateau.
Due to the scale of the outbreak, limitations in the current response capacity (both financial and human resources) and existence of critical gaps (e.g. surveillance, case management), the HCT has prioritized a two-pronged approach, based on the respective critical lifesaving gaps identified for each geographical group (HRP and non-HRP states). In the north-east (HRP states), the lifesaving interventions will be implemented within a humanitarian context to scale up a mutli-sectoral approach, including the strengthening of both the WASH and health response in accordance with the HRP objectives. Outside the north-east (non-HRP states), lifesaving interventions will address critical gaps in the health component of the outbreak response to support Government in disease surveillance, early reporting, case management, and risk communication. A CERF intervention is necessary to prevent avoidable deaths and contain the spread of the outbreak.18-RR-NGA-32765-NR02haggarty@un.org#Alta BellEnglishKatia Petion2019-02-28T00:00:002019-04-05T00:00:002019-08-02T00:00:002020-01-17T23:26:35HealthHealth144540151266295806151450147669299119594925Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3350028140616404060032665732651349052018-11-01T00:00:0062945618-RR-NER-32834Niger RR Application Oct 2018 (Cholera)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-10-10T00:00:002018-10-10T00:00:002018-10-24T00:00:002018-10-30T00:00:002626981.002274186The CERF rapid response application of $2.6 million is to respond to the outbreak of cholera in Niger. On 15 July 2018, the Ministry of Health in Niger officially declared a cholera outbreak. As of 1 October, 3,692 cases had been reported including 68 deaths in 12 affected districts. Concerns that the outbreak could further spread are mounting as the country is experiencing the rainy season and an increased number of cases in neighbouring Nigeria. Urgent assistance is required to contain the outbreak and support the health structures in early case detection and improved the quality of surveillance and care.
The CERF allocation will target the 12 affected districts with Health, WASH and UNHAS support implemented through UNICEF, WHO and WFP. The health interventions will target 574,970 individuals whilst the WASH interventions will reach some 177,084 individuals. UNHAS will be utilized to kickstart the response to ensure that the appropriate personnel and supplies are on the ground in a timely manner.18-RR-NER-32834-NR02emanuele.cidonelli@un.org#Emanuele CidonelliEnglishKatia Petion2019-03-06T00:00:002019-03-27T00:00:002019-07-24T00:00:002020-03-05T00:00:00HealthHealth160589121146281735167144126091293235574970Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene45542605901061324653878785125323231455Common Services - LogisticsLogistics00000002018-10-23T00:00:0063045918-RR-VEN-33275Venezuela RR Application Nov 2018 (disruption of services)AmericasVenezuelaLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-11-01T00:00:002018-11-01T00:00:002018-11-23T00:00:002018-11-26T00:00:008996184.009202761Venezuela’s political, social and economic situation has deteriorated over the last two years. The economic crisis is leading to triple digit monthly hyperinflation. Moreover, the loss of oil revenue and imposed economic sanctions have resulted in import reductions that are causing shortages of medical, food and other basic supplies. Production capacities have decreased in most economically productive industries and there is serious disruption of basic services (mainly electricity, water and transport), as a result, the population is facing severe challenges related to health, nutrition and protection.
A CERF allocation is needed to alleviate negative consequences of the crisis for the most vulnerable population. The main CERF activities will be to contain the nutritional deterioration and to reduce its impact particularly on infants, pregnant and lactating women; to help ensure access to treatment and continuity of priority health programs; and to strengthen pre-existing protection networks.
This is the sixth allocation to the Venezuela mixed migratory crisis in 2018. Indeed, in response to the increase of the Venezuelan exodus into neighboring countries and beyond, the ERC allocated up to $5.9 million to Colombia, $1.5 million to Brazil, $1.5 million to Ecuador, and $2 million to Peru. The allocations are in addition to $6.2 million already released to UNHCR and IOM in April 2018 to jumpstart their regional operations, including in these four countries. Venezuela crisis 2018-18-RR-VEN-33275-NR01batistab@un.org#Barbara BatistaEnglishSamir Mahmoud2019-03-05T00:00:002019-04-23T00:00:002019-09-25T00:00:002020-05-19T22:27:15NutritionNutrition6457906457973476968783163147742HealthHealth2085474281056366522448164138566586721295324ProtectionProtection14854534601913736942831514334Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1846282602672221439140643550362225Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence01780178015741071712291140712018-11-21T00:00:0063145818-RR-MDG-33194Madagascar RR Application Nov 2018 (Plague outbreak)AfricaMadagascarEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRUnspecified Health EmergencyBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-11-02T00:00:002018-11-09T00:00:002018-11-20T00:00:002018-11-26T00:00:001000000.001000000From August to 25 October 2018, a total of 97 confirmed and suspected cases of plague, including 9 deaths (case fatality rate 9.3%), have been reported in 22 out of 114 districts in Madagascar. Of the nine deaths registered, five cases were pneumonic and four bubonic. The disease is endemic in Madagascar and the current number of cases is within the annual averages and is still manageable. However, there is concern that due to aggravating factors such an ongoing measles outbreak, the occurrence of cases near populated urban areas, and presidential campaign activities which present opportunities for crowds could increase the risk of spreading the disease. Using the basis of plague cases reported last year, 1,411 plague cases could be reported over the three-month peak (November-January) of this plague season, including 974 pneumonic and 437 bubonic plague cases (for the most optimistic scenario).
A CERF rapid response allocation of US$1 million is needed to support the most urgent and lifesaving activities of the national response plan for the three-month peak of the plague season. The objectives of the CERF response will be: (i) to contain the outbreak in currently affected districts and; (ii) to implement effective early actions to prevent the spread of the outbreak. Priority activities to be implemented will be case management, infection prevention and control, disease surveillance, vector and reservoir control, risk communication, and community engagement. Some 1,460,000 individuals will be assisted over three months. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action18-RR-MDG-33194-NR01rakotoson@un.org#Rija RakotosonEnglishKatia Petion2019-02-28T00:00:002019-04-22T00:00:002019-08-20T00:00:002019-11-08T00:00:00HealthHealth4294157217101151125414373789182120355523546802018-11-16T00:00:0063246018-RR-NGA-33345Nigeria RR Application Nov 2018 (Floods)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20182018-11-30T00:00:002018-12-24T00:00:002018-12-27T00:00:002018-12-26T00:00:004493561.003959223Heavy rains since August 2018 triggered large-scale floods along two major rivers of Nigeria (Niger and Benue), affecting over 2.3 million people in 12 states by 27 October. A state of emergency has been declared in nine states and over 700,000 people have been internally displaced due to the floods, staying in camps and host communities. Government-led and other sectoral assessments revealed an immediate impact on health including rises in infectious disease cases among the affected population, destruction of water and sanitation facilities and services, and widespread damages to social and economic infrastructure. Shelter, food, medicines, and NFIs were noted as priority needs.
The Government has so far allocated US$15 million towards an estimated $34 million requirement for the overall response to the floods. However, field assessments have highlighted critical gaps in the response, including in urgent life-saving interventions, caused by delays in the disbursement of the federal financial assistance and in the deployment of relief materials to the affected population.
This CERF application for $4.5 million aims to support immediate scale up of the response in the sectors of WASH (UNICEF), health (UNFPA and WHO), emergency shelter and NFIs (IOM), and education (UNICEF), targeting some 311,079 flood-affected people in six priority states of Kogi, Anambra, Niger, Rivers, Bayelsa and Delta over six months. The CERF funds will support localized interventions by the appealing agencies in partnership with their government and local implementing partners. The health component of the response will be coordinated with the ongoing cholera response supported by a recent CERF rapid response allocation of $2.3 million to ensure complementarity.
Internal note: The ERC on 16 November agreed to allocate up to $4.5 million under this allocation based on the CERF review of the draft application chapeau submitted on 12 November with an original request for $5.2 million. Given the late timing of the application submission, it was recommended that the allocation would focus on highly prioritized, time-critical interventions that meet life-saving criteria and can be implemented immediately. Upon reviewing the formal application submitted on 30 November, the CERF secretariat on 4 December recommended the RC/HC to withdraw the education project, which was not accompanied with strong justification for prioritization and was neither planned for immediate implementation nor interlinked with other life-saving activities. On 23 December, CERF secretariat was notified of the withdrawal of the education project. This brought down the overall allocation amount to about $4 million, targeting 301,401 beneficiaries.18-RR-NGA-33345-NR03omuga@un.org#Vincent OmugaEnglishTeodor Stefan Gherman2019-04-02T00:00:002019-05-28T00:00:002019-09-27T00:00:002019-10-16T00:00:002020-03-06T00:00:00Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene479954290590900470454205589100180000HealthHealth414464062582071432764241985695167766Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI280819444752367223766048108002018-12-21T00:00:0063346218-RR-COD-33492DR Congo RR Application Dec 2018 (Angolan returnees)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20182018-12-06T00:00:002018-12-17T00:00:002019-01-16T00:00:002019-01-17T00:00:0010045932.009823584Since October 2018, more than 362,097 Congolese have returned to the Democratic Republic of Congo from Angola following the expiration of their legal status in the country. The massive return of this population requires a scale up of assistance to ensure the safe return to their villages of origin. Returnees require emergency assistance to facilitate their return as the majority lack social networks and/or livelihood opportunities in DRC. They will be returning to villages that are already facing significant humanitarian challenges, notably in the Kasai Region, which places a further strain on their ability to be self-sufficient upon arrival.
The HCT in DRC has developed an emergency response plan to: 1) facilitate the actual return process of the affected population to their villages of origin, and 2) provide emergency assistance upon arrival in their villages together with support to the host population. The overall response plan requires US$52 million to support the estimated 656,620 affected individuals (both returnees and host population). The US$10million CERF allocation is aimed to kick start the activities through interventions in Protection, Food Security, Shelter and WASH. The allocation will provide assistance for 200,000 returnees through the implementation of activities over 3 to 6 months. Z - not in use - Returnees DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201818-RR-COD-33492-NR01Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-04-16T00:00:002019-06-20T00:00:002019-10-16T00:00:002020-03-31T00:00:002020-06-04T00:00:00ProtectionProtection10200399505015011050238003485085000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene17262342735153517843251544299794532HealthHealth4010970226110335246144997574589184924Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection177508000257501775080002575051500Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security498011622166025184120961728033882Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1033367731710611119741318532356382019-01-15T00:00:0063446118-RR-HTI-33497Haiti RR Application Dec 2018 (Earthquake)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20182018-12-10T00:00:002018-12-10T00:00:002018-12-27T00:00:002018-12-27T00:00:003292837.003157660A 5.9 magnitude earthquake struck the North-Western, Artibonite and Northern Haitian departments on 6 October 2018 causing significant loss of life and material damage. Initially, the government did not request assistance from the humanitarian community. The national authorities mobilized state resources to provide basic assistance to the affected populations. While the official partial damage assessment of the authorities as at 10 October 2018 showed 18 deaths, 548 wounded and nearly 11,134 families affected, these figures more than doubled as reports from the various municipalities reached the national level. At that point, the government solicited support from national and international organizations. In parallel, there were several socio-political unrests and demonstrations which hindered partners’ efforts to assess the situation. The final official figures issued in late November, indicated a total of 31,500 families were affected, 2,668 houses were destroyed and 29,433 houses damaged, 8 schools were totally destroyed, and 171 severely damaged.
According to various reports and supplementary assessments, the sectors that have been most affected are health, education, shelter and access to water and sanitation. The HC and HCT agreed to solicit CERF rapid response to address unmet critical needs in shelter, education and health.18-RR-HTI-33497-NR02nijimbere@un.org#Alix NijimbereEnglishSamir Mahmoud2019-04-02T00:00:002019-05-29T00:00:002019-09-27T00:00:002019-10-31T00:00:002020-03-25T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4815664511460798390571704028500EducationEducation2806107291329435329965909Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3438132357036056436697239HealthHealth15141874338818881078312671160592018-12-24T00:00:0063546318-RR-LSO-33695Lesotho RR Application Dec 2018 (Drought)AfricaLesothoSouthern AfricaSouthern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20182018-12-27T00:00:002018-12-27T00:00:002019-01-18T00:00:002019-01-22T00:00:005626261.005550533Lesotho has experienced the impact of late onset rains and dry spells between September and November 2018, which has had an effect on the start of the 2018/19 agriculture season. Though, not officially declared an El Nino event, Southern Africa has been experiencing lower than average rainfall that could be the start of El Nino. The situation is further exacerbating underlying health vulnerabilities including prevalence of HIV and malnutrition. Overall, agencies require US$29 million to respond to the immediate life-saving activities and protection of livelihoods for the 320,000 individuals affected (20% of the country’s population) by the drought.
The US$5.4 million CERF application was developed by the UNCT using the Integrated Phase Classification (IPC) of November 2018, early warning information from LMS, FEWSNET, SARCOF, GIEWS, baseline information as well as lessons learned from previous emergencies. The overall objective of the CERF response is to save lives, reduce the impact of the shocks on the well-being of affected population in the four districts that are IPC 3 and above and ensure that vulnerable populations, including women, children, the elderly and people with disabilities have access to adequate food, safe water, and protection during the emergency period. Some 273,635 individuals will be supported over a period of 6 months through the sectors of WASH, food security and agriculture, protection, nutrition and health. Southern Africa drought 2018-202018-RR-LSO-33695-NR01asel.abdurahmanova@one.un.org#Asel AbdurahmanovaEnglishSamir Mahmoud2019-04-22T00:00:002019-08-19T00:00:002019-11-15T00:00:002020-05-19T21:02:09Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1130899922130012060124552451545815Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture199555396073915275055585083355157270NutritionNutrition20578150003557820590400006059096168Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene484879655614504346411104032150443295486ProtectionProtection12202228033500513245426175586290867HealthHealth116535054670177045676337110072019-01-18T00:00:0063646419-RR-RWA-33824Rwanda RR Application Jan 2019 (Ebola readiness)AfricaRwandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20192019-01-10T00:00:002019-01-16T00:00:002019-01-25T00:00:002019-01-31T00:00:001800000.001798007The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) declared a new outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in August 2018, with the epi-centre in North Kivu and Ituri provinces. As of 27 December 2018, at least 593 probable and confirmed cases, including 359 deaths had been reported. WHO has assessed four priority countries at major risk of being affected by the spread of the disease beyond the national borders of the DRC. Rwanda, South Sudan, Uganda, and Burundi are at high risk because of their proximity to the outbreak affected areas and the large-scale movement of goods and people across their border with DRC. The Ministry of Health of Rwanda in close consultation with WHO and partners, has developed an EVD Preparedness and Contingency Plan that outlines priority actions (based on WHO protocols) necessary to ensure operational readiness in the event of an outbreak. Indeed, the Rwanda Ebola Virus Disease Early Action project has been developed in response to the ongoing outbreak of EVD in the DRC to ensure operational readiness capacities in Rwanda to timely detect, respond and contain any potential spread of the outbreak from DRC. On 14 December 2018, the ERC agreed to a provisional allocation of $1.8 million to Rwanda to support national efforts (through the Ministry of Health) to prepare for a potential EVD outbreak. The CERF funds will enable WHO and UNICEF support the joint EVD preparedness and contingency plan to ensure operational readiness capabilities for timely detection and timely response to a potential imported EVD case from DRC to Rwanda.
This CERF allocation is part of a $10 million the ERC allocated end of December 2018 to support Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) readiness activities in Rwanda, Uganda, South Sudan and Burundi. These countries have been assessed by WHO to have the greatest risk of potential spread from DRC. Each country will receive respectively $1.8 million (Rwanda), $3.8 million (Uganda), $2.0 million (South Sudan), and $2.4 million (Burundi). AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Prevention/preparedness/readiness Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201919-RR-RWA-33824-NR01deborah.gribaudo@one.un.org#Deborah GribaudoEnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-04-25T00:00:002019-08-14T00:00:002019-10-25T00:00:002020-01-21T22:06:27HealthHealth1682605156996832525731677883178552534634086715981Multi-SectorMulti-Sector7020006480001350000858000792000165000030000002019-01-25T00:00:0063746519-RR-SSD-33820South Sudan RR Application Jan 2019 (Ebola readiness)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20192019-01-14T00:00:002019-01-14T00:00:002019-01-25T00:00:002019-01-31T00:00:001999493.002015164On 1 August 2018, the Ministry of Health of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) reported an outbreak of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in North Kivu Province. This is the 10th Ebola outbreak in DRC since the virus was discovered in 1976. As of 27 December 2018, at least 593 probable and confirmed cases, including 359 deaths had been reported. WHO has assessed four priority countries at major risk of being affected by the spread of the disease beyond the national borders of the DRC. South Sudan, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi are at high risk because of their proximity to the outbreak affected areas and the large-scale movement of goods and people across their border with DRC. The risk of the disease spreading beyond the borders of the DRC into South Sudan was assessed by WHO on 28 September 2018 as very high. Following this assessment, the government of South Sudan established a coordination and leadership structure while WHO appointed an Incident Manager to coordinate EVD preparedness activities. An initial National Ebola Preparedness Plan of US$16,333,093, covering a period of six months through to March 2019, was developed under the leadership of WHO and MoH. Within the National Plan the requirements of UN agencies amount to US$11,568,822. On 14 December 2018, the ERC agreed to a provisional allocation of $2 million to South Sudan to support national efforts (through the Ministry of Health) to prepare for a potential EVD outbreak. The CERF funds will enable the UN agencies support the joint EVD preparedness and contingency plan to ensure operational readiness capabilities for timely detection and timely response to a potential imported EVD case from DRC to South Sudan.
This CERF allocation is part of a $10 million the ERC allocated end of December 2018 to support Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) readiness activities in Rwanda, Uganda, South Sudan and Burundi. These countries have been assessed by WHO to have the greatest risk of potential spread from DRC. Each country will receive respectively $2.0 million (South Sudan), $1.8 million (Rwanda), $3.8 million (Uganda), and $2.4 million (Burundi). AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Prevention/preparedness/readiness Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201919-RR-SSD-33820-NR01ndiku@un.org#John NdikuEnglishTeodor Stefan Gherman2019-04-30T00:00:002019-08-14T00:00:002019-10-25T00:00:002020-01-18T00:00:00HealthHealth4239612151416391042654132499175153339063Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3910032300714005610042500986001700002019-01-25T00:00:0063846619-RR-YEM-33901Yemen RR Application Jan 2019 (Logistics/UNHAS Scale-Up)AsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-01-15T00:00:002019-01-24T00:00:002019-01-25T00:00:002019-01-31T00:00:0031654000.0031666052The US$32 million CERF allocation for Yemen aims to support the scale up of operations aimed at saving lives in the next 6 months. The scale-up will target 12 million severely food insecure individuals, an increase from 8 million in 2018 and avert famine through an integrated multi-cluster programming in priority districts and responding to increased needs across all sectors, including the massive displacement and expected returns. While the key entry points into the country are still restricted, the current peace process, initiated at the end of 2018, provides a unique humanitarian access opportunity.
The Logistics Cluster, UNHAS and the Emergency Telecommunications Cluster represent the backbone of the humanitarian response in Yemen, providing a common services platform, which enables the humanitarian community to operate. With the CERF funding, the two Clusters and UNHAS will expand their services in response to the additional logistics and telecommunication requirements through the provision of additional cargo and passenger flights, augmentation of the capacity at sea and airports, increased storage and fuel capacity, safe accommodation space and expanded communication services. The Logistics Cluster will expand transport and storage of cargo, including critical items such as medicines, as well as fuel storage capacity and provision at the main hubs in Yemen. In addition, the Logistics Cluster will purchase equipment to overcome logistics bottlenecks at two key entry points, Aden and Sana’a, thus rendering the supply chain of relief items into Yemen more efficient. CERF will also provide critical expansion of services by UNHAS by allowing an increase in the transport of passengers from Amman to Sana’a and an additional route from Amman to Aden. Implementation of the urgent life saving activities would be jeopardized without the increased logistic capacity.
Complementing the CERF Allocation, the Yemen Humanitarian Fund (YHF) is allocating US$75 million for the scale-up of humanitarian programming in IPC 4 and above areas, in IDP collective sites and in response to the large-scale displacement and expected returns. The YHF allocation is closely linked to the CERF Rapid Response allocation as the programmes can only be implemented if common services such as passenger and cargo transport, supply storage and provision and connectivity are in place. The CERF allocation will allow activities to be implemented over 6 months.19-RR-YEM-33901-NR01martiny@un.org#Yannick MartinEnglish2019-04-25T00:00:002019-08-29T00:00:002020-01-30T00:00:002020-10-31T00:00:002021-03-22T09:45:33.733Common Services - LogisticsLogistics00000002019-01-25T00:00:0063946719-RR-MWI-33930Malawi RR Application Jan 2019 (Drought)AfricaMalawiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-01-17T00:00:002019-01-17T00:00:002019-02-09T00:00:002019-02-12T00:00:009999925.0010000426The US$10million CERF allocation for Malawi is in response to the sharp increase in food insecurity affecting the country. The rate of food insecurity has risen sharply in the southern and central parts of country due to rainfall deficits that resulted in below-average 2018 main and winter (irrigated maize) harvests as well as an outbreak of Fall Armyworm (FAW). Production capacity has been reduced due to consecutive dry spells, an outbreak of Fall Armyworm, low agriculture prices for cash crops and reduced production capacity of maize (a staple food crop) by 28 percent, down 20.3% compared to the 5-year average. An estimated 3.3 million people are facing crisis or emergency food insecurity (IPC Phase 3 and 4). The Government of Malawi together with UN agencies has developed a US$105.6 million response plan.
The CERF allocation aims to kick start the lean season humanitarian response through the sectors of food security, nutrition, WASH, health and protection. The allocation will complement the efforts of the Government of Malawi who have provided some US$27 million of in-kind maize support for targeted households. The allocation will allow WFP, UNICEF, WHO and UNFPA to support some 200,000 individuals in 9 targeted districts over 6 months. Southern Africa drought 2018-202019-RR-MWI-33930-NR01rani.marchal@one.un.org#Rani MarchalEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-05-17T00:00:002019-08-13T00:00:002019-11-30T00:00:002020-05-18T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security202267194176396443210357202267412624809067HealthHealth344937450419433621780714428886231NutritionNutrition158004322201221724676822492845050Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence4200311773176120408804700054317Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1330401003622334021384691044592429284763302019-02-07T00:00:0064046819-RR-BDI-33879Burundi RR Application Jan 2019 (Ebola readiness)AfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20192019-01-17T00:00:002019-01-29T00:00:002019-02-14T00:00:002019-02-15T00:00:002400000.002384881The Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) declared a new outbreak of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) in August 2018, with the epi-centre in North Kivu and Ituri provinces. WHO has assessed four priority countries at major risk of being affected by the spread of the disease beyond the national borders of the DRC. Burundi, Rwanda, South Sudan, and Uganda are at high risk because of their proximity to the outbreak affected areas and the large-scale movement of goods and people across their border with DRC. The Government of Burundi, with its technical and financial partners, has put in place an Ebola Contingency Plan (ECP) to be prepared for the eventual spread of the disease from DRC. The most likely scenario developed in the ECP is the spreading of EVD in Burundi south of the epicenter and leading to the management of at least five cases crossing the border at once. On 14 December 2018, the ERC agreed to a provisional allocation of US$2.4 million to Burundi to support national efforts (through the Ministry of Health) to prepare for a potential EVD outbreak. The CERF funds will enable the UNCT support the joint EVD preparedness and contingency plan to ensure operational readiness capabilities for timely detection and timely response to a potential imported EVD case from DRC to Burundi.
This CERF allocation is part of a $10 million the ERC allocated end of December 2018 to support Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) readiness activities in Burundi, Rwanda, Uganda, and South Sudan. These countries have been assessed by WHO to have the greatest risk of potential spread from DRC. Each country will receive respectively $2.4 million (Burundi), $1.8 million (Rwanda), $3.8 million (Uganda), and $2.0 million (South Sudan). AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Prevention/preparedness/readiness Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201919-RR-BDI-33879-NR01simba@un.org#Lucien SimbaEnglishDaniel Edward William Whalley Ham2019-05-17T00:00:002019-09-20T00:00:002019-12-03T00:00:002020-01-27T00:00:002021-03-10T17:00:42.987HealthHealth773952659261143321380226868304414853122918525Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene43482798560914204364638161014598147841428988502019-02-12T00:00:0064146919-RR-PAK-33969Pakistan RR Application Jan 2019 (Drought)AsiaPakistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-01-18T00:00:002019-01-29T00:00:002019-02-21T00:00:002019-02-21T00:00:0011386429.0010280648Below average rainfall during the monsoon season of 2018 in Pakistan, particularly in Sindh and Balochistan provinces, set off severe and moderate drought conditions, resulting in acute shortages of water and food affecting an estimated 4.7 million people across 26 districts of these provinces. The Government has channelled some $10 million for immediate in-kind assistance, and requested the HC/RC to extend the UN support to undertake a coordinated assessment and response.
A multi-sector needs assessment carried out by National Disaster Consortium – led by IOM in collaboration with UN agencies and NGO partners – in November 2018 found 32 per cent of the assessed households to be severely food insecure, overall reduction of crop cultivation by 34 per cent and livestock mortality rates of up to 58 per cent. The National Nutrition Survey conducted in December 2018 also revealed an alarmingly high malnutrition rates among children under five and pregnant and lactating women that were in some areas twice the global emergency threshold.
This CERF application for $11.4 million aims to support provision of urgent life-saving humanitarian assistance to in the sectors of food security (FAO, WFP), health (WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA), nutrition (UNICEF, WFP, WHO), WASH (UNICEF, WHO) and protection/GBV (UNFPA), targeting 412,410 drought-affected people in two prioritized districts of Tharparkar (Sindh province) and Killa Abdullah (Balochistan province) over six months. The CERF funds will support the Government’s overall drought response with an estimated financial requirement of $156 million and will be complemented by a $3 million reserve allocation from the country-based pooled fund as well as an existing nutrition programme supported by the World Bank and other international assistance.
Internal note: The ERC on 2 January agreed to allocate $8-10 million under this allocation based on the CERF review of the concept note submitted on 14 December (followed by a few revisions, the latest of which was received on 28 December) with an original request for $20 million. Upon reviewing the formal application submitted on 18 January, the CERF secretariat on 23 January recommended the RC/HC to reprioritize the activities to be included in the application, reducing the overall request amount to $10 million. On 29 January, a revised application was submitted with a reduced request amount of $10.3 million, targeting 412,410 beneficiaries under the same proposed sectors (WHO's WASH activities were integrated into its health project).19-RR-PAK-33969-NR01iqbalf@un.org#Fatima IqbalEnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-05-22T00:00:002019-08-16T00:00:002019-12-18T00:00:002020-12-29T00:00:002021-03-11T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture49635942341438694467984825129504273373Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security10201111181321382493514115236208750422574HealthHealth423001403556335400342721367247123582NutritionNutrition2406012212528124398315855598381264Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence86837651163347198253453254348877Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene735618294815650976558863311628893193982019-02-19T00:00:0064247019-RR-UGA-33993Uganda RR Application Jan 2019 (Ebola readiness)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20192019-01-21T00:00:002019-01-29T00:00:002019-03-01T00:00:002019-03-01T00:00:003800000.004304763On 1 August 2018, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) declared an Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) outbreak in North Kivu Province. As of 8 January 2019, 628 Ebola cases (580 confirmed, 48 probable) with 383 deaths have been reported. The outbreak affects provinces and villages in between 30 and 100 kilometres from the Uganda/DRC border. The risk of the disease spreading beyond the border of the DRC into Uganda was assessed by WHO as very high due to Uganda’s proximity to the epicentres of the outbreak, the high-volume of cross-border movements between DRC Ebola-affected provinces and Uganda, and the influx of Congolese refugees to Uganda due to continued unpredictable security situation in North Kivu and Ituri provinces affected by the outbreak. The Government of Uganda responded swiftly to the threat by strengthening preparedness and readiness actions. The Ministry of Health activated the National Task Force for Ebola and revised the Uganda Ebola Preparedness and Response Plan. The UN agencies requirements for the EVD Readiness activities in Uganda amount to $28 million.
On 14 December 2018, the ERC agreed to a provisional allocation of $3.8 million to Uganda to support national efforts (through the Ministry of Health) to prepare for a potential EVD outbreak. The CERF funds will enable the UN agencies support the joint EVD preparedness and contingency plan to ensure operational readiness capabilities for timely detection and timely response to a potential imported EVD case from DRC to Uganda.
This CERF allocation is part of a $10 million the ERC allocated end of December 2018 to support Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) readiness activities in Rwanda, Uganda, South Sudan and Burundi. These countries have been assessed by WHO to have the greatest risk of potential spread from DRC. Each country will receive respectively 3.8 million Uganda, $2.0 million (South Sudan), $1.8 million (Rwanda), and $2.4 million (Burundi). On 10 January 2019, the ERC allocated an additional $500,000 to WFP for the establishment of a Common Logistics Services Regional Staging Area in Entebbe and Kampala, in Uganda. This project was included in the Uganda application. AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Prevention/preparedness/readiness Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201919-RR-UGA-33993-NR01asel.abdurahmanova@one.un.org#Asel AbdurahmanovaEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-06-10T00:00:002019-10-02T00:00:002019-12-01T00:00:002019-12-15T00:00:002020-07-02T13:35:45HealthHealth4079583305587385164394313584227978531536369Common Services - LogisticsLogistics00000002019-02-27T00:00:0064347119-RR-COG-34189Congo RR Application Feb 2019 (Assistance for DRC Refugees )AfricaRepublic of CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-02-06T00:00:002019-02-18T00:00:002019-03-01T00:00:002019-02-28T00:00:002995361.002987422According to a report dated 16 January 2019 from the United Nations Office for Human Rights, inter-ethnic conflicts in early December 2018 caused nearly 890 deaths in the Mai-Ndombe department of northwestern DRC. Following the fighting, an estimated 16,000 asylum seekers arrived in the Republic of Congo, most of them are women and children and are located in the areas of Makotipoko, Bouemba and Mpouya (Plateau Department). On 18 December 2018, a first joint mission of the Government of the Republic of Congo and the United Nations System visited Bouemba and Makotipoko and found urgent needs in terms of shelter, access to drinking water and hygiene and sanitary infrastructure, food as well as several cases of malnutrition. On 27 December 2018, due to the continue influx of asylum seekers from DRC, the Government of the Republic of Congo officially requested the support of the United Nations System and its partners.
A six-month humanitarian response plan has been developed covering the sectors of Protection, Health, Nutrition, Food Security, Shelter and NFI, and WASH for a total amount of US$ 10,451,640. This CERF allocation of US$ 2,995,361 will cover the health, protection, nutrition, and food security of 16,000 asylum seekers and 10,000 members of the host population for six months. Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201819-RR-COG-34189-NR01cyprien.balaya@undp.org#Cyprien BalayaFrenchKatia Petion2019-06-10T00:00:002019-10-15T00:00:002019-12-01T00:00:002020-07-02T16:30:54Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1548249940471857254844058452Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1104505601403254651025Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security31671350451737741765553910056HealthHealth5531466510196888081201700027196NutritionNutrition8890889140560020052894ProtectionProtection1548249940471857254844058452Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene353824305968440832037611135792019-02-26T00:00:0064547319-RR-ZWE-34298Zimbabwe RR Application Feb 2019 (Drought)AfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-02-11T00:00:002019-02-11T00:00:002019-03-12T00:00:002019-03-13T00:00:0010034144.0010050789CERF received a request from Zimbabwe for an allocation of US$10 million to respond to the impacts of the drought and economic crisis experienced by the country causing high rates of food insecurity. The request stems from the results of the Zimbabwe Vulnerability Assessment 2018 which demonstrated that the number of severely food insecure people was expected to reach 2.4 million by March 2019 (hunger peak period), translating to 28% of the rural population. Currently the country has 11 districts with a food insecurity prevalence above 40% and another 11 districts ranging between 30% and 39%. At the same time, access to basic services and particularly healthcare has become increasingly challenging as the economic circumstances worsen.
As a response, the Government together with UN agencies issued a Flash Appeal for US$ 234 million to support the 4.3 million people in need of humanitarian assistance of which 2.2 million will be targeted for humanitarian assistance. The CERF allocation of US$ 10 million aims to implement time-critical activities in the 11 districts most affected by food insecurity, in nine provinces across Zimbabwe. The projects included in the proposal will assist 271,942 people with life-saving assistance, including food, health, nutrition, WASH and protection services. Southern Africa drought 2018-202019-RR-ZWE-34298-NR01Kanako.Mabuchi@one.un.org#Kanako MabuchiEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-06-14T00:00:002019-08-27T00:00:002019-12-12T00:00:002020-03-10T00:00:002020-07-02T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture11457119772343412412128312524348677Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security377803793775717376234407781700157417HealthHealth27184182514543528211194544766593100NutritionNutrition2269022692458845348699289261Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection8391155199421244553161776127703Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0005030150922012220122Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene42316425828489843486642031076891925872019-03-08T00:00:0064647619-UF-MDG-34350Madagascar UF Application Feb 2019 (Drought and Measles)AfricaMadagascarEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20192019-02-13T00:00:002019-02-13T00:00:002019-03-14T00:00:002019-03-14T00:00:005000000.004998919Since October 2018, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) showed 890,000 people in Acute Food and Livelihood Crisis including 460,000 in Humanitarian Emergency (IPC-4) requiring immediate multisectoral assistance. Additionally, since October 2018, a measles outbreak was declared in Madagascar. This is the country’s worst measles outbreak in more than a decade. As of 25 January 2019, a total of 33,877 cases were recorded, including 561 laboratory-confirmed cases and 139 registered deaths. The epidemic is affecting all regions of the country with around 19 million children and adolescents at risk. The Government and its partners have elaborated two different plans to address the two emergencies. The total requirements for the drought response is US$ 32.4 million and the one for the measles is US$ 11 million. Both plans cover a six-month period until May 2019. The Madagascar country team has proposed CERF funds to support the drought response in two of the most affected districts and the measles response at the national level.
The UNCT suggested the US$5 million in CERF underfunded funds to target 460,000 highly food insecure individuals and 1,636,000 most vulnerable children (9 months – 9 years) at risk of measles. The strategy would cover the sectors of food security and livelihood, WASH, nutrition, and health for nine months. Southern Africa drought 2018-202019-UF-MDG-34350-NR01rakotoson@un.org#Rija RakotosonFrenchInga Christina Mueller2019-10-15T00:00:002020-03-31T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:002020-07-20T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture10875228753375016875243754125075000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security252363091256148265733240958982115130HealthHealth84834841502889850894999428179378161827666Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector04654650385385850NutritionNutrition282316281191042938255592849747601Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5120273078507805404511850197002019-03-12T00:00:0064747419-RR-BFA-34491Burkina Faso RR Application Feb 2019 (Intercommunal violence-Displacement)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-02-20T00:00:002019-02-20T00:00:002019-03-12T00:00:002019-03-13T00:00:004000000.003998647Burkina Faso declared a state of emergency in several northern provinces on 31 December following an increase in attacks by armed groups, particularly near the border with Mali. The violence forced the closure of more than 1,100 schools, depriving around 150,000 children of education, while some 120,000 people have no access to medical care as health centres in the violence-affected regions have closed or provide only minimal services. In addition, around 676,000 people are at risk of food insecurity, and 130,000 children are threatened by severe acute malnutrition this year. In total, over 100,000 people have been uprooted from their homes, predominantly in Est, Nord, Centre-Nord and Sahel regions.
The CERF US$4 million allocation is in support of Burkina Faso’s $100 million emergency response plan, which was launched in February by the Government and the humanitarian community. The funds will boost urgent UN assistance in the provision of food, shelter, non-food items, water, sanitation and hygiene services and health and protection services for 25,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) in four sites, and 5,000 people in host communities in the Centre-Nord and Sahel regions. It will also support services for over 15,500 women and girls. CERF will support the interventions of UNHCR, WFP, UNICEF, UNFPA, WHO and IOM.19-RR-BFA-34491-NR01knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonEnglishDaniel Edward William Whalley Ham2019-06-14T00:00:002019-09-25T00:00:002019-12-12T00:00:002020-03-03T00:00:002021-05-04T16:54:59.22Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security9685389113576943054941492428500HealthHealth27743144384218128049165454459486775ProtectionProtection1668071852386516680107782745851323Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection15144361950156364622094159Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence17560105602812016850133153016558285Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI9221535614577862965461517529752Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene80575786138438636534113977278202019-03-08T00:00:0064847519-RR-CUB-34583Cuba RR Application Feb 2019 (Tornado)AmericasCubaLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-02-23T00:00:002019-02-25T00:00:002019-03-13T00:00:002019-03-18T00:00:001999221.001995221In late evening of 27 January, a category 5 tornado of the Enhanced Fujita Scale (EFS) touched down in Cuba. For 30 minutes, winds with speed of up to 300 km/hour crossed Cuba destroying houses, apartment buildings, hospitals, clinics, schools, electric and telecommunication infrastructures, small and medium industries and harbor infrastructures. Of the affected population living in the five hardest-hit municipalities, there are at least 58,340 people considered as highly vulnerable. This includes, children under age five, pregnant women and adults over age 65. Some 31,500 people completely lost or partially lost their homes. Preliminary estimates indicate some 7,872 homes are severely impacted.
The in-country Plan of Action was informed by rapid needs assessments, field visits, and close dialogue with national and local authorities and is targeting the 253,682 most affected individuals within the five affected municipalities for a total of $14 million. The CERF response will support key life-saving activities for 60,000 of the most affected people. Sudden Onset19-RR-CUB-34583-NR01ydoime@yahoo.com#Yaima DoimeadiosEnglish2019-06-19T00:00:002019-08-26T00:00:002019-12-13T00:00:002020-01-13T00:00:002020-07-30T15:01:50EducationEducation767023179017368767813516036Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI187362998172218579591014418316Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security475613507182635136146491978538048HealthHealth661318752253656336283353467160036Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene116949126081107753226399124802019-03-12T00:00:0064947719-RR-SSD-34983South Sudan RR Application Mar 2019 (IDP returns)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-03-13T00:00:002019-03-13T00:00:002019-04-04T00:00:002019-04-03T00:00:0010998536.0010917832Recently revitalized peace process in South Sudan offers the prospect of new opportunities in 2019 for South Sudan’s women, men and children. As a consequence of the increased hope for peace along with some positive signs of change such as improved security and community dialogues, there is evidence that some IDPS are returning home, and that others in Protection of Civilian (PoC) sites, collective centres and spontaneous settlements across South Sudan want to return home. This ranges from between 6 per cent to 43 per cent of households (Sept 2018 – IDP Profiling for Solutions, POC and Urban Sites, UNHCR). About 17,500 IDPs have already returned to In Leer, Koch, and Mayendit (Unity region) between December 2018 and January 2019 alone. Needs of returnees are high, as many do not have access to basic services including education, health care, and access to water or livelihood opportunities. The return of civilians to their homes brings additional challenges in the form of housing, land, and property issues and potential for increased inter- and intra-communal conflict.
The CERF allocation of US$11 million against is requested to address the needs of IDP returnees through household/individual assistance and through basic services in areas of return. South Sudan crisis 2013-19-RR-SSD-34983-NR02ndiku@un.org#John NdikuEnglishTeodor Stefan Gherman2019-07-09T00:00:002019-09-11T00:00:002020-01-04T00:00:002020-03-03T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management13725112552498041837135825541980399EducationEducation751023777473580167374711494Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture199584822768185171927212389315157500Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security224763371456190274714120668677124867HealthHealth234253380857233285443575364297121530NutritionNutrition2496381123307531064125444360876683ProtectionProtection308001980050600363002310059400110000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection59241295721963082151845915678Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence8023080230139361393621959Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI20200177993799927264282395550393502Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene78174529123468153600114154265002019-04-01T00:00:0065048319-RR-SDN-35023Sudan RR Application Mar 2019 (economic crisis and food insecurity)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20192019-03-14T00:00:002019-04-23T00:00:002019-04-18T00:00:002019-04-18T00:00:0026362821.0026362821Alerted by the deteriorating economic crisis and resulting food insecurity affecting Sudan, the ERC on 11 January advised that a meaningful CERF allocation of $25-30 million be considered to respond to urgent humanitarian needs in the country. A subsequent Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) analysis report found an estimated 5.7 million people to be in crisis (IPC 3) or emergency (IPC 4) levels of food insecurity in the October-December 2018 period. The number was expected to increase to nearly 5.8 million in the January-March 2019 period. The severe food insecurity has been driven by an escalation in food prices that have more than doubled in the past year, including the price of the staple crop sorghum which hit more than 230 percent above the five-year average. Beyond food insecurity, the economic crisis had a serious impact on all humanitarian sectors, forcing households that are unable to afford food to spend less on medical services, agricultural inputs and other basic needs, and resort to negative coping mechanisms.
This CERF application for $26.5 million aims to support provision of urgent life-saving humanitarian assistance in the food security and livelihoods (FAO, UNDP), nutrition (UNICEF, WFP, WHO), health (WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA) and WASH (UNICEF, IOM, WHO) sectors, targeting some 1,052,557 people in 19 prioritized localities across 7 states over 6 months. The CERF funds will support the most time-critical elements of the forthcoming 2019 Humanitarian Response Plan, which requires $1 billion to support some 4.3 million of at least 5.5 million people in need of humanitarian assistance in 2019. The CERF allocation will be complemented by the concurrent Sudan Humanitarian Fund Standard Allocation of some $20 million, which will jointly target the prioritized localities ensuring strategic synergies with the CERF funds.
Internal note: The ERC on 6 February agreed to a provisional allocation amount of $25 million under this allocation based on the CERF review of the concept note submitted on 4 February with an original request for $30 million. This was followed by a revised concept note requesting $25 million, received on 13 February, and a further request on 22 February for an additional $1.8 million to cover IOM’s WASH project. Upon reviewing the formal application submitted on 14 March, the CERF secretariat recommended the RC/HC to reprioritize some of the proposed activities under the application, while appreciating the provisional allocation amount of $25 million.19-RR-SDN-35023-NR01elhassan2@un.org#Tarig ElhassanEnglishTeodor Stefan Gherman2019-07-18T00:00:002019-11-22T00:00:002020-02-04T00:00:002020-06-04T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture115550169484285034115550176794292344577378HealthHealth1337584216115553691575184981846557021211071NutritionNutrition423470423474527898859144137186484Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2306732098284405012552852305144857999263002019-04-16T00:00:0065149119-UF-UKR-35074Ukraine UF Application Mar 2019 (conflict)EuropeUkraineEastern EuropeEastern EuropeUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-03-15T00:00:002019-03-15T00:00:002019-05-07T00:00:002019-05-16T00:00:005998506.006003065The active armed conflict in eastern Ukraine continues to be critical, with 5.2 million Ukrainians affected. Of this, 3.5 million require humanitarian assistance and protection, which is a three per cent increase from 2018 due to widespread mine contamination, escalating psychological trauma and the lack of access to basic services . 279 civilian casualties were recorded in 2018 including 55 deaths, with shelling, small arms fire and landmines and explosive remnants of war (ERW) being the main causes. The majority of people in need live in the two conflict-affected provinces of Donetska and Luhanksa – which has a 427-km-long ‘contact line’ dividing the region into two. The crossings of the contact line has increased by 15 per cent in 2018 compared to 2017, which is an average of 1.1 million crossings every month. Over half of the people crossings are over 60 years old – with most being female. Civilians are forced to regularly suffer long delays, risks from the hostilities and undignified conditions to maintain family links and access basic services.
The $6 million CERF UFE allocation will address the urgent unmet needs humanitarian and protection needs of an estimated 180,000 people in NGCA, through multi-sectoral programming. The CERF allocation will enable a continuation and expansion of critically-needed basic humanitarian service provision and life-saving activities in NGCA in the area of education, health, protection, emergency livelihoods, emergency shelters, including winterization, and WASH services. CERF will be also strengthen humanitarian response for an estimated 70,000 people in hard-to-reach areas along the contact line, in GCA including essential service delivery and protection and through using cash transfers targeted at the most vulnerable. Thirdly, the CERF allocation would also be utilized to early jumpstart the winterization programming, to ensure an adequate coverage ahead of the harsh 2019-2020 winter.19-UF-UKR-35074-NR01paul11@un.org#Jock PaulEnglish2019-10-21T00:00:002020-02-10T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:002021-03-11T06:14:30.58EducationEducation63450634559580595812303Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture91826843602856375846148216HealthHealth11709483326004117784147303165087225128ProtectionProtection048048007207201200Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection128366891284558827182589096217551Protection - Human RightsProtection33046604990440455049909980Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI494365941535776456703311186Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene29874584928836633776703581041341925002019-05-03T00:00:0065247919-RR-SOM-34946Somalia RR Application Mar 2019 (Drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-03-15T00:00:002019-04-10T00:00:002019-04-10T00:00:002019-04-11T00:00:0011946861.0011946861Despite some improvements in the overall humanitarian situation, significant needs persist in parts of Somalia. An estimated 2.6 million people remain internally displaced, either in rural areas or in informal settlements surrounding urban areas. Results from the 2018 Post-Deyr (October-December) seasonal Food Security and Nutrition Assessment indicate that 4.9 million Somalis, an increase from 4.6 million half a year ago, face acute food insecurity and will require humanitarian assistance and protection through mid-2019. Among these are 1.5 million people whose conditions are expected to deteriorate from Stressed (IPC Phase 2) to Crisis (IPC Phase 3) or worse between February and June due to the impact of below-average 2018 Deyr seasonal rainfall (October to December) compounded by the lingering effects of destitution and displacement from the 2016-2017 drought. In addition, 903,100 children under the age of five years will likely face acute malnutrition in 2019, including 138,200 who are likely to be severely malnourished. Overall, almost half of the people in Crisis and Emergency resides in Somalia and Puntland and require humanitarian assistance to reduce food consumption gaps and save livelihoods until the onset of the Gu rains when conditions improve. Internally displaced persons (IDPs) and poor rural households are particularly vulnerable, struggling to feed their families with diminished income.
This CERF allocation of US$12 million is to target the most critical areas in the north of Somalia where the severely food insecure population is at the highest risk of sliding from Crisis (IPC3) to Emergency (IPC4). Communities will receive assistance in the sectors of Food Security, Health, Nutrition and WASH.19-RR-SOM-34946-NR01patrick.david@un.org#Patrick Francis Pascal DavidEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-07-12T00:00:002019-09-24T00:00:002020-01-10T00:00:002020-07-20T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture24839209434578224154203644451890300Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security10920134162433610920134162433648672HealthHealth242612607250333293144506074374124707NutritionNutrition1619501619517476327965027266467Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3645125770622213760836508741161363372019-04-09T00:00:0065348019-UF-TCD-35117Chad UF Application Mar 2019 (Multiple)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20192019-03-19T00:00:002019-03-19T00:00:002019-04-12T00:00:002019-04-15T00:00:0010999882.0010979313In 2019, internal and regional political, military and socioeconomic challenges will continue to contribute to the vulnerability and suffering of millions of people in need of humanitarian assistance in Chad. According to the HRP, 3.7 million individuals will be food insecure during the lean season expected in June-August 2019, of which more than 500,000 are expected to be in IPC 3 and above. In Eastern Chad, food security, nutrition and access to water continues to be a challenge for the 300,000 refugees from Sudan and the host communities. Whilst in the South, both the over 100,000 refugees from CAR and the host population continue to experience high rates of food insecurity and malnutrition. The 2019 HRP requirement is $500 million.
Based on the multiple humanitarian challenges facing Chad, the HCT has proposed the CERF UFE to focus on prevailing food insecurity and nutrition issues in the East and Southern parts of the country. The proposed response aims to address the most urgent needs in the sectors of Food Security and Nutrition together with complementary interventions in WASH, protection and education; and for UNHAS activities, a key lifeline to reaching the most affected areas in Chad. The UFE allocation will help to reach some 782,599 individuals over 9 months. CAR crisis 2013-, Boko Haram crisis 2014-19-UF-TCD-35117-NR01holdsworth@un.org#Belinda HoldsworthFrench2019-10-21T00:00:002020-04-07T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-07-06T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture36183731734949834606958916938Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security6333658612919686177081456927488HealthHealth472060472064893104893196137Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector14045984414224873136320134398270718495591NutritionNutrition101951331032810612471065920987ProtectionProtection266182247549093131465157156288621337714Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene35129585499367837681638031014841951622019-04-11T00:00:0065448419-UF-HND-34980Honduras UF Application Mar 2019 (Drought)AmericasHondurasLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-03-19T00:00:002019-03-19T00:00:002019-04-18T00:00:002019-04-23T00:00:002999994.002999924Since April 2018, Honduras has experienced erratic rainfalls which have resulted in prolonged dry spells during the most critical phases of staple crops growth. These dry spells severely affected five departments of the “Dry Corridor” of Honduras: Choluteca, La Paz, Francisco Morazán, Valle and El Paraíso. In August 2018, the Honduran Council of Ministers declared a state of emergency in 12 departments. The production losses of basic grains in the first 2018 cycle (Primera) was greater than 70 per cent for more than half of the producers in the Dry Corridor, with more than 75% of households losing their food reserves. A food security assessment carried out late in 2018 identified 525,000 people affected by various levels of food insecurity and showed that 40% of households had a decreased quantity of water compared to the same time of the year in 2017 which could leads to higher exposure to water-borne diseases threats .
The Government, with the support of the HCT, developed an action plan to respond to the immediate needs of 65,500 food insecure households in 74 municipalities of Honduras over a 6-month period. The plan focused on providing food assistance to affected families but also considered provision of irrigation systems and rehabilitation of water basing. WASH interventions supported the implementation of the plan, through safe access to WASH services.
The CERF application includes three projects to support the Government’s response in providing immediate life-saving and life-sustaining assistance to the 81,160 affected persons (23,160 boys, 23,913 girls, 12,987 men, and 21,100 women, including 873 disabled people). The CERF projects will mitigate the exposure to GBV of at least 1,090 women and girls, through coming their access to water closer. The humanitarian partners have prioritized the most time-critical life-saving activities in the sectors of Food Security (food assistance and livelihood/agriculture assistance) and WASH for a total amount of 2,999,994 USD.19-UF-HND-34980-NR01palmae@un.org#Erlin PalmaEnglishSamir Mahmoud2019-10-21T00:00:002020-02-17T00:00:002020-03-31T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture21033905600826945004769813706Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security18969163003526921391245004589181160Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene78174977127948499596014459272532019-04-17T00:00:0065548519-UF-COL-35000Colombia UF Application Mar 2019 (Conflict)AmericasColombiaLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20192019-03-19T00:00:002019-03-19T00:00:002019-04-23T00:00:002019-04-30T00:00:008000000.007991845As presented in the Colombia Humanitarian Needs Overview (HNO) 2019, the convergence of emergencies related to conflict, increasing armed violence, and natural and man-made disasters has led to a total of 5.1 million people in needs of humanitarian assistance in Colombia in 268 of the 1,110 municipalities. The areas with the highest concentration of humanitarian impact are the Venezuelan border region (Norte de Santander and Arauca), the Ecuadorian border region (Nariño), the Pacific coast and border with Panama (Chocó) and the northwest of the country. Of the total 5.1 million people in need in Colombia, the 2019 HRP 2019 targets 1.3 million people, with US$192.3 million requested in funding. The target population is disaggregated as follows: 102,720 IDPs, 272,971 in recipient communities, 459,558 victims of natural disasters, 464,751 people in need from other groups including mine victims, sexual violence victims, victims of attacks against the civilian population, confinement victims and victims of movement restrictions. The 8 prioritized sectors in HRP are protection; food security and nutrition; early recovery; education in emergencies; WASH; shelter; and coordination.
This CERF application for $8 million aims to support provision of life-saving humanitarian assistance to some 97,774 people in the departments of Nariño, Choco, Arauca and Norte Santander over a period of nine months. CERF funded interventions will be implemented within the sectors of food security and livelihoods (WFP and FAO), Health (WHO, UNICEF and UNFPA), WASH (UNICEF), Education in Emergencies (UNICEF) and Protection (UNHCR and UNWomen), including GBV (UNFPA) and Mine-Risk Education (UNMAS). The CERF UFE prioritization will support two of the 2019 HRP strategic objectives, namely to save and protect lives and prevent and mitigate protection risks.19-UF-COL-35000-NR01Claudia Rodriguez Burrell#Claudia Rodriguez BurrellEnglishTeodor Stefan Gherman2019-10-22T00:00:002020-02-10T00:00:002020-03-31T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:002021-03-10T00:00:00EducationEducation290080037003100120043008000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture103016702700950185028005500Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2389227546642275249147669430HealthHealth144130804521739582611565620177Protection - Mine ActionMine Action7578610913687740360041340727094ProtectionProtection1143197831211422186932916412Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence107801873432259160236210Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene162030804700200033005300100002019-04-20T00:00:0065648819-UF-HTI-34979Haiti UF Application Mar 2019 (Cholera)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanUFCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-03-19T00:00:002019-03-19T00:00:002019-05-01T00:00:002019-05-02T00:00:005000000.005018366Since the start of the cholera epidemic in 2010, over 800,000 cases and over 9,700 deaths have been reported in Haiti. Cholera has not yet been eliminated and continues to pose serious life-threatening health risks to persons living in areas with continued cholera transmission. Considering cholera continues to circulate in Haiti, a sudden recrudescence of cases remains possible, as witnessed in 2014 when newly reported cases increased from approximatively 900 in March to over 7,000 in November due to uncontrolled outbreaks. With a potential 3,370 new cases and 330,000 affected people (expected cholera cases and their contacts) in 2019, strong vigilance and a joint wash-health response capacity must be ensured in the three priority departments while accelerating longer term interventions to reduce cases and deaths due to cholera. It remains critical that activities supporting epidemiological surveillance, laboratory capacity, rapid response, and emergency medical response continue. Given that most cases were reported in the departments of Artibonite (31%), Centre (29%) and Ouest (22%), the CERF funds will be utilized to primarily ensure that the existing response mechanism remains in place in these departments; with planned contingency for other departments should localized outbreaks occur.
The UNCT suggested the US$5 million in CERF underfunded funds to target 333,000 highly at risk individuals of cholera. The application covers the sectors of health and WASH for nine months.19-UF-HTI-34979-NR01Heber Rocha Costa#Heber Rocha CostaEnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-11-11T00:00:002020-02-25T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-06-15T00:00:002021-03-01T10:41:41.96HealthHealth4613939289854286560242533108135193563Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene788606683914569985782732191590013047002019-04-30T00:00:0065748919-UF-COD-34978DR Congo UF Application Mar 2019 (Multiple emergencies)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20192019-03-19T00:00:002019-03-19T00:00:002019-05-01T00:00:002019-05-03T00:00:0032023853.0031753453In late 2018, noticeable security improvements have led to a slight increase of number of returnees in Tanganyika and the three Kasai provinces. At the same time, more than 400,000 Congolese workers living illegally in Angola were expelled from the country. They found shelter within the host community in Tanganyika and the Kasai but live in extreme precariousness. The Kasai Oriental has been affected by price rises, climate disruption and phytosanitary diseases resulting in low agricultural production. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) showed 249,300 people in emergency need of assistance. Around 10,9 % of children are affected by acute moderate malnutrition and 3,2% by severe acute malnutrition. In North Kivu and Ituri provinces, the humanitarian crises remain dynamic and are linked to the deterioration of the security context that leads to a lot of internal displacements. There are 32 spontaneous settlements registered, welcoming more than 54,000 people and protection issues are alarming. In 2018, the Protection cluster has registered 9,820 cases of GBV and 125 antimine alerts for these provinces. In South Kivu, insecurity is the main cause of the crisis. Since June 2018, there has been a clear increase in violence by armed groups and several new areas are now affected. In 2018, the province registered more than 17,609 protection incidents including 1,164 GBV cases. The 2019 DRC HRP requires $1.6 billion.
The suggested CERF strategy has three objectives which align the 2019 HRP. The country team seeks to ensure access to basic services to affected populations (IDPs, host families and returnees); to cover the needs of victims of human rights violations and reduce protection risks for women and children; and to contribute to reducing the nutritional and food emergency through a multisectoral response. The response targets 1.2 million people in the shelter, protection, antimine, nutrition, education, health, food security, and logistics sectors through 12 projects. DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201819-UF-COD-34978-NR02Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirFrench2019-11-12T00:00:002020-02-17T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-06-05T00:00:002021-02-16T00:00:00EducationEducation398732921427944319510164421187005Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1082717280281079639189002853956646Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security339988721427193639798724626988988HealthHealth66761723251390867232578352150677289763Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector16104140263013015918183503426864398NutritionNutrition153882367177551667131531982437579ProtectionProtection71535141227212762141705231293372998585760Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1207723193087879616743604Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence37661034720433890589161Protection - Mine ActionMine Action46163579819542993182748115676Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI129368624215601250590552156043120Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene235341568939223254941699742491817142019-04-30T00:00:0065849619-UF-UGA-35202Uganda UF Application Mar 2019 (Displacement)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-03-19T00:00:002019-03-19T00:00:002019-05-17T22:45:03.1372019-05-20T00:00:0018000000.0017991573Uganda hosts the largest refugee population in Africa with over 1.2 million refugees as of December 2018. Existing refugee caseloads and continued new arrivals have put enormous pressure on the country’s resources, in particular basic services and acute needs remain in protection, food assistance, shelter, health and nutrition, WASH and emergency livelihoods. Seven refugee hosting districts in Uganda have been prioritized (Isingiro, Kyegegwa, Kikuube, Adjumani, Lamwo, Moyo and Arua) due to deteriorating humanitarian conditions and stretched limited services for refugees mostly from Burundi, DRC and South Sudan.
The Uganda country team will utilize CERF funds to respond to the needs of over 700,000 refugees, including nearly 260,000 vulnerable people in host communities. With CERF funds, the country team aims to prioritize critical life-saving interventions in the food, health, nutrition, protection, WASH and shelter/NFI sectors. South Sudan crisis 2013-, Burundi political crisis 2015-2020, DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201819-UF-UGA-35202-NR02asel.abdurahmanova@one.un.org#Asel AbdurahmanovaEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-11-13T00:00:002020-02-11T00:00:002020-03-31T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture4263131531741624304813110562846Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security257444149484406928240835182703423538830466HealthHealth12797433495614624515105783130298186444Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector3310561867845178403227842335885563721074212ProtectionProtection0572757270191571915724884Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence8995303453934011992381735016589505Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1507594132448816222944825670501582019-05-16T00:00:0065948719-UF-DJI-35058Djibouti UF Application Mar 2019 (Drought and Refugees)AfricaDjiboutiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20192019-03-19T00:00:002019-03-19T00:00:002019-04-30T00:00:002019-04-30T00:00:004000000.004003125Worsening food insecurity, political instability and conflict has increased the flow of refugees and asylum seekers from the Horn and Eastern Africa to Djibouti. Djibouti hosts over 28,000 refugees and asylum seekers, mainly from Somalia and Ethiopia, but also from Eritrea and Yemen. Refugee flow from Yemen continues to increase, at 100 new arrivals a month. Recurrent droughts in Djibouti have had a critical impact on food security, livelihoods and affected access to safe water sources for the most vulnerable populations, including those living in rural areas as well as migrants and refugees. Nutrition is deteriorating amongst the most vulnerable food insecure populations, including migrant and refugee households. Drought conditions make access to safe water sources scarce, especially amongst vulnerable host community, migrant and refugee populations, increasing the risk for disease outbreaks. Refugees and migrant populations come to Djibouti in deteriorated conditions and travelling from areas with active cholera, measles, disease burden and risk of outbreaks of communicable diseases is high.
The $4 million CERF UFE allocation will address the needs of the most vulnerable and marginalized groups, including refugees, migrants and vulnerable host community populations through provision of multi-sectoral life-saving assistance. CERF funds will be used to increase access to life-saving protection interventions to the most vulnerable among the refugee population, particularly those originating from conflict-affected areas of Yemen. The UN country team will also use CERF funds to implement a multi-sectoral response to those affected by drought conditions and the most vulnerable migrant and refugee populations and their host communities with food security, nutrition, health, and WASH assistance in Tadjourah, Ali Sabieh, Obock, Dikhil regions and support WASH and health activities in Arta and Djibouti town. The CERF-funded nutrition interventions will target 4,250 people withe Moderate Acute Malnutrition activities and 1,200 people with Severe Acute Malnutrition.19-UF-DJI-35058-NR01harbi.omar@undp.org#Harbi OmarEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-10-22T00:00:002020-02-17T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-05-31T00:00:002020-07-02T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture2469158340522469171041798231HealthHealth926365541914805510135057368158718306773NutritionNutrition2966029663126247055968562Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2015007011783004781179Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5160307553591537601518818948548632019-04-26T00:00:0066049519-UF-TZA-35239Tanzania UF Application Mar 2019 (refugees and asylum-seeker from DRC and Burundi)AfricaUnited Republic of TanzaniaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-03-20T00:00:002019-03-21T00:00:002019-05-16T00:00:002019-05-16T00:00:006000000.005989345Tanzania hosts over 285,000 refugees and asylum-seekers residing in three overcrowded camps in north-western Tanzania. The majority of the population comes from Burundi and DRC. Tanzania remains the largest host of Burundian refugees in the region. Major gaps, directly linked to underfunding, have been identified in the critical areas of protection, water supply, health services, and food and nutrition, as part of the Tanzania Refugee Response Plan 2019-2020. The Tanzania country team will utilize CERF funds to respond to the needs of all camp-based Burundian and Congolese refugees and asylum-seekers in the Kigoma Region.
The $6 million CERF UFE allocation will help maintain protection and basic service assistance to refugees and asylum seekers in line with international norms, while also ensuring returns are based on principles of voluntariness and informed decisions and take place in safety and dignity. CERF funds will be used to address the SGBV in and around camps strengthen support to SGBV survivors through critical medical, psychosocial and legal assistance. The UN Country Team will also provide safe transportation of PoCs including post-arrival and intercamp movements and assisting with safe and informed voluntary repatriation. Monthly in-kind General Food Distribution will be provided while cash-based transfers through a voucher modality to the refugee camps will also be implemented using CERF funds. Equitable and timely access to Primary Health Care Services will be increased and Emergency Reproductive Health (RH) kits will be supplied to partners working across all three refugee camps. Access to safe drinking water and basic sanitation facilities across the three camps will be increased as well. Burundi political crisis 2015-2020, DRC conflict and refugees 2017-201819-UF-TZA-35239-NR01helge.flard@one.un.org#helge.flard@one.un.orgEnglish2019-11-12T00:00:002020-03-04T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-05-31T00:00:002021-05-14T13:50:33.573Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security73264563231295877424159237133478263065HealthHealth5569142636983275557347258102831201158ProtectionProtection73264563231295877424159237133478263065Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene732645632312958774241592371334782630652019-05-14T00:00:0066148619-UF-PSE-34982oPt UF Application Mar 2019 (Internal strife)Asiaoccupied Palestinian territoryWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-03-25T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:002019-04-23T00:00:002019-04-24T00:00:007748483.007748483In the occupied Palestinian territory (oPt) of Gaza strip and the West Bank, an estimated 2.5 million Palestinians are in need of humanitarian assistance, according to the 2019 oPt Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP). Gaza in 2018 saw a sharp deterioration in the humanitarian, human rights, security and political situation, including an enormous rise in Palestinian casualties resulting from the “Great March of Return” demonstrations. Israel’s continuous air and sea blockade and restrictions on the movement of people and goods in and out of Gaza have led to frequent power cuts, collapse of basic services, high levels of unemployment, food insecurity and aid dependency. In the West Bank, Palestinians’ access to land and freedom of movements are significantly restricted, marked by increasing settler violence and demolition of infrastructure resulting in Palestinian casualties, forcible transfers, and damage to their property and livelihoods. The 2019 HRP seeks US$350,000 to provide prioritized assistance to some 1.4 million people (including 1.2 million in Gaza and 200,000 in Area C, East Jerusalem, H2/Hebron of the West Bank) by protecting the rights of Palestinians living under occupation, providing access to basic services for those who are vulnerable, and supporting the ability of Palestinians to cope with, and overcome, the protracted crisis, while more sustainable solutions are sought.
This CERF application for $8 million aims to support provision of urgent life-saving humanitarian assistance in the food security (FAO, WFP), health (UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO, UNRWA), protection, education and WASH (all UNICEF) sectors, targeting 403,860 people in the Gaza and Area C and H2/Hebron of the West Bank over about nine months. The CERF funds will support the most time-critical elements of the 2019 HRP targeting the most vulnerable people in need. The CERF allocation will be complemented by the oPt Humanitarian Fund allocation of $12 million.19-UF-PSE-34982-NR01abdel-haq@un.org#abdel-haq@un.orgEnglish2019-10-22T00:00:002020-02-17T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-08-31T00:00:002021-05-04T14:59:49.637EducationEducation6534106544404722406910613Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture90717017160881037770171739433482Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security94211091120332821683891660536937HealthHealth126794117131243925128480154522283002526927ProtectionProtection39630069639181112021898Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection2481024812643026435124Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene125181359226110123101339525705518152019-04-20T00:00:0066249219-UF-NER-35355Niger UF Application Mar 2019 (Displacement)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-03-25T00:00:002019-03-25T00:00:002019-05-08T00:00:002019-05-08T00:00:007999835.007989787Niger continues to experience the impact of the proliferation of armed groups, inter-community conflicts and the increase of violent extremism. The ongoing displacement of IDPs and refugees and seasonal floods have further worsened the situation, with consequences on hygienic and water conditions leading to an increased risk of cholera and meningitis. According to the results of the October 2018 SMART Nutrition Survey, the prevalence of Global Acute Malnutrition (GAM) is 15.0% while chronic malnutrition reaches 47.8%. The 2019 HRP requires $340 million and targets 1.7 million people with humanitarian assistance.
The CERF strategy aims to respond to the humanitarian needs of up to 463,000 people in need of humanitarian assistance (51% of which will be females, and 84% children) in Tillaberi and Tahoua Regions, affected by the increase of violent extremism and conflicts, and by the recurrence of natural disasters. All the activities will consider the needs and vulnerabilities of different groups (refugees, IDPs, returnees and vulnerable host populations). As the funds have already been pledged for the crises affecting the Diffa Regoin, the country team prioritize this allocation to kick-start the first wave of response in these regions, addressing problems such as access and mobility and encourage further donor support. Boko Haram crisis 2014-19-UF-NER-35355-NR01saidousidibe@un.org#Halima SidibeEnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-10-22T00:00:002020-02-17T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:002020-07-29T00:00:00EducationEducation9134267411808798522121019722005Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI625534729727736241371149921226Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture11797108912268812278113342361246300Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7285346210747680841631097121718HealthHealth1911003577022687019889937231236130463000Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector12915139342684911791191593095057799NutritionNutrition7332073327491475796615298Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection733236076927491475796615658ProtectionProtection733236076927491475796615658Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence98515622410473910291663202166118270857Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene72373919111567533465312186233422019-05-06T00:00:0066347819-RR-MOZ-35492Mozambique RR Application Mar 2019 (Cyclone Idai)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-03-27T00:00:002019-03-27T00:00:002019-04-04T00:00:002019-04-09T00:00:0013885034.0014018121On 14 March 2019, Tropical Cyclone Idai made landfall near Beira City, bringing devastation and destruction in its path. Both ahead of and after its landfall, the weather system brought torrential rains, wind and flooding to multiple districts. Over the weekend of 16 to 17 March, entire villages were left underwater as the floodwaters rose, leaving people stranded on roofs and trees. Hundreds of thousands of acres of crops were damaged, exacerbating food insecurity across the central region of the country. According to the Government, at least 400 people have died and more than 1,500 have been injured. The death toll is expected to rise. Health and education facilities have suffered significant damage, with more than 2,800 classrooms and 39 health centers impacted by the cyclone and floods. Water supply have also been damaged and/or contaminated. These, altogether, heightened risk of water borne diseases. More than 17,400 houses have been totally destroyed (11,025), partially destroyed (4,363) or flooded (2,056), according to government reports. The Humanitarian Response Plan aims to provide humanitarian supports to 1.85 million affected people in the districts most affected by floods caused by Tropical Cyclone Idai.
The CERF application includes sixteen (16) projects to support the Government’s response in providing immediate life-saving and life-sustaining assistance to the 1,277,252 affected persons (310,237 boys, 354,999 girls, 279,333 men, and 332, 683 women). The UN and NGOs have prioritised the most time-critical life-saving activities in the health, WASH, food security, protection and nutrition sectors across the affected areas.
The IASC activated SCALE UP protocols for the Mozambique Cyclone Idai response. As such, the CERF secretariat is fast-tracking the proposal review and grant disbursement processes, and allowing a maximum level of flexibility in terms of detail in proposals and budgets. Recipient agencies will be able to revise programming and modify budgets, if required, following sectoral needs assessments.19-RR-MOZ-35492-NR02petersena@un.org#Autumn PetersenEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-07-19T00:00:002020-01-28T00:00:002020-01-31T00:00:002020-05-31T00:00:00EducationEducation3600030036300360003003630072600Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI12965134952646013495140452754054000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0650006500006000060000125000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security370242198359007347102198356693115700HealthHealth9600010400020000096000104000200000400000NutritionNutrition4769304769347859600053859101552Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection20002002000200400ProtectionProtection800080001600012000120002400040000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence00036000420007800078000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene723556655513891078735723551510902900002019-04-02T00:00:0066449419-UF-CMR-35569Cameroon UF Application Mar 2019 (Displacement)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-03-28T00:00:002019-03-28T00:00:002019-05-09T00:00:002019-05-09T00:00:0011230606.0011295158The situation in the North-West and South-West of Cameron continues to present challenges due to the persistent insecurity and attacks against civilians have forced over 437,000 people to flee across four regions, which are now hosting 40% of the total displaced population in Cameroon. The 2019 HRP aims to assist 2.3 million people, representing 53 per cent of the 4.3 million people in need. This plan requires $299 million to meet the most urgent needs in the prioritized regions.
The CERF strategy focuses on providing emergency assistance and protection to new IDPs, returnees and host communities. Activities will focus on emergency food, essential primary and reproductive health services, emergency protection for women, girls and boys exposed to threats of exploitation and abuse by armed groups, first response shelter and NFI. It will address the priority needs of 680,000 people including 400,000 internally displaced persons; 180,000 host communities hosting IDPs and 100,000 returnees in the South-West region, the North-West region and the Far North Region (Mayo Sava, Mayo Tsanaga and Logone and Chari divisions). Boko Haram crisis 2014-19-UF-CMR-35569-NR01jadjombaye@un.org#Kemoral JadjombayeEnglish2020-02-17T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:002020-06-05T00:00:002021-02-15T00:00:00Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0000000EducationEducation4683954647385449845304551492899Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture5832442810260621366411285423114Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1500090002400012500135002600050000ProtectionProtection1375326564020317214415595234239389442561Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection242760242762234302234346619Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence28216308045902037151117180154331213351Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI68288837156656783872815511311762019-05-07T00:00:0066548119-RR-MWI-35650Malawi RR Application Mar 2019 (Cyclone Idai)AfricaMalawiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-03-29T00:00:002019-04-05T00:00:002019-04-12T00:00:002019-04-18T00:00:003206000.003352045In early March 2019, a severe weather system formed off the eastern coast of Mozambique and hit Malawi with heavy rain accompanied by strong winds in before moving back to the Mozambique channel where it intensified into Cyclone Idai and then hit Malawi a second time. The heavy and persistent rain led to severe flooding across some districts in southern Malawi. More than 868,900 people have been affected, including more than 86,980 displaced, with 60 deaths and 672 injuries recorded according to the Government.
On 29 March, the RC for Malawi submitted a CERF rapid response request of $3.2 million to kick start critical response efforts. The CERF funds will support three months of activities in the sectors of Food Security, Nutrition, Health, Shelter/NFI, Education, Protection and Logistics. Some 252,000 affected individuals will benefit from the CERF-funded services.19-RR-MWI-35650-NR02matts.weurlander@one.un.org#Matts WeurlanderEnglishInga Christina Mueller2019-07-12T00:00:002019-09-27T00:00:002020-01-12T00:00:002020-07-22T16:43:26EducationEducation256500256502565002565051300Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security19976195693954520972211994217181716HealthHealth17722216603938219199234664266582047NutritionNutrition262738160026433830077467227368001632339ProtectionProtection0000000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection69300693084700847015400Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence39805400938014860159383079840178Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI230161665439670272272122748454881242019-04-11T00:00:0066649719-RR-AGO-35794Angola RR Application Apr 2019 (Drought)AfricaAngolaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-04-02T00:00:002019-05-16T00:00:002019-05-22T00:00:002019-05-23T00:00:006342732.006342732The 2018 drought in Angola has been exacerbated by below-average and erratic rainfall, particularly in the hardest hit southern provinces of Cunene, Huíla and Namibe. In Cunene province alone, from January to March 2019, the number of people in need of humanitarian assistance increased from 249,884 people to 857,443 people and an estimated 702,148 livestock is at risk of dying as a consequence of drought. Bié province also faces a serious nutrition crisis, with a Global Acute Malnutrition prevalence of 9.8 per cent and Severe Acute Malnutrition of 5.6 per cent. Bié presents unique challenges, with more than 70 per cent of households referring that their food crops were destroyed during the past agriculture season and reporting 73 per cent losses in livestock due to lack of water. The prevailing drought has, as a result, led to a nutrition emergency in the southern provinces of Angola, further exposing children under five to multiple deprivations including poor infant and young child feeding practices, low access to quality health care, limited hygiene practices, and poor-quality water and sanitation infrastructure.
The overall humanitarian response plan is aligned with the government priorities set out in the government drought recovery framework 2018-2022 for the southern provinces of Cunene, Huila and Bie. The overall funding requirement for the emergency response plan is estimated at $92,077,339.
The CERF application will cover 6.9 per cent of the overall needs, or $6,342,732 and includes five projects to support the Government’s response in providing immediate life and livelihoods assistance to the 564,746 affected persons (172,934 boys, 191,591 girls, 29,325 men, and 170,896 women). The UN and NGOs have prioritized the most time-critical life-saving activities in the nutrition, WASH, food security, health and protection sectors across the affected areas. Southern Africa drought 2018-202019-RR-AGO-35794-NR01fatima.santos@one.un.org#Fatima SantosEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-08-26T00:00:002020-01-22T00:00:002020-03-29T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:002020-07-29T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture9085535014435967659891566530100HealthHealth56905694551209672551826087NutritionNutrition117419011741912814696000224146341565Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence5039050394994219672696132000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4082223975647974422425973701971349942019-05-20T00:00:0066748219-RR-ZWE-35840Zimbabwe RR Application Apr 2019 (Cyclone Idai)AfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-04-03T00:00:002019-04-03T00:00:002019-04-17T00:00:002019-04-17T00:00:004012284.004055106The cyclone Idai weather system hit the eastern part of Zimbabwe, a highly impoverished part of the country, on 15 and 16 March 2019. The cyclone comes during a particularly challenging time for the country which is emerging from a drought and is grappling with economic challenges that have exacerbated humanitarian conditions across the country.
While the total number of people affected by the category four cyclone is likely to increase as more areas become accessible, preliminary reports indicate that some 270,000 people with existing acute levels of vulnerability, have been directly affected across all districts in Manicaland and parts of Masvingo and Mashonaland East provinces. The force of the cyclone was concentrated in Chimanimani and Chipinge districts, with at least 50% of the population affected and where loss of life is expected to be the greatest. There have been significant damage to crops, livestock and particularly infrastructure including roads, bridges, water installations, power and communication and many homes, schools and community structures have also been damaged. While the number of people killed, missing, or displaced is difficult to estimate given ongoing significant access challenges; preliminary reports indicate that, more than 10,000 displaced individuals are living in spontaneous settlements, in public buildings (schools, and Government buildings), in transit camps and with host families in several districts. As of 25 March, the Government reported 181 deaths and 330 missing, 1,263 houses have been damaged and 584 destroyed in Mutare,2,290 were damaged in Buhera district. These numbers are likely to increase as more areas become accessible in the hardest hit districts. The Flash Appeal for the drought has been revised to include an additionnal USD64 million and target 270,000 vulnerable people.
The CERF application includes eleven (11) projects to support the Government’s response in providing immediate life-saving and life-sustaining assistance to the 270,000 affected persons (64,800 boys, 70,200 girls, 64,800 men, and 70,200 women). The UN and NGOs have prioritised the most time-critical life-saving activities in the health, WASH, food security, protection and nutrition sectors across the affected areas. Sudden Onset19-RR-ZWE-35840-NR02Kanako.Mabuchi@one.un.org#Kanako MabuchiEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-07-17T00:00:002019-10-15T00:00:002020-01-17T00:00:002020-05-19T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management5460464110101548154181089921000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI520044209620562051121073220352HealthHealth65479653211308007192871021142949273749Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000NutritionNutrition2380102380123031214634449468295Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection94084779141871485790092386638053Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence55961716822764271966309790293113057Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene233342073944073254382577851216952892019-04-15T00:00:0066849019-RR-IRN-36632Iran RR Application Apr 2019 (Floods)AsiaIslamic Republic of IranSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-04-23T00:00:002019-05-05T00:00:002019-05-01T00:00:002019-05-03T00:00:001971476.001971476Unprecedented heavy rains since 18 March caused the worst floods in over 50 years across Iran, resulting in at least 78 deaths and 1,137 injuries. The floods affected 25 of 31 provinces in the country, including 12 severely. An estimated 2 million of the affected 10 million people are in need of emergency assistance. Over 65,000 houses were destroyed and 114,000 suffered damage due to the floods and landslides. At least 366,000 people reportedly remain displaced, including 231,282 in the worst-affected provinces of Khuzestan, Golestan, Lorestan and Ilam.
Despite access constraints, Government–UN joint field missions were able to assess situations in these four provinces, where the greatest and most imminent needs were confirmed for the sectors of WASH, health, shelter/NFIs, and early recovery/livelihoods. Humanitarian partners in consultation with the Government developed an emergency response plan requesting US$25 million to provide 115,641 displaced people in these four provinces with short- and medium-term assistance focusing on the provision of life-saving assistance and the restoration of basic services and livelihoods.
This CERF application for $2 million aims to jump-start the most urgent and time-critical elements of the response plan in the sectors of health (WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA), shelter/NFI (UNHCR) and WASH (UNICEF, UNFPA), targeting 115,641 flood-affected people in the four prioritized provinces over six months. The CERF funds will support the Government’s overall flood response efforts and will be complemented by a $450,000 allocation of IFRC’s Disaster Relief Emergency Fund, focusing on cash-based assistance, as well as other bilateral in-kind and monetary assistance.
Internal note: The ERC on 16 April agreed to a provisional allocation of $2 million based on the CERF and OAD recommendations to focus on immediate provision of basic supplies in health, shelter/NFIs and WASH sectors, while removing the debris removal component and procurement of environmental health equipment from an earlier informal request for $3 million. The formal application was submitted on 23 April with a focused request for $2 million incorporating the ERC suggestion.19-RR-IRN-36632-NR01hamid.nazari.unrcs@gmail.com#hamid.nazari.unrcs@gmail.comEnglish2019-08-08T00:00:002019-12-18T00:00:002020-06-30T00:00:002020-06-30T00:00:002021-04-28T17:32:00.313HealthHealth57116621181192346064575401136046255280Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI37953796759137953796759115182Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3808356218943013525656791920471863482019-04-29T00:00:0067149819-RR-COM-37104Comoros RR Application May 2019 (Cyclone Kenneth)AfricaComorosEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-05-08T00:00:002019-05-17T00:00:002019-05-22T00:00:002019-05-23T00:00:003000000.002994184On 24 April 2019, the tropical cyclone Kenneth hit Comoros archipelagos especially the main island of Grande- Comore. At least 7 people have died, 182 have been injured and 19,372 persons displaced. More than 4,400 houses have been totally destroyed and 14,970 partially destroyed. Education facilities have suffered significant damages, with more than 465 classrooms destroyed including 213 totally destroyed classrooms, leading 44,800 under 18 student without school access. At least 6 health structures covering 54,820 persons are damaged and 96 water tanks have also been destroyed. In Moroni, the capital city, two out of three water plants are damaged which prevents a majority of the population from accessing to drinking water. Around 100,000 people are estimated to face water access issues in Grande Comore island. These, altogether, heightened risk of water borne diseases such as cholera, diarrhoea, measles and malaria. In addition, in some areas, up to 60% of the food and cash crops are damaged and critically erode the livelihoods of the affected farmers and may affect their food and nutrition security. Some strategic roads are destroyed which limits the humanitarian access.
Under the leadership of the national authorities (Civil Protection directorate), a 20.1 million USD multisectorial response plan was developed to be implemented for three months. Five sectors are considered as priorities: shelter, WASH, education, food security/agriculture/livelihoods and health.
The CERF application includes eight projects to support the Government’s response in providing humanitarian assistance to the 276,572 affected persons (64,049 boys, 60,823 girls, 74,615 men, and 77,085 women). The UN and NGOs have prioritized the most time-critical life-saving activities in the shelters, nutrition, WASH, food security, health, education and logistics sectors across the affected areas.19-RR-COM-37104-NR01mirhame.mshangama@one.un.org#Mirhame MshangamaFrenchPatrick Francis Pascal David2019-08-26T00:00:002019-12-12T00:00:002020-02-22T00:00:002020-03-15T00:00:002020-07-02T14:16:03EducationEducation123432040143831185814171327527658Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI483910139349192414152808Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0702670260118681186818894Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7301573713038721456691288325921HealthHealth62240725081347485910574907134012268760Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000NutritionNutrition123510123511270401270425055ProtectionProtection632063277307731405Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3892432521714453996339354793171507622019-05-21T00:00:0067249919-RR-MOZ-37184Mozambique RR Application May 2019 (Cyclone Kenneth)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-05-13T00:00:002019-05-13T00:00:002019-05-29T00:00:002019-05-30T00:00:0010012169.009964907Cyclone Kenneth made landfall in Cabo Delgado, Mozambique on 25 April 2019 as a Category 4 cyclone, with the eye of the storm hitting Quissanga, Macomia and Ibo districts. This was the first time in recorded history that two strong tropical cyclones (above Category 2) have made landfall in Mozambique in the same season. Further, no cyclone has never made landfall this far north in Mozambique. While the impact seems to be lower than Cyclone Idai in terms of displacements, the current situation is made complex by the immense destruction and pockets of insecurity reported in five districts of Cabo Delgado. In addition, some roads are still completely cut-off making access impossible to some of the worst affect areas. While the full extent of Cyclone Kenneth’s impact is still being assessed, reports indicate significant damage to infrastructure and livelihoods. As of 6 May, the Government reported a total of 249,984 people (53,966 households) affected including 94 injuries and 43 deaths. A total of 447 schools and 19 health facilities are affected. Heavy rains resulted in floodings in parts of Pemba and Nampula. Around 55,490 ha of crops are affected while 28,189 ha are totally destroyed. A total of 45,382 houses are destroyed.
On 28 April 2019, the ERC allocated USD10 million to scale-up the response in Mozambique. This allocation will enable UN agencies implementing lifesaving interventions in the WASH; Health; Protection including Child Protection and GBV; Shelter; Food Assistance; Logistics and Emergency Telecommunications.19-RR-MOZ-37184-NR03dinoi@un.org#Sergio DinoiEnglish2019-08-29T00:00:002020-01-28T00:00:002020-03-28T00:00:002020-05-31T00:00:002021-03-18T13:53:03.167Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI16132168043293616803174763427967215Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security68159512441194037089658458129354248757HealthHealth12583064310190140177980190961368941559081Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection352940580441093558405804413888247ProtectionProtection90491398385168307Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence10111811282223180458786905871880Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3415031412655623716134150713111368732019-05-24T00:00:0067350119-RR-MMR-37457Myanmar RR Application May 2019 (Rakhine displacement)AsiaMyanmarSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-05-23T00:00:002019-05-23T00:00:002019-06-11T00:00:002019-06-07T00:00:003494424.003494397An upsurge in fighting between the Myanmar Military and the Arakan Army (AA) following the attack on four police outposts by the AA in Buthidaung Township on 4 January 2019 has displaced around 30,000 people in seven townships of Rakhine State and one township of Chin State since the beginning of 2019, according to the Government. This new displacement has further compounded the humanitarian situation in Rakhine, creating significant needs for those who have fled their homes and among communities hosting them. Humanitarian organizations estimate that over 71,000 people are in need of humanitarian assistance, including projected displacement until 30 June 2019, as a direct consequence.
Preliminary analyses conducted by humanitarian partners expect that the new displacement will remain around current levels, especially in the townships located in the central part of Rakhine, and that their needs will remain through the forthcoming rainy season (May to October). Inter-agency missions to displacement sites identified food assistance and WASH interventions as most urgent needs of the affected populations, as well as those for shelter/NFIs, protection, nutrition and education in emergencies assistance.
This CERF application for $3.5 million aims to support provision of urgent life-saving humanitarian assistance to in the sectors of food security (FAO, WFP), WASH (UNICEF), Shelter/NFIs (UNHCR), protection (UNHCR, UNFPA, UNICEF), nutrition (WFP) and health (WHO, UNFPA), targeting 39,330 displaced people and members of the host communities in the seven affected townships of Rakhine State over six months. The CERF funds will support the Supplemental Response Plan of the Myanmar Humanitarian Response Plan addressing the emerging humanitarian needs triggered by this new displacement with a funding requirement of $12.16 million. The CERF allocation will be strategically complemented by a $1.5 million reserve allocation from the Myanmar Humanitarian Fund (MHF) which is supporting mainly NGO partners in implementing education, health, nutrition, protection, shelter/NFIs and WASH sector responses through an integrated CERF-MHF allocation.
Internal note: The ERC on 15 May agreed to allocate $3.5 million under this allocation based on the CERF review of the draft integrated CERF-MHF allocation strategy and a preliminary sectoral and agency breakdown of requested CERF funding submitted on 14 May.19-RR-MMR-37457-NR01rosa-berlanga@un.org#Narciso Rosa-BerlangaEnglishSamir Mahmoud2019-10-15T00:00:002020-01-17T00:00:002020-04-03T00:00:002020-07-02T15:49:47Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI29254550747530885687877516250Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture19355400733519655700766515000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security21003400550023004200650012000HealthHealth12645052631615456177772214038NutritionNutrition1221012211831135231834404Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection4500045004500045009000ProtectionProtection54008400138005700105001620030000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence17222922464687249331805644Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene75005000125007500500012500250002019-06-03T00:00:0067550219-RR-ETH-37661Ethiopia RR Application Jun 2019 (Drought)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-06-20T00:00:002019-06-27T00:00:002019-07-03T00:00:002019-07-03T00:00:0010000000.009998667Drought conditions caused by failure of 2019 spring rains in most parts of the Horn of Africa are causing serious water shortages in southeastern Ethiopia where the majority of farmers and herders are dependent on rain and are highly vulnerable to strong climate variations. The drought affects, among others, most parts of Somali region and lowland pastoral areas of Oromia. 3.8 million people are estimated to be affected by food insecurity in the next few months due to recent climatic events. The 37 worst affected woredas have been identified, which have pastoral or agro-pastoral areas in which >50% of the population is estimated to be in IPC Phase 3 or above.
The Ethiopia Humanitarian Country Team (EHCT) flagged that drought-affected areas including Somali and low-lands of Oromia will require early response to avoid a humanitarian crisis and estimated the cost of in-action at $250-300 million in emergency humanitarian assistance. An estimated USD 177 million is for the humanitarian response to only the agriculture and WASH sectors.
The UN and NGOs have prioritized the most time-critical life-saving activities in the nutrition, WASH, food security, health and protection sectors across the affected areas. The CERF application will cover 8.5% of the agriculture and water needs, or USD 10 million and includes two projects to support the Government’s response in providing immediate life and livelihoods assistance to the 766,757 affected persons (175,316 boys, 170,622 girls, 197,534 men, and 192,114 women). The other key sectors that were considered in this CERF proposal were Nutrition, Food, and Health. The first two are receiving important contributions from other donors and the Government of Ethiopia and health is receiving support through an ongoing Ethiopia Humanitarian Fund allocation.19-RR-ETH-37661-NR01sajid@un.org#Sajjad Mohammad SajidEnglish2019-10-22T00:00:002020-01-17T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture161466182526343992168486189547358033702025Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene671427571414285666608751101417182845742019-07-01T00:00:0067650519-RR-KEN-37704Kenya RR Application Jun 2019 (Drought)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-06-27T00:00:002019-06-27T00:00:002019-07-18T00:00:002019-07-19T00:00:004999317.004999317The 2019 long rains (Gu season) failed in some counties of Kenya (Baringo; Garissa; Isiolo; Mandera; Marsabit; Tana River; Turkana and Wajir ) and dramatically affected the crop and livestock productions. Consequently, the population in food crisis situation (IPC phase 3) has increased significantly as of May 2019. Parts of Turkana, Marsabit, Wajir, Garissa, Tana river and Baringo counties are in Crisis phase (IPC phase 3). The total population in IPC phase 3 is expected to raise to 2 million by July 2019. The prevailing drought has also led to a nutrition emergency and deteriorated the health situation with cholera, measles and other drought-borne disease outbreak.
The overall humanitarian response plan is aligned with the government priorities. The Government of Kenya has estimated a total of US$160 million to respond to the drought in key sectors, based on the latest information a total of US$80 million have been allocated for the 8-month period (May-December 2019). The majority of this funding will cover Food Relief and cash transfer.
The CERF application of USD 4,999,317 includes nine projects to support the Government’s response in providing immediate life and livelihoods assistance to 549,668 people (including 8,945 people with disabilities, 27,000 IDPs, 137,794,boys, 141,121 girls, 26,853 men, and 243,900 women). The UN and NGOs have prioritized the most time-critical life-saving activities in the nutrition, WASH, food security/livelihoods, health and protection sectors across the affected areas.19-RR-KEN-37704-NR01quacquarella@un.org#Giovanni QuacquarellaEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2020-01-15T00:00:002020-02-14T00:00:002020-05-10T00:00:002020-05-02T00:00:002020-07-30T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture532204065693876499694204292011185887HealthHealth680716896876067299238666305965374725NutritionNutrition688440688446125594590155845224689Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection3875038754607046078482Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0000566156615661Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2764029943575832876831165599331175162019-07-16T00:00:0067750319-RR-GTM-37683Guatemala RR Application Jun 2019 (Drought)AmericasGuatemalaLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-06-26T00:00:002019-06-27T00:00:002019-07-10T00:00:002019-07-08T00:00:001986599.001986599Between June and August of 2018, Guatemala was affected, for the sixth consecutive year, by a prolonged heat wave associated with the El Niño phenomenon that directly impacted subsistence farmers and indirectly agricultural day laborers. At the request of the National Food Security Secretariat, the World Food Program (WFP), in coordination with the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), conducted a Food and Nutrition Security Assessment between September and October 2018. The evaluation determined that some 538,735 families, or about 3 million people, were in a situation of moderate to severe food insecurity. The departments with the highest levels were Alta Verapaz (81%), Quiché and Quetzaltenango (58%) and Sololá (54%). In Alta Verapaz, around 800,000 individuals (160,000 families) are in-need of food assistance, including around 225,000 children under five. Poverty, inequality, and lack of access to basic services (health, education, sanitation) exacerbated this humanitarian situation. Based on the assessment, the National Food Security Secretariat requested support from the Humanitarian Country Team to target Alta Verapaz as the area with the highest priority for humanitarian support. A comprehensive Strategic Response Plan (SRP) was formulated for a total requirement of USD 22 million for 105,000 beneficiaries for 18 months. This CERF request includes life-saving interventions for six months from UNICEF (Nutrition), PAHO (Health and WASH), WFP (Food Assistance), and FAO (Food Security) for a total of USD 2,000,00.19-RR-GTM-37683-NR01barillase@un.org#Edy Manolo BarillasEnglishKristine Hansen2019-11-11T00:00:002020-01-20T00:00:002020-04-10T00:00:002020-07-02T13:17:33Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture2296169539912943143943828373Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7733628514018747172551472628744HealthHealth13696714368391059442380NutritionNutrition1229443081660212098861720715373172019-07-03T00:00:0067850419-RR-SLV-37678El Salvador RR Application Jun 2019 (Drought)AmericasEl SalvadorLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-06-28T00:00:002019-06-28T00:00:002019-07-15T00:00:002019-07-16T00:00:002000000.001998859According to the Salvadoran Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources (MARN), from 2012 to 2015 El Salvador suffered four consecutive droughts that generated agricultural losses up to USD 218.8 million. 2016 and 2017 were years of partial recovery for smallholder farmers. However, in 2018 El Salvador experienced the longest dry period for 48 years and this occurred at the most critical phase of the first crop cycle. This was followed by extremely heavy rains during the second and last crop cycle that further exacerbated the situation. Consequently, the General Directorate of Civil Protection issued an orange alert for 12 departments and red alert for 143 municipalities due to extreme weather drought. In response to the severe drought and declaration of Red Alerts, the government activated its national response mechanisms and immediately requested WFP, FAO and UNICEF to carry out an Emergency Food Security Assessment (EFSA). The results revealed that 98,783 subsistence farmers’ households (493,915 people) were heavily affected by the drought, of which 85% are completely dependent on agricultural activities. The assessment highlighted that 42,000 families (210,000 people) would be food insecure as of January 2019, month in which it was estimated that their food reserves would be exhausted and require urgent assistance. In addition, the analysis of the Integrated Classification by Phases of Food Security (IPC) projected that from April to July 2019, 5% (63,000 people) of the affected population will be in the emergency phase, 17% (239,000 people) in crisis phase and 34% (472,000 people) in stress phase. This CERF rapid response allocation will cover the food assistance (WFP), agriculture (FAO), nutrition and WASH (UNICEF) and health (WHO) needs of 12,500 people for six months.19-RR-SLV-37678-NR01solorzano2@un.org#Laura SolorzanoEnglishSamir Mahmoud2019-10-23T00:00:002020-02-14T00:00:002020-04-15T00:00:002020-05-18T00:00:002021-03-10T16:34:36.407Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture244249577399901260091502122420Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security25623350591224884100658812500HealthHealth161673098925176983411011019035NutritionNutrition564056454575212971861Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene11082268337612663057432376992019-07-11T00:00:0067950619-RR-ETH-37959Ethiopia RR Application Jul 2019 (secondary displacement / IDP returns)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-07-10T00:00:002019-08-27T00:00:002019-08-20T00:00:002019-08-20T00:00:0011111092.0011111092Inter-communal conflicts surged in Ethiopia in late 2017 led to the displacement of 3.2 million people. Children account for 59 per cent of the displaced population in the country. Many of these IDPs are hosted in areas reeling from past droughts and continue to be challenged by acute malnutrition, disease outbreaks, protection risks and other hazards, including floods. Efforts to return or relocate IDPs have been undertaken in isolated manners in the past, and some returns triggered further violence. In April 2019, the Government developed a strategy to address all internal displacement in the country under the pillars of peace and security, rule of law, short-term relief assistance and longer-term recovery and rehabilitation. In a period of three weeks, many IDPs (nearly 1 million) were “returned” both coercively and voluntarily, according to assessment findings and protection monitoring reports. The Ethiopia Humanitarian Country Team (EHCT) has been committed to engage in a pragmatic manner focusing assistance on needs and not displacement status and by putting in place policy and operational guidelines – including launching joint targeting exercise with representation from the Government and affected communities to ensure assistance reaches those vulnerable avoiding inclusion and exclusion errors. A CERF USD 11.4 million allocation will allow the EHCT to cover the health; shelter/NFI; protection; SGBV; common services; and multiple sectors needs of some 844,000 people.19-RR-ETH-37959-NR02bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2020-01-15T00:00:002020-02-20T00:00:002020-06-19T00:00:002021-02-23T00:00:00Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0000000HealthHealth166408189286355694171298182547353845709539ProtectionProtection1283243131714517530113232885345998Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection332142952362737319862829260278123015Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence8427122012062812418212783369654324Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4301827575705935354235848893901599832019-08-15T00:00:0068050719-RR-SOM-38014Somalia RR Application Jul 2019 (Drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-07-23T00:00:002019-08-16T00:00:002019-08-20T00:00:002019-08-19T00:00:0029922589.0029922589Six out of seven rainy seasons have been poor since 2016, leaving people with no time to recover from one bad season to the next. The 2019 Gu rains (April to June) started late and have performed poorly and are to further aggravate the vulnerability of those who had not recovered from both the drought of 2016 and 2017 and the flooding in 2018. The Food Security and Nutrition Analysis Unit estimates that 5.4 million Somalis face acute food insecurity through September 2019 including a 40 per cent increase in the number of people in Crisis and Emergency (IPC3 and 4), from 1.5 to 2.2 million comprising rural (48%), internally displaced (40%) and urban (12%) people from the beginning of the year. The prevailing drought has also led to a nutrition emergency and households’ displacements. The drought also deteriorated the health situation with cholera, measles and other drought-borne disease outbreak.
The 2019 Somalia Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) focuses on four strategic objectives namely providing lifesaving assistance, nutrition, protection and resilience support to the most vulnerable and seeks US$1.08 billion to reach 3.4 million (including 2 million children) out of the 4.2 million people in need of humanitarian assistance.
The CERF application will cover US$ 30 million and includes 15 projects to support the Government’s response in providing immediate life and livelihoods assistance to 487,487 people (including 261,755 IDPs, 127,732 boys, 135,616 girls, 80,661 men, 143,478 women and 350 people with disabilities). The UN and NGOs have prioritized the most time-critical life-saving activities in the nutrition, WASH, food security/livelihoods, health, protection and Logistics sectors across the affected areas.19-RR-SOM-38014-NR02agwaro@un.org#Patricia Nyimbae AgwaroEnglishPatrick Francis Pascal David2020-01-15T00:00:002020-02-25T00:00:002020-06-12T00:00:002020-06-30T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management11964116002356411621123702399147555EducationEducation521430055144572164473610250Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1001086271863712484153342781846455Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture13692114392513113067111222418949320Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security40437623291027664041762347102764205530HealthHealth707744957912035372454101884174338294691Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000NutritionNutrition405692040589452205318598405138994Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection7424517794175971726932317264ProtectionProtection11204112512245510845117002254545000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence564572581290317929312054913462037Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene823045519613750087417660411534582909582019-08-15T00:00:0068150819-RR-HTI-37982Haiti RR Application Aug 2019 (Food Insecurity)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-08-01T00:00:002019-12-21T00:00:002019-08-22T00:00:002019-08-23T00:00:005080010.005081432Throughout 2018, Haiti experienced a rapidly deteriorating economic situation, which has taken a dramatic turn to the worst in 2019, severely reducing the average income and purchasing power of Haitian households, especially the most vulnerable among them. The depreciation of the national currency (the gourde) reached approximately 40% over a year, fueling double-digit inflation and further penalizing the poorest households. The price of the food basket, which includes the six most basic food products, registered an increase of 14% in only three months (December 2018- February 2019) while the US- dollar equivalent value of the minimum wage decreased by 15%. Approximately 1 out of 4 Haitians are living below the poverty line, especially in rural areas, and as such do not have the necessary resources to meet their basic needs. According to the latest IPC analysis (Dec 2018), prolonged periods of water deficit led to a significant decline in agricultural production and loss of income for rural households. Thus, during the hunger gap period of March-June 2019, 2.6 million Haitians living in rural areas are reported to be food insecure (IPC phases 3 and 4), representing about 38% of the rural population. This represents twice the number of food-insecure people compared to the same lean period in 2018. Of these 2.6 million people, 2,054,000 people are in “Crisis” (IPC 3) and 571,000 people in “Emergency” phases (IPC 4). The departments with the highest proportion of people in crisis and emergency are North, Northeast, Southeast, Central, Northwest, Grande Anse and West.The Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) for Haiti is based on the humanitarian needs analysis of HNO 2019, which estimates that 2.6 million people need humanitarian assistance in the country. The plan targets 1.3 million people spread all over the country (especially in rural settings) for a multisectoral response that prioritizes the most urgent needs identified in the HNO, in the areas of Food Security, Health, Nutrition, WASH, Education, Shelter / NFI and Protection.
A CERF rapid response of USD5 million will help support the food assistance, livelihoods, and nutrition needs of 172,980 people in the North, Northeast, and Southeast departments.19-RR-HTI-37982-NR02soltesz@un.org#Eva SoltészEnglishInga Christina Mueller2020-01-16T00:00:002020-03-20T00:00:002020-06-18T00:00:002020-07-29T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture232563488458140251943779162985121125Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security12195177672996212258178603011860080NutritionNutrition37890378936910369174802019-08-21T00:00:0068250919-RR-BGD-38402Bangladesh RR Application Aug 2019 (Flood)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-08-19T00:00:002019-08-30T00:00:002019-08-30T00:00:002019-08-30T00:00:005239236.005239236Heavy rainfall in July has triggered the worst floods in 20 years in Bangladesh, affecting over 7.6 million people in 28 out of 64 districts along the country’s two major river systems. The floods have so far claimed 119 lives, damaged nearly 600,000 houses and displaced over 300,000 people. Over 1,500 km of embarkments were washed away, leading to prolonged flooding and extensive loss of agricultural livelihoods including $112 million worth of crops and $83 million worth of livestock and poultry. While the Government and humanitarian partners began immediate response through provision of emergency shelter, food packages, cash grants, etc., significant needs remain unaddressed. Further rains and upstream water flow are feared to aggravate the flood situation, exposing the affected communities to greater health and protection risks.
Informed by the joint needs assessments co-led by the Government and CARE, the RC in consultation with the Humanitarian Coordination Task Team (HCTT) launched a $27 million Humanitarian Response and Recovery Plan (HRRP) to provide immediate humanitarian assistance and recovery support to 160,000 primarily female-headed households (FHHs) (about 736,000 people) in the worst-affected 9 districts over 9 months. The inter-NGO START Network’s national fund has been activated in several affected districts of Bangladesh, while IFRC launched an emergency appeal for CHF 7 million to support the most affected families. CERF is requested to allocate $5.25 million to complement these and other funding sources to kickstart the most urgent life-saving assistance in food security, health, protection, WASH, shelter and emergency livelihoods sectors, primarily under HRRP’s Phase 1 with a total funding requirement of $14.4 million, targeting 43,066 FHHs (about 194,861 people) in three most severely affected districts. It should be noted that the flood response under the HRRP does not target Cox’s Bazar district covered by the Joint Response Plan (JRP) for the Rohingya refugee crisis; thus there will be no geographical or beneficiary overlap between the requested CERF rapid response allocation and the concurrent CERF underfunded emergency allocation of $10 million which will support multi-sectoral assistance in line with the JRP.
Internal note: The ERC OiC on 12 August agreed to a provisional allocation of $5.25 million focusing on food security, health, protection, WASH, shelter and emergency livelihoods, based on the CERF and OAD recommendations.19-RR-BGD-38402-NR01henry.glorieux@one.un.org#Henry GlorieuxEnglishSamir Mahmoud2020-01-16T00:00:002020-02-14T00:00:002020-05-30T00:00:002020-07-29T22:05:36Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI5142710012242547972631274224984Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture210122770248714207783159352371101085Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security17442182003564218313178413615471796HealthHealth1136744188010944242833522737107Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0009066398394890548905Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene486087291212152050592758881264802480002019-08-28T00:00:0068851019-RR-COD-38519DR Congo RR Application Aug 2019 (Ebola)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20192019-08-28T00:00:002019-09-05T00:00:002019-09-12T00:00:002019-09-16T00:00:0010051407.009837589Efforts continue in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) to stem the outbreak of Ebola that has claimed thousands of lives since its declaration by the Ministry of Health on August 1, 2018. This epidemic is now the second deadliest in the world after the 2014 - 2016 one in West Africa and the worst in the history of DRC. With the support of the international community, the DRC government has put in place mechanisms to control the epidemic. Although currently limited to the provinces of Ituri and North Kivu, the caselaod continues to increase, with the largest monthly increase occurring in May 2019. In August 2019, deaths in the community, untraceable contacts and new cases not yet known, show that urgent efforts are still needed. The humanitarian needs are high and extensive. Basic health, education and other essential services are inadequate when they exist. Confidence in national authorities is weak and efforts to contain the epidemic have been tainted with suspicion and mistrust.
On 9 August, the Emergency Relief Coordinator allocated US$10 million to support the Ebola response in DRC. This allocation is against the US$287,590,149 of the DRC Ebola Strategic Response Plan for July-December 2019 and will cover the health (WHO, IOM, UNICEF) and mutiple sectors (UNICEF) needs of 45,000,000 people. This allocation is an addition to two rapid response allocations for Ebola in DRC: US$2 million in May 2018 for the outbreak in Equateur and US$2.8 million in August 2018 for the outbreak in Ituri and North Kivu. These allocations supported activities in Health (WHO), WASH (UNICEF) and Logistics/UNHAS (WFP). Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201919-RR-COD-38519-NR03yangou@un.org#Severin Yangou-BemodoFrench2020-01-17T00:00:002020-05-29T00:00:002020-06-12T00:00:002020-10-09T00:00:002021-03-10T14:10:35.713Early RecoveryEarly Recovery0450245020193019306432HealthHealth212845422912182250406362044985220136652405865049099286NutritionNutrition206532738274321034844222Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection97726493162651617465132268738952Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1614321074752689071746471164322910795599862019-09-10T00:00:0068951219-UF-ERI-38585Eritrea UF Application Sep 2019 (Drought)AfricaEritreaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-09-06T00:00:002019-09-06T00:00:002019-09-26T00:00:002019-09-25T00:00:002000000.00200011219-UF-ERI-38585-NR01Karem Ahmed Issa#Karem Ahmed IssaEnglish2020-11-03T00:00:002020-11-03T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002021-02-03T00:00:002021-04-28T17:00:02.09Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture22151205324268321735304345216994852HealthHealth1055897646118205010558976461182050364100NutritionNutrition1500015001500015003000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene02925292503575357565002019-09-24T00:00:0069051519-UF-BGD-38582Bangladesh UF Application Sep 2019 (Rohingya refugee crisis)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-09-09T00:00:002019-10-02T00:00:002019-09-27T00:00:002020-09-04T00:00:0010104523.001499457519-UF-BGD-38582-NR02henry.glorieux@one.un.org#Henry GlorieuxEnglish2021-11-10T00:00:002021-11-10T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002022-03-07T00:00:002022-05-04T11:04:19.957EducationEducation324531138335912987113543122564816HealthHealth526627937713203949071134806183877315916ProtectionProtection8900540014300880069001570030000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0005028475076125360125360Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1180090672086711598100792167742544Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene66565866125226746569812444249662020-08-28T00:00:0069151319-UF-AFG-38544Afghanistan UF Application Sep 2019 (Displacement)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-09-09T00:00:002019-09-18T00:00:002019-09-26T00:00:002019-09-30T00:00:0016000000.0015999997 Z - not in use - Returnees19-UF-AFG-38544-NR01Fekadu Tafa Lemma#Fekadu Tafa LemmaEnglish2020-05-20T00:00:002020-08-05T00:00:002020-10-30T00:00:002021-05-12T21:16:25.943HealthHealth2889363987916877272660613649576310181318745NutritionNutrition1393401393416518114892800741941ProtectionProtection5600104821608233312712604322125Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection89081251221420687592471612237542Protection - Mine ActionMine Action0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5483137123919545123837123883611803152019-09-24T00:00:0069351719-UF-VZR-38575VZ Region UF Application Sep 2019 (Venezuela regional emergency)AmericasVenezuela Regional Refugee and Migration CrisisLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-09-09T00:00:002019-09-09T00:00:002019-10-04T00:00:002019-10-07T00:00:006000000.006000000 Venezuela crisis 2018-19-UF-VZR-38575-NR01apreato@iom.int#Alberto PreatoEnglish2020-05-20T00:00:002020-06-24T00:00:002020-10-30T00:00:002020-11-20T00:00:002021-04-30T13:48:34.907Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2810449373037299165322383131134HealthHealth01010965804590109020Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector12966306760214207627904716649ProtectionProtection10340185322887212992237383673065602Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2519481199373197323463545Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI9211201442935593192201731336606912019-10-03T00:00:0069551819-UF-VEN-38565Venezuela UF Application Sep 2019 (Multiple)AmericasVenezuelaLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-09-10T00:00:002019-09-10T00:00:002019-10-07T00:00:002019-10-08T00:00:0010000000.0010015686 Venezuela crisis 2018-19-UF-VEN-38565-NR01batistab@un.org#Barbara BatistaEnglish2020-05-01T00:00:002020-06-12T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002021-05-05T14:24:52.743HealthHealth147072301909448981172650291861464511913492NutritionNutrition2553502553525549121643771363248ProtectionProtection158343087046704186093631954928101632Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection44797120095680619143106112975486560Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1238353747753029169231995224727Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene425048725212975649896843481342442640002019-10-03T00:00:0069652419-UF-SDN-38579Sudan UF Application Sep 2019 (Economic crisis and food insecurity)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFMultiple EmergenciesInternal strifeMultiple20192019-09-12T00:00:002019-09-12T00:00:002019-11-05T00:00:002019-11-05T00:00:0014003594.001400359419-UF-SDN-38579-NR03noviera@un.org#Laksmita NovieraEnglish2020-04-28T00:00:002020-06-12T00:00:002020-10-30T00:00:002020-11-30T00:00:002021-05-12T20:41:42.473EducationEducation644046669067760526828615192Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture244453520659651244453814262587122238HealthHealth177177115551292728175882190558366440659168NutritionNutrition1540101540117687245844227157672ProtectionProtection623701445776827634083396997377174204Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene140579986642392431386171016432402604795032019-11-01T00:00:0069751919-UF-BFA-38547Burkina Faso UF Application Sep 2019 (Insecurity)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-09-13T00:00:002019-09-13T00:00:002019-10-08T00:00:002019-10-09T00:00:006011883.00601188319-UF-BFA-38547-NR02knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonFrench2020-04-30T00:00:002020-06-19T00:00:002020-09-30T00:00:002021-01-15T00:00:002021-05-04T15:51:13.207Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture403271381117009801980120971HealthHealth72737574241301617748498616176100306261ProtectionProtection424312053662967412182863569853132820Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection26922502519424732529500210196Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1938146133993184180249868385Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI7518436611884703553361237124255Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene119241296724891212952666347958728492019-10-07T00:00:0069852019-UF-CMR-38557Cameroon UF Application Sep 2019 (Displacement)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-09-16T00:00:002019-11-07T00:00:002019-10-24T00:00:002019-10-24T00:00:005002518.005002518 Boko Haram crisis 2014-19-UF-CMR-38557-NR02martinezv@un.org#Victoria MartinezEnglish2020-04-30T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002021-02-28T00:00:002021-08-27T08:36:40.007EducationEducation7140912117262076254169477948150568HealthHealth107325127183234508103543134748238291472799Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector1216192631421668261242807422NutritionNutrition377313308270813392705397893248164061ProtectionProtection133002370037000180003700055000920002019-10-22T00:00:0070151619-RR-BHS-38922Bahamas RR Application Sep 2019 (Hurricane Dorian)AmericasBahamasLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-09-23T00:00:002019-09-23T00:00:002019-09-27T00:00:002019-10-02T00:00:001000000.001002151 Sudden Onset19-RR-BHS-38922-NR01john.fallgren@un.org#John FallgrenEnglish2020-01-17T00:00:002020-04-07T00:00:002020-06-27T00:00:002021-04-27T16:45:37.757Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management421897131840389913022620Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence15561076598099819782743Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI687160222896871602228945782019-09-26T00:00:0070252119-RR-PRK-39293DPR Korea RR Application Oct 2019 (Cyclone Lingling)AsiaDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-10-11T00:00:002019-10-11T00:00:002019-10-23T00:00:002019-10-25T00:00:005992414.00599989819-RR-PRK-39293-NR01Chunyao Yi#Chunyao YiEnglish2020-01-30T00:00:002020-05-21T00:00:002020-10-24T00:00:002021-08-27T12:25:21.58Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture5137913682118820050832160968211800400000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security180793984657925174844353361017118942NutritionNutrition542930542935650966206122715177008Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene208571827539132269701979846768859002019-10-22T00:00:0070352319-RR-SDN-39315Sudan RR Application Oct 2019 (Cholera)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-10-11T00:00:002019-10-11T00:00:002019-10-31T00:00:002019-11-05T00:00:002999948.002999889 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action19-RR-SDN-39315-NR02fisherm@un.org#Martin FisherEnglish2020-02-05T00:00:002020-04-07T00:00:002020-07-31T00:00:002021-05-06T10:35:47.2HealthHealth441673541079577445853610080685160262Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector6370333275969786380354292118095215073NutritionNutrition960961000100196Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection122510122512288902288935140Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2802051821184623232855442063294918739541962019-10-31T00:00:0070452219-RR-NER-39319Niger RR Application Oct 2019 (Nigerian refugees)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20192019-10-14T00:00:002019-10-25T00:00:002019-10-30T00:00:002019-11-05T00:00:008000000.007995737 Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee Boko Haram crisis 2014-19-RR-NER-39319-NR02saidousidibe@un.org#Halima SidibeFrench2020-01-30T00:00:002020-08-10T00:00:002020-11-30T00:00:002021-02-09T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1744591672661217111118332894455556HealthHealth355692283058399370212376960790119189Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector32190131964538634396188035319998585NutritionNutrition64190641966813044972516144ProtectionProtection32190131964538634396188035319998585Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection14213100372425014693107702546349713Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence19775120523182743432207166414895975Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI36762040571643272430675712473Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene00000002019-10-29T00:00:0070652819-RR-SSD-39576South Sudan RR Application Nov 2019 (Floods)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-11-14T00:00:002019-11-25T00:00:002019-12-03T00:00:002019-12-05T00:00:0014999933.001499983719-RR-SSD-39576-NR03Georgios Alexandratos#Georgios AlexandratosEnglish2020-04-27T00:00:002020-06-19T00:00:002020-10-04T00:00:002020-10-23T00:00:002021-03-01T10:08:02.197Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture80001580001660008000246000254000420000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security294304353272962356985293488632161594HealthHealth6723171102138333131000145667276667415000Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector436342783271466418453349175336146802Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI66715547851215008024173802154043275543Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene965651380272345921134361570922705285051202019-12-03T00:00:0071052919-RR-KEN-39625Kenya RR Application Nov 2019 (Floods)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-11-19T00:00:002019-11-19T00:00:002019-12-05T00:00:002019-12-06T00:00:003009272.00300927219-RR-KEN-39625-NR02lenanyokie@un.org#Julius Lesoina LenanyokieEnglish2020-04-01T00:00:002020-06-12T00:00:002020-10-05T00:00:002021-02-15T00:00:00Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI8179781915998823878981613632134Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture4344652002954485239749920102317197765Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security05812581206188618812000HealthHealth252841843043714267886989496682140396Common Services - LogisticsLogistics870087001740011500115002300040400Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2896931382603513015232664628161231672019-12-04T00:00:0071152619-RR-PHL-39649Philippines RR Application Nov 2019 (Tulunan earthquake)AsiaPhilippinesSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20192019-11-19T00:00:002019-11-19T00:00:002019-11-29T00:00:002019-12-05T00:00:003092135.00306607519-RR-PHL-39649-NR01vidic@un.org#Manja VidicEnglish2020-04-01T00:00:002020-05-21T00:00:002020-09-04T00:00:002021-03-11T05:37:26.723Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management35737971115444947109941594127485EducationEducation65091065196082317639912918HealthHealth0004084207161556155Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection89474476134238819107471956632989Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0001551288244334433Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI20464406645228336452928515737Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene186911021128902186921021128903578052019-11-29T00:00:0071253019-RR-ZMB-39661Zambia RR Application Nov 2019 (Drought)AfricaZambiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-11-19T00:00:002019-11-27T00:00:002019-12-05T00:00:002019-12-06T00:00:008000000.007988674 Southern Africa drought 2018-202019-RR-ZMB-39661-NR01laura.hastings@un.org#Laura HastingsEnglish2020-05-04T00:00:002020-06-19T00:00:002020-10-05T00:00:002020-10-15T00:00:002021-02-11T00:00:00EducationEducation1705221317265182491711842035685Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security198985183678382663207105191173398278780941HealthHealth0000000NutritionNutrition1356013561503015032859Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence810679651607117007254094241658487Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene210641838139445219231913241055805002019-12-04T00:00:0071453119-RR-SOM-39722Somalia RR Application Nov 2019 (Floods)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-11-25T00:00:002019-11-25T00:00:002019-12-12T00:00:002019-12-12T00:00:008000001.008000222 Sudden Onset19-RR-SOM-39722-NR03agwaro@un.org#Patricia Nyimbae AgwaroEnglish2020-04-27T00:00:002020-06-24T00:00:002020-09-12T00:00:002020-09-18T00:00:002021-05-06T15:39:49.477Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services049490494998Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security306812947860159306812947860159120318HealthHealth243495470579054243495470579054158108ProtectionProtection1790146032502150146036106860Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI17016201313714717097198583695574102Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3826724192624593647727065635421260012019-12-10T00:00:0071553219-RR-WSM-40060Samoa RR Application Dec 2019 (Measles)OceaniaSamoaPolynesiaPolynesiaRRMeaslesBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-12-08T00:00:002019-12-30T00:00:002019-12-20T00:00:002019-12-23T00:00:002707068.00270706819-RR-WSM-40060-NR01Anne Colquhoun#Anne ColquhounEnglishSamir Mahmoud2020-10-17T00:00:002020-10-17T00:00:002021-03-11T00:00:00HealthHealth3787024160087947103587054274067861111580821Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection26374208794725325340200604540092653Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene38318543486681805136072742551778624416042952019-12-18T00:00:0071653319-RR-LSO-39982Lesotho RR Application Dec 2019 (Drought)AfricaLesothoSouthern AfricaSouthern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20192019-12-16T00:00:002019-12-16T00:00:002020-01-06T00:00:002020-01-07T00:00:003050000.003049997 Southern Africa drought 2018-202019-RR-LSO-39982-NR01waqas.muhammad@one.un.org#Waqas MuhammadEnglish2020-04-27T00:00:002020-06-24T00:00:002020-11-06T00:00:002020-11-30T00:00:002021-02-23T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture177064787465580199645398073944139524Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security20484353640122194715693413335HealthHealth5311762912940633391091544228382NutritionNutrition66625549521215779596375878171841293418Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1040673177716208158562206429835Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene666255495212157795963758781718412934182020-01-03T00:00:0071753419-RR-DJI-40092Djibouti RR Application Dec 2019 (Floods)AfricaDjiboutiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20192019-12-18T00:00:002019-12-27T00:00:002020-01-09T00:00:002020-01-09T00:00:003000000.002975819 Sudden Onset19-RR-DJI-40092-NR01harbi.omar@undp.org#Harbi OmarEnglish2020-10-06T00:00:002020-10-06T00:00:002020-11-05T00:00:002020-12-17T00:00:002021-03-10T15:34:39.92EducationEducation4998049984802048029800Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture29485078802629485406835416380Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security743811743191817634123301996439145HealthHealth316414794479585261094430670415150000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1882282347051958293748959600Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2634238277646192741839963673811320002020-01-07T00:00:0071853519-RR-COG-40036Congo RR Application Dec 2019 (Floods)AfricaRepublic of CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202019-12-24T00:00:002020-01-17T00:00:002020-01-10T00:00:002020-01-16T00:00:007000000.006926981 Sudden Onset19-RR-COG-40036-NR01Elna Yama#Elna YamaFrench2020-10-14T00:00:002020-10-14T00:00:002020-11-12T00:00:002020-12-15T00:00:002021-02-11T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture900330042001100370048009000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security253002615051450253002615051450102900HealthHealth13591280094160014703324304713388733NutritionNutrition1187011871188119023783565Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence820339342132119162841840322616Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4856558510441559560611165622097Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene135912800941600147033243047133887332020-01-10T00:00:0071953619-RR-NAM-40495Namibia RR Application Dec 2019 (Drought)AfricaNamibiaSouthern AfricaSouthern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20202019-12-24T00:00:002020-02-05T00:00:002020-01-24T00:00:002020-01-29T00:00:003000029.003000029 Southern Africa drought 2018-202019-RR-NAM-40495-NR01errolice.tjipura@one.un.org#Errolice TjipuraEnglish2020-04-28T00:00:002020-11-21T00:00:002021-02-19T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture08822882205887588714709NutritionNutrition716190716197887516479039150658Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection8000008000080000080000160000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence400405686106081629416334Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene68529082159347246960616852327862020-01-22T00:00:0072153720-RR-UGA-40553Uganda RR Application Jan 2020 (Floods)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-01-03T00:00:002020-01-03T00:00:002020-02-03T00:00:002020-02-04T00:00:003951312.003951312 Sudden Onset20-RR-UGA-40553-NR01nasiib.kaleebu@un.org#Nasiib KaleebuEnglish2020-10-05T00:00:002020-10-05T00:00:002020-11-26T00:00:002020-12-18T00:00:002021-09-17T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0000000HealthHealth409743682677800472513505282303160103Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection38583023688151083819892715808Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2998521151312239427063857Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6714399110705652044961101621721Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3177427618593923377629119628951222872020-01-30T00:00:0072353920-RR-CMR-40714Cameroon RR Application Jan 2020 (Displacement & Cholera)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-01-28T00:00:002020-02-21T00:00:002020-02-14T00:00:002020-02-19T00:00:008756165.00871699020-RR-CMR-40714-NR01martinezv@un.org#Victoria MartinezEnglish2020-11-04T00:00:002020-11-04T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002021-02-09T00:00:002021-05-06T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security74260260911003516021140141100352200703HealthHealth4162245490871129154889016180564267676NutritionNutrition1711501711518431302814871265827Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection7404074041076401076418168Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence683393107627611185294614047216Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6855798314838665065171316728005Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene207272537646103184432589044333904362020-02-13T00:00:0072454020-RR-ZWE-40612Zimbabwe RR Application Jan 2020 (Drought & Economic Crisis)AfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20202020-01-30T00:00:002020-01-30T00:00:002020-02-17T00:00:002020-02-19T00:00:0014894023.0014894023 Southern Africa drought 2018-202020-RR-ZWE-40612-NR01English2020-10-15T00:00:002020-10-15T00:00:002021-01-02T00:00:002021-01-15T00:00:002021-09-22T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture11840120322387213189129392612850000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security76496812521577487337996899170278328026HealthHealth59872598711197435987259871119743239486NutritionNutrition2216910221691240166382970623136844827Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection242302112263423336649223828864630Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence188464718066026227807522798007164033Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2816640531686973051343909744221431192020-02-14T00:00:0072554220-RR-SDN-40765Sudan RR Application Jan 2020 (Time-Critical Interventions)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20202020-01-30T00:00:002020-06-30T00:00:002020-03-03T00:00:002020-03-03T00:00:00100000000.0099874841 Special Allocation, Z - Not in use - Application - Refugee, Z - not in use - Returnees, Z - Not in use - Transition/early recovery Select20-RR-SDN-40765-NR01fisherm@un.org#Martin FisherEnglish2021-09-20T00:00:002021-09-20T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:002022-07-21T00:00:002023-07-07T11:01:02.3Early RecoveryEarly Recovery50960956581466186030985343145652292270EducationEducation5294232875622947462345450916107145Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture5970202628738598935583142850698433831703276HealthHealth246183106887353070275469170265445734798804Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector3223847063235078301536NutritionNutrition8806908806991663157411249074337143ProtectionProtection701812542805124461777559764180214173992662016Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI947216932516404610058373325173908337954Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene46121742133388255048935345218794154018240902020-02-28T00:00:0072654120-RR-SYR-40986Syria RR Application Feb 2020 (Displacement)AsiaSyrian Arab RepublicWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-02-13T00:00:002020-02-17T00:00:002020-02-18T00:00:002020-02-20T00:00:0030000000.0029995744 Fast-tracked Allocation Syria crisis 2011-20-RR-SYR-40986-NR01Paul Thomas (thomasp@un.org)#Paul Thomas (thomasp@un.org)English2020-10-20T00:00:002020-10-20T00:00:002020-12-18T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002022-09-30T00:00:00Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1218007980020160013020088200218400420000ProtectionProtection20519134443396321934148593679370756Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI55888767491326375043573664124099256736Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene581134424910236257912468891048012071632020-02-17T00:00:0072754420-UF-MRT-40776Mauritania UF Application Feb 2020 (Drought)AfricaMauritaniaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20202020-02-14T00:00:002020-03-25T00:00:002020-03-06T00:00:002020-03-09T00:00:005999380.00599938020-UF-MRT-40776-NR01bouh.yahya@one.un.org#Bouh YahyaFrench2020-12-16T00:00:002020-12-16T00:00:002021-03-31T00:00:002021-08-26T00:00:00EducationEducation0000000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture157841625832042854592461779149833Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security160231864788149786751017214960HealthHealth11035121502318513570370355060573790NutritionNutrition97430974312100142852638536128Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence22001642364629918864878851Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2010215502356024901950021990455502020-03-05T00:00:0072854520-RR-AGO-40795Angola RR Application Feb 2020 (Drought)AfricaAngolaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20202020-02-22T00:00:002020-03-10T00:00:002020-03-10T00:00:002020-03-10T00:00:003501693.003501693 Southern Africa drought 2018-202020-RR-AGO-40795-NR01Andrea Antonelli#Andrea AntonelliEnglish2020-10-08T00:00:002020-10-08T00:00:002021-01-09T00:00:002021-01-15T00:00:002021-09-15T00:00:00EducationEducation150000150001500001500030000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture72006012132129126101301925632468HealthHealth4244246644650496962NutritionNutrition518981950771405571864235799543170948Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection130900130901358601358626676Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence200002000400090001300015000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene273431941646759286232001548638953972020-03-06T00:00:0073054920-UF-TCD-40769Chad UF Application Feb 2020 (Displacement)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-02-24T00:00:002020-02-24T00:00:002020-03-19T00:00:002020-03-20T00:00:0012000000.001202016220-UF-TCD-40769-NR01holdsworth@un.org#Belinda HoldsworthFrench2021-01-08T00:00:002021-01-08T00:00:002021-04-30T00:00:002021-10-05T11:13:15.937Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management0631126311205825758257121369Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0000000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture25759129483870739899194225932198028Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security497704129191061497714350493275184336HealthHealth106120106121140601140622018Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector0000000NutritionNutrition469522215269104596172381383430152534ProtectionProtection0631126311205825758257121369Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection29432120506334052212561710680Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence10014265526616975366105358558851Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI10348108432119111716129062462245813Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene39812106798146610429081149001578083044182020-03-18T00:00:0073255520-UF-HND-40782Honduras UF Application Feb 2020 (Drought)AmericasHondurasLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20202020-02-26T00:00:002020-02-26T00:00:002020-03-31T00:00:002020-04-02T00:00:005000000.00500003820-UF-HND-40782-NR01palmae@un.org#Erlin PalmaEnglish2021-01-27T00:00:002021-01-27T00:00:002021-04-30T00:00:002021-08-27T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture6112596212074551357351124823322Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security98006300161001015087501890035000HealthHealth24642340285867012086166922877887448Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection28653820668527294229695813643Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene911593731848891831030619489287942020-03-31T00:00:0073354820-UF-HTI-40821Haiti UF Application Feb 2020 (Economic Disruption)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanUFEconomic DisruptionConflict-related20202020-02-26T00:00:002020-03-14T00:00:002020-03-12T00:00:002020-03-20T00:00:007000000.00699940520-UF-HTI-40821-NR01Nadja Kristina Gueggi#Nadja Kristina GueggiFrench2020-11-03T00:00:002020-11-03T00:00:002021-04-30T00:00:002021-10-22T00:00:00EducationEducation56372425879510587519211071Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture22738145273726524632170534168578950Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security26053794639926173814643112830HealthHealth1587650962097217864340835194772919Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection926079991725910084129812306540324Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence13873940532715161474016256215832020-03-12T00:00:0073455620-UF-GTM-40784Guatemala UF Application Feb 2020 (Drought)AmericasGuatemalaLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20202020-02-25T00:00:002020-02-25T00:00:002020-04-06T00:00:002020-04-07T00:00:005000076.00499367720-UF-GTM-40784-NR01barillase@un.org#Edy Manolo BarillasEnglish2020-11-04T00:00:002020-11-04T00:00:002021-04-30T00:00:002021-06-09T00:00:002021-08-03T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture7420346510885776635001126622151Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security15022108902591214706142532895954871HealthHealth2829111639450147631476318708NutritionNutrition1258076992027912459131082556745846ProtectionProtection0592592631695175828174Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2500165541552000122321423218387Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene55846901124855244787413118256032020-04-03T00:00:0073555020-UF-SYR-40845Syria UF Application Feb 2020 (Displacement)AsiaSyrian Arab RepublicWestern AsiaWestern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-02-26T00:00:002020-03-09T00:00:002020-03-19T00:00:002020-03-20T00:00:0025000000.0024887327 Syria crisis 2011-20-UF-SYR-40845-NR02Nurhaida Rahim#Nurhaida RahimEnglish2021-04-20T00:00:002021-04-20T00:00:002021-07-30T00:00:002021-10-15T00:00:002022-04-11T13:43:11.47Early RecoveryEarly Recovery36742446612036742446612012240EducationEducation612224363656387252663913004Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture159397163118322515163201172109335310657825Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security0000000HealthHealth135751147749283500125100161160286260569760NutritionNutrition2395060239506239117430488669605909111Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection31766127904455628041179914603290588Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1622296062582815668142352990355731Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene112895937562066511401871012912414784481292020-03-18T00:00:0073755420-RR-BFA-41333Burkina Faso RR Application Mar 2020 (Displacement)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-03-06T00:00:002020-03-25T00:00:002020-03-23T00:00:002020-04-01T00:00:0010000000.001000543320-RR-BFA-41333-NR01knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonFrench2020-10-20T00:00:002020-10-20T00:00:002020-12-23T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002021-05-05T00:00:00HealthHealth11513592994208129123990110707234697442826Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection6742539212134730458421314625280Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence213152356307583311433129Protection - Mine ActionMine Action19894201494004320383261194650286545Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI21199100723127120369123093267863949Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene838065799514180184345603611447062865072020-03-20T00:00:0073955720-UF-NER-40771Niger UF Application Mar 2020 (Displacement)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-03-09T00:00:002020-03-30T00:00:002020-03-31T00:00:002020-04-08T00:00:0010951371.001095137120-UF-NER-40771-NR01dieudonneb@un.org#Dieudonne BamouniFrench2020-11-03T00:00:002020-11-03T00:00:002021-04-30T00:00:002021-08-09T00:00:00EducationEducation29392443183306119532566439Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture421033444876551456123731882930159481Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security478931497938513064801161019548HealthHealth18017133463136318684166823536666729Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector4523662711150537987111409025240NutritionNutrition10987143111301045112531170422834ProtectionProtection61284520471133316511356863121976235307Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection9845953619381819570121520734588Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1026976701793924712244624917467113Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI7501416311664882949611379025454Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2426914138384072711452238793521177592020-03-30T00:00:0074056920-UF-PRK-41744DPR Korea UF Application Mar 2020 (Protracted Crisis)AsiaDemocratic People's Republic of KoreaEastern AsiaEastern AsiaUFEconomic DisruptionConflict-related20202020-03-10T00:00:002020-03-10T00:00:002020-06-19T00:00:002020-07-27T00:00:005000000.00499968920-UF-PRK-41744-NR01Chunyao Yi#Chunyao YiEnglish2021-04-28T00:00:002021-04-28T00:00:002021-03-31T00:00:002022-03-31T00:00:002022-08-09T14:24:49.95Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture152505599671246154146334078754150000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security0000000HealthHealth0000000NutritionNutrition0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene00000002020-06-04T00:00:0074155220-RR-PSE-41231oPt RR Application Mar 2020 (Food Insecurity)Asiaoccupied Palestinian territoryWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-03-11T00:00:002020-03-11T00:00:002020-03-23T00:00:002020-03-27T00:00:0022293277.002229327720-RR-PSE-41231-NR01Chiara Capozio#Chiara CapozioEnglish2020-10-12T00:00:002020-10-12T00:00:002020-12-23T00:00:002021-09-15T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security26636126692853328926479126513352992410632132020-03-20T00:00:0074255320-RR-MLI-41516Mali RR Application Mar 2020 (Violence/Clashes)AfricaMaliWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20202020-03-12T00:00:002020-03-24T00:00:002020-03-23T00:00:002020-03-26T00:00:007000000.006999805 Food Security20-RR-MLI-41516-NR01Evelyne MASSOMA COLOMINA & David CIBONGA#Evelyne MASSOMA COLOMINA & David CIBONGAFrench2020-10-20T00:00:002020-10-20T00:00:002021-01-25T00:00:002021-03-31T00:00:002021-09-17T00:00:00EducationEducation1429319746261502317246749300Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture5414766113075586667151258125656Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security11123199383106111707206483235563416HealthHealth89591655106141101144981550926123NutritionNutrition168127016812714321999244242463410590ProtectionProtection413177821911013450555187709Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection207141724881645151179642842020-03-20T00:00:0074356020-UF-COD-40870DR Congo UF Application Mar 2020 (Displacement)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-03-13T00:00:002020-05-07T00:00:002020-04-15T00:00:002020-04-15T00:00:0030003830.002998389020-UF-COD-40870-NR01Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirFrench2021-01-27T00:00:002021-01-27T00:00:002021-08-31T00:00:002021-11-22T00:00:002022-03-23T10:23:52.25Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000EducationEducation744124776887686153783915527Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture534614076194228262209162917848600Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security18944112833022720224125243274862975HealthHealth12745310449123194481690101392183082415026Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector17190115782876820860228724373272500NutritionNutrition203123401254322492416784417069602ProtectionProtection339223852772449374415025087691160140Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection7565271410279878229811176322042Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence350804011675196376365388291518166714Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI283062049748803306642220552869101672Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4126227508687703808825392634801322502020-04-14T00:00:0074455920-RR-PAK-41273Pakistan RR Application Mar 2020 (winter emergency)AsiaPakistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-03-24T00:00:002020-03-24T00:00:002020-04-14T00:00:002020-04-17T00:00:003000000.003000016 Sudden Onset20-RR-PAK-41273-NR01iqbalf@un.org#Fatima IqbalEnglish2021-01-12T00:00:002021-01-12T00:00:002021-02-16T00:00:002021-12-31T00:00:002022-02-18T14:28:01.5Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1019619280294769786187622854858024Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security25477234534893024500225704707096000HealthHealth54806482001030065039846596969942000002020-04-14T00:00:0074555820-RR-GLB-42285Global RR Application Apr 2020 (COVID-19)GlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalRRCOVID-19Meteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20202020-04-01T00:00:002020-04-01T00:00:002020-04-09T00:00:002020-04-20T00:00:0080000000.0080000024 Special Allocation Covid-19 2020-202120-RR-GLB-42285-NR02castelh@who.int#Helene CastelEnglish2021-06-30T00:00:002021-10-31T00:00:002022-03-23T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management11906289663208725137274112760250034458759Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000EducationEducation902834291809799464398682488339718902220618968645Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture459484343089378467055283099535188913HealthHealth704594416248750232946947810345165903372440068247695376Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector15992194633545515992241264011875573Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection23577145708163806587724981874394240689242714958304Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence615914639207982662090244116864137662Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI99543820148155113204623157551105706Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene8077027154751523177835035780988161602331392002020-04-14T00:00:0074656120-RR-MOZ-42470Mozambique RR Application Apr 2020 (Conflict and floods)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20202020-04-07T00:00:002020-04-28T00:00:002020-04-27T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:007003179.00700307920-RR-MOZ-42470-NR01Mr. Sergio Dinoi#Mr. Sergio DinoiEnglish2021-02-27T00:00:002021-03-26T00:00:002021-08-27T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management22641202234286420223177963801980883Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000EducationEducation8750525014000875052501400028000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture6723678813511667758061248325994Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security20665155373620221570176483921875420HealthHealth16500585007500045800194400240200315200NutritionNutrition638063866369313561994ProtectionProtection12137127072484413878150512892953773Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection28323568640027933612640512805Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence675067501350015750157503150045000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI14155126392679412639111222376150555Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene207321907039802225602073243292830942020-04-24T00:00:0074856220-RR-ZWE-42705Zimbabwe RR Application Apr 2020 (Social Protection)AfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-04-15T00:00:002020-04-22T00:00:002020-04-29T00:00:002020-04-30T00:00:0019999113.001999911320-RR-ZWE-42705-NR02atupele.kapile@one.un.org#Atupele KapileEnglish2021-11-29T00:00:002022-02-16T00:00:002022-03-31T11:23:36.403Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security46910475099441948038594421074802018992020-04-28T00:00:0074956420-RR-NER-42550Niger RR Application Apr 2020 (Displacement)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-04-23T00:00:002020-04-23T00:00:002020-05-15T00:00:002020-05-19T00:00:006001054.00600105420-RR-NER-42550-NR02dieudonneb@un.org#Dieudonne BamouniFrench2021-08-05T00:00:002022-04-06T00:00:00EducationEducation563325858914525144466910560Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security12931193913232212424186213104563367Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector879610963197599750120062175641515NutritionNutrition834083486808681702ProtectionProtection409210168142607521110071852832788Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection38811113992540610255089500Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence409210168142607521110071852832788Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI9034647415508940367381614131649Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2191334454563672446239100635621199292020-05-14T00:00:0075056320-RR-VUT-42734Vanuatu RR Application Apr 2020 (Tropical Cyclone Harold)OceaniaVanuatuMelanesiaMelanesiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-04-27T00:00:002020-05-18T00:00:002020-05-12T00:00:002020-05-18T00:00:002579188.002605385 Sudden Onset20-RR-VUT-42734-NR01Daniel Gilman#Daniel GilmanEnglish2021-03-14T00:00:002021-05-28T16:32:07.69Common Services - Emergency TelecommunicationsEmergency Telecommunications0000000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture705310133171867034101611719534381HealthHealth13513125002601312500196083210858121NutritionNutrition2808028082727284255698377Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene158171974435561157441981735561711222020-05-12T00:00:0075156520-RR-COD-42346DR Congo RR Application May 2020 (post-Ebola response)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20202020-05-05T00:00:002020-05-08T00:00:002020-05-29T00:00:002020-06-05T00:00:0039930584.0039947117 Special Allocation Ebola in DRC and readiness in neighboring countries 2018-201920-RR-COD-42346-NR02Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirFrench2021-10-15T00:00:002021-10-15T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-04-14T00:00:00EducationEducation2068948221171206204782109842269Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security4051040418809285576844960100728181656HealthHealth4379374760799140164760795141289902071904223NutritionNutrition108150291911106979109346982578193647ProtectionProtection238012158674396686277681317349595030991716Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection5832769660140651192525711858Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence8558085588289119672025628814Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI15835193553519015214185953380968999Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene607729118351955902231478905001256952020-05-28T00:00:0075256720-RR-SOM-43194Somalia RR Application May 2020 (Floods)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-05-19T00:00:002020-05-28T00:00:002020-06-05T00:00:002020-06-09T00:00:007100529.007100529 Sudden Onset20-RR-SOM-43194-NR01agwaro@un.org#Patricia Nyimbae AgwaroEnglish2020-12-18T00:00:002020-12-18T00:00:002021-03-05T00:00:002021-03-22T00:00:002021-05-12T00:00:00Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1190058311773118800159693476952500Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene60304338789418262561406231031841973662020-06-04T00:00:0075356620-RR-KEN-43346Kenya RR Application May 2020 (Floods)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-05-21T00:00:002020-05-28T00:00:002020-06-03T00:00:002020-06-05T00:00:003000000.003006018 Sudden Onset20-RR-KEN-43346-NR01Joy Maingi#Joy MaingiEnglish2021-03-03T00:00:002021-03-10T00:00:002021-05-05T20:03:55.45Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security13919108422476113221159702919153952HealthHealth251562210347259336013134464945112204Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6221612912350710292081631028660Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene562806096911724957416622011196172368662020-06-02T00:00:0075456820-RR-FJI-42874Fiji RR Application May 2020 (Tropical Cyclone Harold)OceaniaFijiMelanesiaMelanesiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-05-27T00:00:002020-06-08T00:00:002020-06-11T00:00:002020-06-15T00:00:00999920.001002748 Sudden Onset20-RR-FJI-42874-NR01Anne Colquhoun#Anne ColquhounEnglish2020-12-08T00:00:002020-12-08T00:00:002021-03-11T00:00:002021-05-04T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security489798128747677612522539HealthHealth05441544105441544110882Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI24652303476839003287718711955Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene308235546636257228135385120212020-06-10T00:00:0075557020-RR-BGD-43537Bangladesh RR Application Jun 2020 (Cyclone Amphan)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-06-08T00:00:002020-06-08T00:00:002020-06-24T00:00:002020-06-24T00:00:005012123.005012069 Sudden Onset20-RR-BGD-43537-NR01henry.glorieux@one.un.org#Henry GlorieuxEnglish2020-11-04T00:00:002020-11-04T00:00:002021-03-24T00:00:002021-08-27T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture809414867229617738163532409147052Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector13567209373450412457271053956274066NutritionNutrition51627051627507651606466829118456Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection69940653971353376225044673106923242260Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence6241106241110925261599170851233262Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI15876188943477014420179453236567135Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene676306480813243866765848721516372840752020-06-22T00:00:0075657120-RR-GLB-43879Global RR Application Jun 2020 (Covid-19 NGO)GlobalGlobalGlobalGlobalRRCOVID-19Meteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20202020-06-18T00:00:002020-09-23T00:00:002020-06-26T00:00:002020-06-29T00:00:0025074550.0025074550 Special Allocation Covid-19 2020-202120-RR-GLB-43879-NR03jdebacker@iom.int#Jo De BackerEnglish2021-03-26T00:00:002021-12-17T00:00:002022-03-23T00:00:00HealthHealth2284242730745014982392073315595707661072264Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection2749180045492733224149749523Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence398162743267248525092946781976149224Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene23551029935053486025760831840357601111108712020-06-25T00:00:0075757420-RR-BGD-44022Bangladesh RR Application Jun 2020 (Anticipatory Action - Floods)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-06-25T00:00:002020-06-25T00:00:002020-07-24T00:00:002020-07-08T00:00:005339084.005189062 AA - allocation under AA framework20-RR-BGD-44022-NR02Daniel Gilman#Daniel GilmanEnglish2021-04-24T00:00:002020-12-15T00:00:002021-02-17T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture20670269344760418409277924620193805HealthHealth0000432043204320Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector21529839621054911937688268107644213135Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0004500595510455104552020-07-06T00:00:0075857220-RR-SLV-43848El Salvador RR Application Jun 2020 (Tropical Storms Amanda & Cristobal)AmericasEl SalvadorLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-06-29T00:00:002020-06-29T00:00:002020-07-10T00:00:002020-07-14T00:00:003000000.002999884 Sudden Onset20-RR-SLV-43848-NR01solorzano2@un.org#Laura SolorzanoEnglish2020-12-18T00:00:002020-12-18T00:00:002021-04-10T00:00:002022-02-14T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture79211231915783138021634078Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security25274803733025325399793115261Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI19623729569119664193615911850Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene180683061748685191182449143609922942020-07-09T00:00:0075957520-RR-RWA-43884Rwanda RR Application Jun 2020 (Floods)AfricaRwandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-06-30T00:00:002020-07-17T00:00:002020-07-23T00:00:002020-07-23T00:00:001000000.00100000020-RR-RWA-43884-NR01deborah.gribaudo@one.un.org#Deborah GribaudoEnglish2021-03-03T00:00:002021-03-03T00:00:002021-04-23T00:00:002021-09-17T07:27:58.697Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture22255403762822114765697614604Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI19812476445724762972544899052020-07-22T00:00:0076157820-RR-ETH-44584Ethiopia RR Application Aug 2020 (Floods and cholera)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-08-13T00:00:002020-08-20T00:00:002020-09-08T00:00:002020-09-10T00:00:008000000.00800000020-RR-ETH-44584-NR01bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2021-02-04T00:00:002021-02-04T00:00:002021-06-23T00:00:002021-06-08T00:00:002022-03-30T16:55:17.907HealthHealth0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene00000002020-09-04T00:00:0076357720-RR-TCD-44607Chad RR Application Aug 2020 (Displacement)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-08-19T00:00:002020-09-02T00:00:002020-10-04T00:00:002020-09-08T00:00:004500000.00450517220-RR-TCD-44607-NR02holdsworth@un.org#Belinda HoldsworthFrench2021-01-19T00:00:002021-01-19T00:00:002021-07-04T00:00:002021-05-28T00:00:002021-10-25T09:04:10.88Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security19883182913817421471198824135379527ProtectionProtection1145694712092711457100792153642463Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI412258599981481066111142121402Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3400640098003600660010200200002020-09-02T00:00:0076558020-RR-NER-45057Niger RR Application Sep 2020 (Floods)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-09-25T00:00:002020-09-25T00:00:002020-10-21T00:00:002020-10-13T00:00:005019682.00501941620-RR-NER-45057-NR03dieudonneb@un.org#Dieudonne BamouniEnglish2021-07-21T00:00:002021-12-28T16:10:09.483HealthHealth312624884580107162032106737270117377ProtectionProtection17502320154951716741179793472084237Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence900828931190117564200563762049521Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI112616611178721378287482253040402Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene567964884510564159114428091019232075642020-10-08T00:00:0076658220-UF-MOZ-45117Mozambique UF Application Oct 2020 (Conflict/Displacement)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-10-01T00:00:002020-10-01T00:00:002020-12-11T00:00:002020-11-03T00:00:006974888.00699988820-UF-MOZ-45117-NR02dinoi@un.org#Sergio DinoiEnglish2021-10-12T00:00:002021-10-12T00:00:002021-12-31T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-04-14T10:46:34.107Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management0000000EducationEducation00000002020-10-29T00:00:0076759320-UF-PAK-45168Pakistan UF Application Oct 2020 (Multiple)AsiaPakistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20202020-10-05T00:00:002020-10-01T00:00:002021-01-13T00:00:002020-11-16T00:00:006000000.00597427420-UF-PAK-45168-NR02iqbalf@un.org#Fatima IqbalEnglish2021-10-21T00:00:002021-10-21T00:00:002022-12-31T00:00:002022-02-21T00:00:002023-03-21T10:42:21.73HealthHealth02047204772292102928231329NutritionNutrition7301107301175744328125403869476880Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence354160949635107432326634009436442020-11-10T00:00:0076958920-RR-PAK-45179Pakistan RR Application Oct 2020 (Sindh Floods)AsiaPakistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-10-16T00:00:002020-10-16T00:00:002021-01-08T00:00:002020-10-30T00:00:003000000.00299988620-RR-PAK-45179-NR01iqbalf@un.org#Fatima IqbalEnglish2021-04-27T00:00:002021-04-27T00:00:002021-10-08T00:00:002022-01-15T00:00:002022-04-04T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security275372994857485264552877655231112716HealthHealth354468861812406462033109296171329295393NutritionNutrition1504601504614985133032828843334Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene576424583110347349282552341045162079892020-10-27T00:00:0077059820-UF-BDI-44781Burundi UF Application Oct 2020 (Displacement)AfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-10-16T00:00:002020-10-16T00:00:002021-01-25T00:00:002020-11-18T00:00:005000000.00500023120-UF-BDI-44781-NR01simba@un.org#Lucien SimbaEnglish2021-09-15T00:00:002021-09-15T00:00:002022-12-31T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-03-28T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management1618155131691632214637786947Common Services - LogisticsLogistics1063129923621299158928885250EducationEducation92750927596530965318928Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector1577134129181863227541387056Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence9422385332713286194543274036067Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI59160011918941191208532762020-11-17T00:00:0077159020-UF-AFG-45288Afghanistan UF Application Oct 2020 (Violence/Clashes)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFViolence/ClashesGeophysical20202020-10-16T00:00:002020-10-16T00:00:002021-01-13T00:00:002020-11-05T00:00:0013000000.001299996520-UF-AFG-45288-NR01Gul Zamir Haqbayan#Gul Zamir HaqbayanEnglish2021-12-20T00:00:002021-12-20T00:00:002022-12-31T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-04-08T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture149399114473263872147171112341259512523384HealthHealth9629321047730677097919183633281552588322NutritionNutrition3024003024029590108384042870668Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence651765171303418548185483709650130Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene8294889187172135760151127161887313608662020-10-30T00:00:0077258320-UF-NGA-45132Nigeria UF Application Oct 2020 (Conflict/Displacement)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-10-16T00:00:002020-11-16T00:00:002020-12-11T00:00:002020-11-10T00:00:0013000959.001300194620-UF-NGA-45132-NR01Trond Jensen#Trond JensenEnglish2021-09-10T00:00:002021-09-10T00:00:002021-12-31T00:00:002022-03-09T00:00:002022-03-31T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management89215546651438807831073786152096295976EducationEducation3839067339063336605353419573258ProtectionProtection75000660001410009000069000159000300000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection228861110239962473324612719451190Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2020487812898557522133925191447220432Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI8160102181837883981001218410367882020-11-05T00:00:0077359920-UF-UGA-45310Uganda UF Application Oct 2020 (Displacement)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-10-16T00:00:002020-10-16T00:00:002021-01-25T00:00:002020-11-23T00:00:005000000.00499933620-UF-UGA-45310-NR01tatsuhiko.furumoto@mofa.go.jp#Tatsuhiko FurumotoEnglish2021-10-19T00:00:002021-10-19T00:00:002022-12-31T00:00:002022-02-03T00:00:002022-04-12T11:31:37.877HealthHealth0000000NutritionNutrition0000000ProtectionProtection0000000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence00000002020-11-19T00:00:0077459720-UF-COL-44671Colombia UF Application Oct 2020 (Post-conflict Needs)AmericasColombiaLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-10-19T00:00:002020-10-19T00:00:002021-01-21T00:00:002020-12-07T00:00:005000000.00500000020-UF-COL-44671-NR01Claudia Rodriguez Burrell#Claudia Rodriguez BurrellEnglish2021-10-21T00:00:002021-10-21T00:00:002022-12-31T00:00:002022-03-28T00:00:002022-04-11T16:26:55.243EducationEducation1850194537952003209741007895Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture87411792053917139823154368Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security28133087590028683114598211882HealthHealth161643537651540174463168749133100673ProtectionProtection42895185947439425212915418628Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection32721001427337616038979914072Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence4822567383474567091449882Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene50616593116544934604610980226342020-12-01T00:00:0077558420-RR-SSD-45085South Sudan RR Application Oct 2020 (Floods)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-10-23T00:00:002020-10-30T00:00:002020-12-10T00:00:002020-11-06T00:00:009740349.009739548 Sudden Onset South Sudan crisis 2013-20-RR-SSD-45085-NR02Georgios Alexandratos#Georgios AlexandratosEnglish2021-05-26T00:00:002021-05-26T00:00:002021-09-10T00:00:002022-04-11T13:53:56.84Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture3237471572103946257485584481592185538Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security239433590359846292624389273154133000HealthHealth771001065001836006800098700166700350300Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence00010654122182287222872Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI5690258912115814467575308699843215657Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1321091038012359101226741132372359114718212020-11-04T00:00:0077758520-UF-BFA-45133Burkina Faso UF Application Oct 2020 (Conflict/Displacement)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-10-29T00:00:002020-12-08T00:00:002020-12-21T00:00:002020-11-23T00:00:006000000.00600114820-UF-BFA-45133-NR02knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonFrench2021-10-05T00:00:002021-10-05T00:00:002021-12-31T00:00:002022-03-31T00:00:002022-04-07T14:37:04.173Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management9270477114041939961941559329634Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture417510770149455800127001850033445HealthHealth122181103384225565131579112782244361469926NutritionNutrition15669001566901630850163085319775Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence14724602607975269636716278Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI130891622241799131231115335Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene239381149035428264761850044976804042020-11-17T00:00:0077858820-RR-SOA-45759Southern Africa RR Application Nov 2020 (Locust)AfricaSouthern AfricaSouthern AfricaSouthern AfricaRRInsect infestationBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-11-11T00:00:002020-11-18T00:00:002020-12-21T00:00:002020-11-30T00:00:002000000.002000000 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action20-RR-SOA-45759-NR01Gemma Connell#Gemma ConnellEnglish2021-05-26T00:00:002021-05-26T00:00:002021-09-21T00:00:002021-08-09T00:00:002022-01-11T14:57:57.9Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture7186757186751437350718675718675143735028747002020-11-23T00:00:0078059520-RR-PHL-45955Philippines RR Application Nov 2020 (Typhoon Goni)AsiaPhilippinesSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-11-18T00:00:002020-11-23T00:00:002021-01-19T00:00:002020-12-02T00:00:003113385.00311367420-RR-PHL-45955-NR01vidic@un.org#Manja VidicEnglish2021-05-26T00:00:002021-05-26T00:00:002021-10-19T00:00:002022-05-21T20:51:10.98Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management187232419182250432851Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security27364451718726564718737414561HealthHealth251473271857865243483163955987113852Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection476539768741520953391054819289Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI2000244944491778242141998648Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene97561358923345139891715931148544932020-11-25T00:00:0078460020-RR-ETH-46276Ethiopia RR Application Dec 2020 (Tigray conflict)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-12-18T00:00:002020-12-28T00:00:002021-01-27T00:00:002021-01-13T00:00:0013000000.001301116920-RR-ETH-46276-NR01bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2021-05-28T00:00:002021-05-28T00:00:002021-10-27T00:00:002021-10-27T00:00:002022-02-14T11:44:17.39HealthHealth72828672241400527580169969145770285822NutritionNutrition638010638016380151125114926178727ProtectionProtection2002734732088233344214894Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI44985615441065294564861204106852213381Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene787784464112341989281498931391742625932020-12-31T00:00:0078860820-RR-SSD-46432South Sudan RR Application Dec 2020 (Cash allocation)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-12-21T00:00:002020-12-31T00:00:002021-02-05T00:00:002021-01-12T00:00:007000000.007000000 Special Allocation South Sudan crisis 2013-, Covid-19 2020-202120-RR-SSD-46432-NR01Georgios Alexandratos#Georgios AlexandratosEnglish2021-08-11T00:00:002021-08-11T00:00:002021-10-11T00:00:002021-11-05T00:00:002022-11-01T12:39:15.42Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security49294472739656750525745081250332216002021-01-07T00:00:0078960320-RR-BFA-46439Burkina Faso RR Application Dec 2020 (Cash allocation)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20202020-12-21T00:00:002020-12-21T00:00:002021-02-05T00:00:002021-01-08T00:00:006000000.006000000 Special Allocation Covid-19 2020-202120-RR-BFA-46439-NR01knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonEnglish2021-08-30T00:00:002021-08-30T00:00:002021-10-07T00:00:002021-10-31T00:00:002022-02-11T12:08:12.397Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security4619725427716244715729785769421485662020-12-31T00:00:0079063020-RR-ETH-46461Ethiopia RR Application Dec 2020 (Anticipatory Action - Drought)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212020-12-23T00:00:002021-03-30T00:00:002021-07-01T00:00:002021-04-13T00:00:0020017966.0019996683 AA - allocation under AA framework, Food Security, Special Allocation20-RR-ETH-46461-NR04bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2021-11-05T00:00:002021-11-05T00:00:002022-01-12T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:002022-08-08T16:48:39.273EducationEducation16686873175591541821221754035099Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture264358101694366052272413102026374439740491HealthHealth11117102622137911571106812225243631NutritionNutrition195526019552619552581109276634472160ProtectionProtection03683680301301669Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection381133607133988483114586115069249057Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence19295304174971276879103465180344230056Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2933124985543162933124985543161086322021-04-09T00:00:0079160220-RR-AFG-46479Afghanistan RR Application Dec 2020 (Cash allocation)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20202020-12-23T00:00:002020-12-23T00:00:002021-02-05T00:00:002021-01-07T00:00:0015000000.0015000000 Food Security, Special Allocation Covid-19 2020-202120-RR-AFG-46479-NR02Gul Zamir Haqbayan#Gul Zamir HaqbayanEnglish2021-08-11T00:00:002021-08-11T00:00:002021-10-05T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:002022-04-08T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture185560128771314331190532134847325379639710Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1537641263062800701400351290522690875491572020-12-31T00:00:0079260520-RR-NGA-46483Nigeria RR Application Dec 2020 (Cash allocation)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212020-12-23T00:00:002021-01-13T00:00:002021-02-05T00:00:002021-01-14T00:00:0015000000.0015000005 Food Security, Special Allocation Covid-19 2020-202120-RR-NGA-46483-NR01Trond Jensen#Trond JensenEnglish2021-08-12T00:00:002021-08-12T00:00:002021-10-13T00:00:002022-02-25T00:00:002022-04-11T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security1534226434417762508636801618871036632021-01-12T00:00:0079460120-RR-EAF-46560Eastern Africa RR Application Dec 2020 (Locust)AfricaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRInsect infestationBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20202020-12-31T00:00:002020-12-31T00:00:002021-01-27T00:00:002021-01-12T00:00:001500000.001500000 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action20-RR-EAF-46560-NR01Gemma Connell#Gemma ConnellEnglish2021-06-10T00:00:002021-06-10T00:00:002021-10-27T00:00:002021-10-11T00:00:002022-03-30T17:01:13.367Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture00000002020-12-31T00:00:0079560421-RR-COD-46697DR Congo RR Application Jan 2021 (Cash allocation)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-01-07T00:00:002021-01-15T00:00:002021-02-05T00:00:002021-01-22T00:00:007000000.006998971 Food Security, Special Allocation Covid-19 2020-202121-RR-COD-46697-NR01Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglish2021-09-08T00:00:002021-11-22T00:00:002022-03-23T00:00:00Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector3502119650546713551024266597761144472021-01-19T00:00:0079661121-RR-AZE-46781Azerbaijan RR Application Jan 2021 (Nagorno-Karabakh conflict)AsiaAzerbaijanWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-01-18T00:00:002021-02-05T00:00:002021-02-19T00:00:002021-02-05T00:00:002000000.00199922721-RR-AZE-46781-NR01muktar@un.org#Muktar FarahEnglish2021-07-19T00:00:002021-07-19T00:00:002021-10-19T00:00:002022-07-29T00:00:00Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth528417037223215841195892543047751Protection - Mine ActionMine Action12500149002740010400122002260050000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI5113265977725558890114459222312021-02-02T00:00:0079761021-RR-ARM-46814Armenia RR Application Jan 2021 (Nagorno-Karabakh conflict)AsiaArmeniaWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-01-20T00:00:002021-02-04T00:00:002021-02-19T00:00:002021-02-02T00:00:002000000.00200059821-RR-ARM-46814-NR01sumpf@un.org#Denise SumpfEnglish2021-07-19T00:00:002021-07-19T00:00:002021-11-01T00:00:002021-11-05T00:00:002021-12-27T00:00:00EducationEducation255425951556571830HealthHealth1478158030581302562569279985ProtectionProtection1187931512194110717591183024024Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1335210034352100404161419576Protection - Mine ActionMine Action35505531908132986424972218803Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI53698364137334987971514702284352021-01-29T00:00:0079860921-RR-FJI-46848Fiji RR Application Jan 2021 (Cyclone Yasa)OceaniaFijiMelanesiaMelanesiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-01-27T00:00:002021-01-31T00:00:002021-02-11T00:00:002021-02-08T00:00:00500000.00500000 Sudden Onset21-RR-FJI-46848-NR01ketewai#ketewaiEnglish2021-08-26T00:00:002021-08-26T00:00:002021-11-30T00:00:002021-12-15T00:00:002022-09-02T11:27:28.653Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture6388249288806388381710205190852021-02-02T00:00:0080161221-RR-GIN-47052Guinea RR Application Mar 2021 (Ebola)AfricaGuineaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20212021-03-12T00:00:002021-03-12T00:00:002021-04-08T00:00:002021-03-26T00:00:006000000.006000001 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Fast-tracked Allocation, Sudden Onset21-RR-GIN-47052-NR01Amadou Diallo#Amadou DialloEnglish2021-08-30T00:00:002021-08-30T00:00:002021-12-14T00:00:002021-12-28T16:09:08.733Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000EducationEducation44966214747113363383883672683839Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security36453861750646164378899416500HealthHealth7046720609127655888706412535501241777799NutritionNutrition5529210750116279360139122452182591345384ProtectionProtection868913747224368803125072131043746Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene32467109765142232314001226851540852963172021-03-22T00:00:0080261821-RR-WAF-47074Western Africa RR Application Mar 2021 (Ebola regional response)AfricaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20212021-03-16T00:00:002021-04-27T00:00:002021-05-14T00:00:002021-04-09T00:00:005000000.004999236 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Prevention/preparedness/readiness, Special Allocation, Sudden Onset21-RR-WAF-47074-NR01arigot@unicef.org#Rigot AudeEnglish2021-10-21T00:00:002021-10-21T00:00:002021-12-30T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-10-05T00:00:00HealthHealth7319695698633414306029744167074015791484324929149278Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene256615692624949239369422855492122491421741532021-04-05T00:00:0080361421-RR-COD-47069DR Congo RR Application Mar 2021 (Ebola)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20212021-03-23T00:00:002021-04-07T00:00:002021-04-22T00:00:002021-04-08T00:00:004000000.004013391 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Sudden Onset21-RR-COD-47069-NR02Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglish2022-01-07T00:00:002022-02-15T00:00:002022-08-10T08:46:13.41HealthHealth534567753546128811356536679696113623272650440Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth64296058124879208104111961932106ProtectionProtection126175520161243113323764392Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence5894460710501560248631046520966Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene59454100100456150430510455205002021-04-05T00:00:0080461321-RR-CAF-47075CAR RR Application Mar 2021 (Displacement)AfricaCentral African RepublicMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-03-28T00:00:002021-04-11T00:00:002021-04-22T00:00:002021-04-13T00:00:008000000.008000183 CAR crisis 2013-21-RR-CAF-47075-NR02Emmanuelle Schneider#Emmanuelle SchneiderEnglish2021-08-30T00:00:002021-08-30T00:00:002022-01-12T00:00:002022-07-22T09:54:10.637Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1340366332003614472100762454844584Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security858810817194059453124272188041285HealthHealth416083014071748416703198073650145398Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth557090371460713690246803837052977NutritionNutrition22267222982476474672229520ProtectionProtection363072753463841357953011865913129754Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection2200615602356621649189423543471092021-04-06T00:00:0080561521-RR-GNQ-47143Equatorial Guinea RR Application Mar 2021 (Bata explosion)AfricaEquatorial GuineaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRUnspecified EmergencyConflict-related20212021-03-31T00:00:002021-03-31T00:00:002021-04-22T00:00:002021-04-14T00:00:001000000.00994464 Sudden Onset21-RR-GNQ-47143-NR01maria.fernandesteixeira@un.org#Maria Fernandes TeixeiraEnglish2022-01-11T00:00:002022-10-14T15:16:31.143Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000ProtectionProtection70001300020000195002050040000600002021-04-09T00:00:0080661721-RR-BGD-47273Bangladesh RR Application Apr 2021 (Rohingya camp fires)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRUnspecified EmergencyConflict-related20212021-04-05T00:00:002021-05-10T00:00:002021-05-14T00:00:002021-04-22T00:00:0014000000.0013974469 Sudden Onset21-RR-BGD-47273-NR01shahidur.rahman@one.un.org#Kazi Shahidur RahmanEnglish2021-12-21T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:002022-09-02T11:24:26.153Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management25061217124677323957253044926196034Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security22214205894280321122241954531788120HealthHealth11571128682443912768228363560460043ProtectionProtection1403743211572487901329874088898136Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI15097131982829514489153502983958134Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene153801339028770151671596131128598982021-04-20T00:00:0080762121-RR-SDN-47060Sudan RR Application Apr 2021 (Inter-communal violence in W Darfur)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222021-04-05T00:00:002022-11-29T00:00:002021-05-24T00:00:002021-04-26T00:00:005000000.00499919421-RR-SDN-47060-NR02noviera@un.org#Laksmita NovieraEnglish2021-09-29T00:00:002021-09-29T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-03-17T00:00:002022-12-15T16:02:01.543EducationEducation94064359841130822551333723178Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture8090860016690809092201731034000HealthHealth361183467070788375593611673675144463ProtectionProtection400045008500550065001200020500Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence851502352826530081268361Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI116836426181091271477382045238561Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene249421468639628268391797144810844382021-04-21T00:00:0080862021-RR-SSD-47076South Sudan RR Application Apr 2021 (Likely famine)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-04-09T00:00:002021-04-09T00:00:002021-05-21T00:00:002021-04-30T00:00:0010000000.0010000359 Food Security South Sudan crisis 2013-21-RR-SSD-47076-NR02elzir@un.org#Rawad El ZirEnglish2021-08-30T00:00:002021-08-30T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:002022-02-21T00:00:002023-02-15T10:26:54.88Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Common Services - LogisticsLogistics044440141458Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture6120339004002024180117000141180181200Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security31141127204386136556149325148895349HealthHealth13527136462717315805201803598563158Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth4752155263018067054886011490NutritionNutrition640325965782405748395804ProtectionProtection333024995829416266601082216651Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection7851318511036640951961160522641Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence258322354818432272641158616404Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1000827863817872092937857871787243574442021-04-27T00:00:0080961621-RR-AFG-47407Afghanistan RR Application Apr 2021 (Drought)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-04-12T00:00:002021-04-12T00:00:002021-05-14T00:00:002021-05-07T00:00:0015000000.0014998459 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security21-RR-AFG-47407-NR03haqbayan@un.org#haqbayan@un.orgEnglish2021-12-20T00:00:002021-12-20T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002023-03-10T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture83301584051417068593657984143920285626HealthHealth4180078716120516380145912697140217656NutritionNutrition237260237262827774793575659482Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2987526675565502774022403501431066932021-05-05T00:00:0081062221-RR-SOM-47079Somalia RR Application Apr 2021 (Drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-04-16T00:00:002021-04-16T00:00:002021-06-18T00:00:002021-05-07T00:00:007000000.007000046 Food Security21-RR-SOM-47079-NR01agwaro@un.org#Patricia Nyimbae AgwaroEnglish2022-01-17T00:00:002022-01-17T00:00:002022-02-07T00:00:002022-02-15T00:00:002022-10-25T10:52:19.69Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000HealthHealth277733380061573277733383561608123181Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth290958234912909247362764531136NutritionNutrition125746012574615729617290174586300332Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene204931274733240208471144462229172561572021-05-03T00:00:0081162321-RR-SOM-47081Somalia RR Application Apr 2021 (Anticipatory Action for drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-04-16T00:00:002021-04-16T00:00:002021-06-18T00:00:002021-05-07T00:00:0020001256.0020001256 AA - allocation under AA framework, Food Security21-RR-SOM-47081-NR02afifa@un.org#Afifa IsmailEnglish2022-01-21T00:00:002022-01-21T00:00:002022-02-07T00:00:002022-03-24T00:00:002022-08-08T16:42:04.343Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture857510185187608254101861844037200Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security259192923055149259192923055149110298HealthHealth435435233195874442615221096471192345NutritionNutrition253821025382126418185772349953603774ProtectionProtection722010630178507774124502022438074Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection8828318012008653239201045222460Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence3108271873029523316215854638841Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3092936714676433248638271707571384002021-05-03T00:00:0081361921-RR-VCT-47490St Vincent Grenadines RR Application Apr 2021 (La Soufriere Volcano)AmericasSaint Vincent and the GrenadinesLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRVolcanoBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-04-23T00:00:002021-04-22T00:00:002021-05-18T00:00:002021-05-07T00:00:001000000.001000000 Sudden Onset21-RR-VCT-47490-NR01Carol Sanchez Diaz#Carol Sanchez DiazEnglish2021-09-23T00:00:002021-09-23T00:00:002022-01-10T00:00:002022-02-10T00:00:002022-08-04T11:27:17.777Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector12733591486412914621591210776Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene30607140102003060714010200204002021-05-05T00:00:0081562821-RR-ETH-47847Ethiopia RR Application May 2021 (Drought)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-05-11T00:00:002021-06-10T00:00:002021-06-28T00:00:002021-06-10T00:00:005000000.004978858 Food Security21-RR-ETH-47847-NR03Marcy Vigoda#Marcy VigodaEnglish2021-11-16T00:00:002021-11-16T00:00:002022-03-09T00:00:002022-09-29T22:48:05.85HealthHealth9079838117460834187201706134521NutritionNutrition151560015156015156042206193766345326Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene841099466617877574272834341577063364812021-06-08T00:00:0081662721-RR-MOZ-47724Mozambique RR Application May 2021 (Displacement)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-05-18T00:00:002021-06-13T00:00:002021-06-25T00:00:002021-06-16T00:00:005000000.00502062021-RR-MOZ-47724-NR01dinoi@un.org#Sergio DinoiEnglish2021-09-21T00:00:002021-09-21T00:00:002022-04-04T00:00:002022-04-08T00:00:002022-10-07T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management28262518534432502920617011514Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security101637641178041060986801928937093HealthHealth484914947197967351228533020450000Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth3374798166523113251784818664NutritionNutrition83430834390380903817381ProtectionProtection21187211864237321186211894237584748Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection224882233023525324054735Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence936756471501410616161082672441738Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6117764613763703597871682230585Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene64025889122916966640213368256592021-06-07T00:00:0081762621-RR-COD-47552DR Congo RR Application May 2021 (CAR Refugees)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRRefugees20212021-05-19T00:00:002021-05-19T00:00:002021-06-25T00:00:002021-05-27T00:00:001500000.00150000021-RR-COD-47552-NR03Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglish2022-02-28T00:00:002022-06-30T13:53:44.287Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector14214592320137140031045224455445922021-05-25T00:00:0081862421-RR-ETH-47841Ethiopia RR Application May 2021 (Tigray conflict)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20222021-05-21T00:00:002022-05-18T00:00:002021-06-22T00:00:002021-06-10T00:00:004000000.001483191421-RR-ETH-47841-NR02Marcy Vigoda#Marcy VigodaEnglish2021-10-21T00:00:002021-10-21T00:00:002022-05-09T00:00:002022-06-03T00:00:002022-10-07T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management145511160242305753157350176089333439639192HealthHealth118589109497228086113954105221219175447261Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence195561755637112261405347179611116723Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI375222615863680377122609363805127485Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene834084726513067394529528241473532780262021-06-08T00:00:0081962521-RR-PSE-48023oPt RR Application May 2021 (Gaza conflict)Asiaoccupied Palestinian territoryWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-05-26T00:00:002021-06-11T00:00:002021-06-24T00:00:002021-06-21T00:00:004500000.004498475 Sudden Onset21-RR-PSE-48023-NR01Andrea De Domenico#Andrea De DomenicoEnglish2021-10-20T00:00:002021-10-20T00:00:002022-03-28T00:00:002023-03-10T00:00:00EducationEducation4758904758954258054258101847Protection - Mine ActionMine Action4117817312290325376641091723207Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1152186930211662172633886409Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1944021963603907621867791886593754387662002021-06-14T00:00:0082063421-RR-COD-48131DR Congo RR Application Jun 2021 (Nyiragongo volcano)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-06-07T00:00:002021-06-17T00:00:002021-07-16T00:00:002021-06-23T00:00:001200000.001197576 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Sudden Onset21-RR-COD-48131-NR04Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglish2021-11-01T00:00:002021-11-01T00:00:002022-02-28T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:00HealthHealth53459581091115685810762758120865232433Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1527269442221616159857524734469502021-06-18T00:00:0082163221-RR-BDI-48293Burundi RR Application Jun 2021 (Flooding)AfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-06-23T00:00:002021-06-23T00:00:002021-07-07T00:00:002021-07-06T00:00:001500000.001500010 Sudden Onset21-RR-BDI-48293-NR02simba@un.org#Lucien SimbaEnglish2021-11-22T00:00:002021-11-22T00:00:002022-03-31T00:00:002022-04-15T00:00:002022-07-25T12:16:15.763Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security38723789766138653974783915500Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI4405613410539436166661102721566Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene56234790104135852498510837212502021-07-01T00:00:0082263321-RR-HTI-48351Haiti RR Application Jun 2021 (Displacement and Gang Violence)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20212021-06-24T00:00:002021-07-06T00:00:002021-07-13T00:00:002021-07-12T00:00:00998966.0099896621-RR-HTI-48351-NR01Christian Cricboom#Christian CricboomEnglish2022-04-11T00:00:002022-07-30T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management20623833589522985807810514000NutritionNutrition20581437349528824309719110686ProtectionProtection979181627951090275138416636Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection20512612312222828525134825Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene325943667625357847728350159752021-07-08T00:00:0082463521-RR-BFA-48377Burkina Faso RR Application Jul 2021 (Displacement)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-07-05T00:00:002021-07-05T00:00:002021-08-09T00:00:002021-07-27T00:00:004000000.00400947821-RR-BFA-48377-NR02knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonEnglish2022-04-26T00:00:002022-06-09T00:00:002022-07-22T09:46:06.403Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security26245144534069826795169264372184419HealthHealth216655867752260893691197719729Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection2103393643039723077130993617666573Protection - Mine ActionMine Action190892694946038235814267066251112289Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI331823525670454631257671133412021-07-21T00:00:0082564321-RR-NPL-48553Nepal RR Application Jul 2021 (Anticipatory Action)AsiaNepalSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-07-21T00:00:002021-07-21T00:00:002021-10-25T00:00:002021-08-19T00:00:006528477.003202301 AA - allocation under AA framework21-RR-NPL-48553-NR01bronwyn.russel@one.un.org#Bronwyn RussellEnglish2022-04-01T00:00:002022-09-29T13:51:24.263HealthHealth0000000Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth0000000Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector0000000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection0000000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0000000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI0000000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene00000002021-08-13T00:00:0082666121-UF-TCD-48490Chad UF Application Aug 2021 (Displacement)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-08-02T00:00:002021-08-02T00:00:002022-01-06T00:00:002021-09-13T00:00:007001065.00700106521-UF-TCD-48490-NR01dieudonneb@un.org#Dieudonne BamouniFrench2022-08-09T00:00:002022-08-09T00:00:002022-12-12T00:00:002023-01-16T00:00:002023-02-20T16:30:32.12Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture65543855040290703605400Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security262139918361312621385023471570846HealthHealth265694082167390265694248769056136446Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth16365164153278014982178853286765647NutritionNutrition8504260511109782481381596227071Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection22472442491336956839376428Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence15065142752934026009250845109380433Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1597205136482066261246788326Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene108402024031080112842087332157632372021-09-08T00:00:0082864121-UF-MDG-48482Madagascar UF Application Aug 2021 (Drought)AfricaMadagascarEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-08-05T00:00:002021-08-05T00:00:002021-10-21T00:00:002021-09-01T00:00:008000000.008000000 Food Security21-UF-MDG-48482-NR01rakotoson@un.org#Rija RakotosonFrench2022-01-25T00:00:002022-01-25T00:00:002022-12-30T00:00:002023-01-16T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture950927240367499898283523825074999Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security301153688967004317113867570386137390HealthHealth236400236402460442642886852508Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth294402632255762332233623369456125218NutritionNutrition302730302733151003151061783Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection4558624910807628265181280023607Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence4280994014220264503160058050722702021-08-25T00:00:0082965421-UF-SSD-48521South Sudan UF Application Aug 2021 (Response to protracted needs)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFViolence/ClashesGeophysical20212021-08-10T00:00:002021-08-27T00:00:002021-11-29T00:00:002021-10-25T00:00:0012441695.0012441721 South Sudan crisis 2013-21-UF-SSD-48521-NR03ndiku@un.org#John NdikuEnglish2022-04-11T00:00:002022-04-11T00:00:002022-12-30T00:00:002023-06-30T00:00:002023-10-05T09:45:19.017EducationEducation188243319221431374928281657738720Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth3610543890487785137452153030578ProtectionProtection4588326693725766090043769104669177245Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection9648096481020201020219850Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence352329636486128012381836619431052021-10-21T00:00:0083066021-UF-VEN-48704Venezuela UF Application Aug 2021 (Social and economic deterioration)AmericasVenezuelaLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaUFEconomic DisruptionConflict-related20212021-08-11T00:00:002021-08-11T00:00:002021-12-23T00:00:002021-09-09T00:00:007000000.00799999321-UF-VEN-48704-NR01Vanessa May#Vanessa MayEnglish2022-08-24T00:00:002022-08-24T00:00:002023-06-08T00:00:002023-10-24T00:00:00EducationEducation10699296109951110411831228723282Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security372255509272417583461252121793HealthHealth210772746238231972341202384347666Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth5210204292563915658357105136877007NutritionNutrition103100103101090540501495525265ProtectionProtection36449510131544205118721607729231Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection428691084653715487614624095001148716Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence226210438127003352231432649539195Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI364495101315442051187216077292312021-09-02T00:00:0083164221-RR-AGO-48651Angola RR Application Aug 2021 (Drought)AfricaAngolaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-08-13T00:00:002021-08-13T00:00:002021-10-21T00:00:002021-09-02T00:00:005000000.004999561 Food Security21-RR-AGO-48651-NR01edo.stork@undp.org#Edo StorkEnglish2022-02-14T00:00:002022-02-14T00:00:002022-06-01T00:00:002022-06-08T00:00:002022-10-19T12:22:14.79Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture76251365899076251735936018350HealthHealth516051653705371053Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth0003333780000113337113337NutritionNutrition643049064394682991198280281144675Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence220030000322005500200002550057700Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3036354683850463340563798972031822492021-08-27T00:00:0083265921-UF-AFG-48806Afghanistan UF Application Aug 2021 (Conflict)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-08-20T00:00:002021-08-20T00:00:002021-12-23T00:00:002021-10-07T00:00:0011000000.001249990221-UF-AFG-48806-NR06Gul Zamir Haqbayan#Gul Zamir HaqbayanEnglish2022-10-04T00:00:002022-10-04T00:00:002023-07-06T00:00:002023-10-09T13:27:43.117Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1073767869418607010162679816181442367512HealthHealth30654680774532285163839116136ProtectionProtection1017910547207269522102241974640472Protection - Mine ActionMine Action2022133151533724446663910724444Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1956241860521422919489517876212771427000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene374375141253753000337575002021-09-29T00:00:0083363621-RR-HTI-48843Haiti RR Application Aug 2021 (Earthquake and TD Grace)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20212021-08-24T00:00:002021-08-24T00:00:002021-10-12T00:00:002021-09-13T00:00:008000000.007872943 Fast-tracked Allocation, Sudden Onset21-RR-HTI-48843-NR02Delphine Vakunta#Delphine VakuntaEnglish2022-05-13T00:00:002022-08-15T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2852110939612693126839617922HealthHealth394317542214858183426645084772332ProtectionProtection104622123258986173427205978Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection681011662184729945121972214240614Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI59431256718510560498501545433964Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3156442240738043465846263809211547252021-09-08T00:00:0083465621-UF-MOZ-48903Mozambique UF Application Aug 2021 (displacement)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-08-18T00:00:002021-11-08T00:00:002021-12-06T00:00:002021-11-01T00:00:005500000.00550095821-UF-MOZ-48903-NR02dinoi@un.org#Sergio DinoiEnglish2022-05-26T00:00:002022-05-26T00:00:002023-02-27T00:00:002023-04-21T00:00:002023-07-03T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management16524191823570621776177493952575231EducationEducation480061454147100475757512989Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture17402610435022923438573010080Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security22625170103963523533194054293882573HealthHealth359304706482994395335144490977173971Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth3061298660476370306243699443041NutritionNutrition31871031871345273003482766698ProtectionProtection8395120632045810014197412975550213Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection30773733450275359733506800Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence4824107261555026451495827603391583Protection - Human RightsProtection14260274419785810551799Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI20682169613764319969162483621773860Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene56744669103435520504810568209112021-10-28T00:00:0083563821-UF-CMR-48777Cameroon UF Application Aug 2021 (Displacement)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-08-26T00:00:002021-07-09T00:00:002021-10-15T00:00:002021-09-23T00:00:005000000.00499891921-UF-CMR-48777-NR01amidou.doumbia@un.org#Amidou DoumbiaEnglish2022-03-14T00:00:002022-03-14T00:00:002022-12-21T00:00:002023-02-28T00:00:002023-04-19T11:28:18.07Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1794159233861918288047988184Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security948409850469525450640211448HealthHealth91174635461547206907452494121568276288NutritionNutrition307351509745832332142402857242103074ProtectionProtection134521253470553285701410217572Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene136561487428530136462314336789653192021-09-15T00:00:0083765321-UF-NGA-48616Nigeria UF Application Aug 2021 (Displacement)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-08-30T00:00:002021-11-18T00:00:002021-11-26T00:00:002021-11-03T00:00:0012500000.001249530221-UF-NGA-48616-NR03swinimerg@un.org#George SwinimerEnglish2022-07-22T00:00:002022-07-22T00:00:002023-07-26T00:00:002023-08-31T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management19754122063196023242200044324675206Common Services - Emergency TelecommunicationsEmergency Telecommunications0000000Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security4779438233860275926245879105141191168HealthHealth5476421905527381959327237310296637570456Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth5077276157126929116775264013380788507717NutritionNutrition5049500010049630295000101302111351ProtectionProtection617995567311747273457100201173658291130Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection35005504050350055040508100Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence58090113231171321174054345911519965691286Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1545242939741360247138317805Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4275826468692265086344490953531645792021-10-29T00:00:0083964521-UF-ETH-48493Ethiopia UF Application Sep 2021 (conflict)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFViolence/ClashesGeophysical20212021-09-01T00:00:002021-10-11T00:00:002021-10-28T00:00:002021-10-14T00:00:0013000000.001300000021-UF-ETH-48493-NR05bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2022-05-26T00:00:002022-05-26T00:00:002023-02-07T00:00:002023-03-08T00:00:002023-04-19T20:45:04.113Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management135639161300296939137056163794300850597789Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture3636214112547748753858484271338129811587856HealthHealth656735564823122155867520558467712598822481440ProtectionProtection250010000125002500100001250025000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence194302761247042207383230153039100081Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI00032503250650065002021-10-12T00:00:0084063921-RR-LBN-48999Lebanon RR Application Sep 2021 (Fuel crisis)AsiaLebanonWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20212021-09-07T00:00:002021-09-07T00:00:002021-10-15T00:00:002021-09-14T00:00:004000.00399835921-RR-LBN-48999-NR01anderson17@un.org#Craig AndersonEnglish2022-02-08T00:00:002022-02-08T00:00:002022-06-06T00:00:002023-01-31T16:51:56.963Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene00000002021-09-10T00:00:0084364421-RR-HTI-49281Haiti RR Application Sep 2021 (Earthquake and Displacement)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20212021-09-21T00:00:002021-09-22T00:00:002021-10-26T00:00:002021-10-11T00:00:004000000.00401130321-RR-HTI-49281-NR03Christian Cricboom#Christian CricboomEnglish2022-07-11T00:00:002022-08-15T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management20002670467022303100533010000Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Common Services - Safety and SecurityCoordination and support services0000000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence811421350249616439740012424Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI12601700296014801890337063302021-10-06T00:00:0084465521-RR-AFG-49269Afghanistan RR Application Sep 2021 (Displacement and Drought)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-09-28T00:00:002021-10-06T00:00:002021-12-06T00:00:002021-10-28T00:00:0020000000.002022750121-RR-AFG-49269-NR05Gul Zamir Haqbayan#Gul Zamir HaqbayanEnglish2022-03-14T00:00:002022-03-14T00:00:002022-07-13T00:00:002022-08-29T00:00:002022-09-29T14:19:40.48Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0771677160192919299645Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture3400912392925793833301882492045793921158775Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI3361428650622643303528448614831237472021-10-26T00:00:0084564021-RR-NER-49530Niger RR Application Sep 2021 (Cholera and floods)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-09-29T00:00:002021-09-29T00:00:002021-10-20T00:00:002021-10-14T00:00:003500000.00349999921-RR-NER-49530-NR01traorem@un.org#Modibo TraoreFrench2022-07-11T00:00:002022-08-08T00:00:00HealthHealth244613178950423563253909167678421587845150Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI88485899147471081472101802432771Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene13613985923472141691026124430479022021-10-08T00:00:0084665121-RR-COL-49434Colombia RR Application Oct 2021 (Floods in La Mojana)AmericasColombiaLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-10-01T00:00:002021-10-01T00:00:002021-11-22T00:00:002021-10-27T00:00:002000177.002006312 Sudden Onset21-RR-COL-49434-NR02Claudia Rodriguez Burrell#Claudia Rodriguez BurrellEnglish2022-04-05T00:00:002022-04-05T00:00:002022-07-26T00:00:002022-09-29T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0000000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security35296203973235875536912318855HealthHealth40819581136625166107041587029532Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI475510722154775019131441816333640Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene182637825608171835095227108352021-10-21T00:00:0084764921-RR-KEN-49369Kenya RR Application Oct 2021 (Drought)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-10-04T00:00:002021-10-26T00:00:002021-11-02T00:00:002021-10-22T00:00:005000000.005001019 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security21-RR-KEN-49369-NR01quacquarella@un.org#Giovanni QuacquarellaEnglish2022-04-06T00:00:002022-04-06T00:00:002022-08-01T00:00:002022-08-05T00:00:002022-08-24T15:55:10.753Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture324052409956504451323383178963135467Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security837511438198138373237323210551918HealthHealth7545715874913318354322824106367197698Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth030891308910155199155199186090NutritionNutrition809860809868744889435176883257869Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection591378867016034592662613327Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence715637970941800517355353560629Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene644086183212624066985644091313942576342021-10-19T00:00:0084865021-RR-AFG-49422Afghanistan RR Application Oct 2021 (Health system)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-10-04T00:00:002021-11-19T00:00:002021-11-23T00:00:002021-10-22T00:00:0045000000.0045000000 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action21-RR-AFG-49422-NR04Gul Zamir Haqbayan#Gul Zamir HaqbayanEnglish2022-04-11T00:00:002022-04-11T00:00:002022-07-21T00:00:002022-08-04T00:00:002023-02-14T00:00:00HealthHealth430279829467647249562402563729516916977328142268902021-10-13T00:00:0084964621-RR-NER-49645Niger RR Application Oct 2021 (Displacement)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-10-04T00:00:002021-10-04T00:00:002021-10-28T00:00:002021-10-26T00:00:005000000.00500000121-RR-NER-49645-NR02saidousidibe@un.org#Halima SidibeFrench2022-01-24T00:00:002022-01-24T00:00:002022-08-25T00:00:002022-11-16T12:30:28.157EducationEducation1206118012241123562101256624807HealthHealth120226114181361475274382219040326ProtectionProtection425331286255395558232763283455138850Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI64404831112716611584712458237292021-10-19T00:00:0085064721-RR-NGA-49477Nigeria RR Application Oct 2021 (Cholera)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-10-04T00:00:002021-10-04T00:00:002021-10-28T00:00:002021-10-27T00:00:006000000.00600480321-RR-NGA-49477-NR02swinimerg@un.org#George SwinimerEnglish2022-02-11T00:00:002022-02-11T00:00:002022-08-22T00:00:002022-09-10T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:00HealthHealth59814610031208176889371373140266261083Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene636979005715375471358763671477253014792021-10-22T00:00:0085164821-RR-MMR-49467Myanmar RR Application Oct 2021 (Displacement & Floods)AsiaMyanmarSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-10-07T00:00:002021-10-27T00:00:002021-10-29T00:00:002021-10-21T00:00:0010032682.001003267721-RR-MMR-49467-NR01nyambanet@un.org#Thomas Onsare NyambaneEnglish2022-04-05T00:00:002022-04-05T00:00:002022-10-31T00:00:002023-01-10T00:00:002023-01-18T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture10980170882806810450188782932857396Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security339075462888535357906404699836188371HealthHealth664490841572810498156612615941887Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth018180375037503768Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1632123228614271018011607138932021-10-19T00:00:0085265221-UF-COD-48617DR Congo UF Application Oct 2021 (Conflict)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFViolence/ClashesGeophysical20212021-10-07T00:00:002021-11-10T00:00:002021-11-24T00:00:002021-11-05T00:00:0022000000.002205807321-UF-COD-48617-NR05alhaique@un.org#Angelica AlhaiqueEnglish2022-06-29T00:00:002022-06-29T00:00:002023-02-27T00:00:002023-04-03T00:00:002023-07-10T10:07:56.183Common ServicesCoordination and support services0000000EducationEducation513621253485525137566211010Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture142069758395188095251140519800HealthHealth68488591221276107017259429129601257211Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector372511488152134037118001583731050Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector8796715815954925887621802033974NutritionNutrition433833046688810114252023524903ProtectionProtection6763721613979745183201577129750Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection6746531812064709651761227224336Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence108827484183661053877301826836634Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI319391032142260353223057765899108159Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene223401512037460245181652541043785032021-11-03T00:00:0085465821-RR-SOM-50275Somalia RR Application Nov 2021 (Drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-11-22T00:00:002021-12-14T00:00:002021-12-22T00:00:002021-12-10T00:00:008000000.008000000 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security21-RR-SOM-50275-NR03merghani@un.org#Randa MerghaniEnglish2022-07-13T00:00:002022-07-13T00:00:002022-09-08T00:00:002022-11-29T00:00:002023-01-17T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture79731749881547197973178048157779312498Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security12482345124699412482345144699693990HealthHealth434825314596627328024009172893169520Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth72948612152427206362306324278ProtectionProtection71006320134208300102801858032000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene649923681410180666792438151106072124132021-12-06T00:00:0085565721-RR-ETH-50321Ethiopia RR Application Nov 2021 (Drought)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20212021-11-23T00:00:002021-12-08T00:00:002021-12-22T00:00:002021-12-08T00:00:005000000.004987750 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security21-RR-ETH-50321-NR06bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2022-06-20T00:00:002022-06-20T00:00:002022-09-07T00:00:002022-10-21T00:00:002023-01-24T15:00:08.83Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture71362806701520327446483773158237310269Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene751674364511881277591460701236612424732021-12-02T00:00:0085666721-RR-SSD-50353South Sudan RR Application Nov 2021 (floods)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-11-26T00:00:002021-12-07T00:00:002022-02-02T00:00:002021-12-20T00:00:0013000000.0012909258 South Sudan crisis 2013-21-RR-SSD-50353-NR01ndiku@un.org#John NdikuEnglish2022-03-07T00:00:002022-03-07T00:00:002022-09-19T00:00:002023-01-16T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management2018485632874717434119372937158118Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security401031579855901449642065965623121524HealthHealth263839924612562927458103297130755256384ProtectionProtection14748195573430511901300934199476299Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection89024274131761436455021986633042Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI405263326673792475734002587598161390Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene209281914840076225582304845606856822021-12-13T00:00:0085766421-RR-ETH-50320Ethiopia RR Application Dec 2021 (conflict)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20212021-12-15T00:00:002021-12-31T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:002022-01-06T00:00:0020000000.0020000028 Fast-tracked Allocation21-RR-ETH-50320-NR01bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2022-07-13T00:00:002022-07-13T00:00:002022-10-05T00:00:002022-10-21T00:00:002023-02-23T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management8800511040519841093205115164208369406779Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000EducationEducation1671048717197150812291531032507Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture150847170522321369157405177081334486655855HealthHealth143884123833267717152661129388282049549766Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth15002221372113834212113504538766NutritionNutrition185185018518518518592592277777462962ProtectionProtection016404164040165961659633000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection4501348962939752523792588117825211800Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence4825688617012606201233272938899Protection - Housing, Land and PropertyHousing, Land and Property1172160027721203170229055677Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI17367126463001319569145353410464117Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4724227431746734876628955777211523942021-12-31T00:00:0085866321-RR-BFA-50782Burkina Faso RR Application Dec 2021 (Displacement)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20212021-12-22T00:00:002021-12-22T00:00:002022-01-21T00:00:002021-12-30T00:00:005000000.00500001521-RR-BFA-50782-NR01knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonFrench2022-06-29T00:00:002022-06-29T00:00:002022-09-30T00:00:002022-10-14T00:00:002022-10-28T09:40:22.3Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security329671870651673357152191257627109300Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6040450810548614259821212422672Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3622033259694793923736032752691447482021-12-27T00:00:0085966521-RR-PHL-50868Philippines RR Application Dec 2021 (Super Typhoon Rai/Odette)AsiaPhilippinesSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20212021-12-30T00:00:002021-12-30T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:002022-01-12T00:00:0011950843.001197460121-RR-PHL-50868-NR01vidic@un.org#Manja VidicEnglish2022-04-05T00:00:002022-04-05T00:00:002022-10-10T00:00:002022-11-16T16:00:51.393Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management25784055663317603875563512268Common Services - Emergency TelecommunicationsEmergency Telecommunications0000000Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000EducationEducation658266272446470167663713881Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security126015527967880117614725959020126900Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth000397690272997299Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection66525855125076841102851712629633Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence708220263273458572485785715084495Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI513671538066747510481538566433133180Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene215722714348715215972781549412981272021-12-31T00:00:0086066622-RR-SOM-51068Somalia RR Application Jan 2022 (drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-01-17T00:00:002022-01-17T00:00:002022-02-02T00:00:002022-01-28T00:00:0017003221.0017003221 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security22-RR-SOM-51068-NR01merghani@un.org#Randa MerghaniEnglish2022-08-09T00:00:002022-08-09T00:00:002022-10-27T00:00:002023-08-29T09:41:47.34Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture11435109852242011901114352333645756Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security102547222082474102537221982472164946HealthHealth358375419490031332155157084785174816Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth71947911982394203572275123949ProtectionProtection7220676913989793180801601130000Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence00050510560560Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI7714356211276870447821348624762Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene11721559660176875106271728901791613560362022-01-24T00:00:0086166822-RR-TCD-50983Chad RR Application Jan 2022 (Cameroonian refugees)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRRefugees20222022-01-17T00:00:002022-02-10T00:00:002022-02-11T00:00:002022-02-03T00:00:006000000.006000065 Sudden Onset22-RR-TCD-50983-NR02Ansoumane Kourouma#Ansoumane KouroumaFrench2022-07-14T00:00:002022-07-14T00:00:002022-10-31T00:00:002023-03-09T00:00:00Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security186424845267092100210922319249901HealthHealth492322407273305692227622845455784Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth21514191634215589234563904545387Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector1777075732534319221144273364858991NutritionNutrition3486034863629100761370517191Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection5105811591637781051482910745Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI376316125375346346028065134402022-02-01T00:00:0086266922-RR-MLI-51054Mali RR Application Jan 2022 (Food security)AfricaMaliWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-01-20T00:00:002022-01-20T00:00:002022-02-11T00:00:002022-01-31T00:00:0010000000.009999992 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security22-RR-MLI-51054-NR01massomacolomina@un.org#Evelyne ColominaFrench2022-06-29T00:00:002022-06-29T00:00:002022-10-31T00:00:002023-02-24T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture238952553349428241152678150896100324Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security035518355180366683666872186NutritionNutrition3454360345436360295247683850637304992022-01-27T00:00:0086369022-UF-NER-51060Niger UF Application Jan 2022 (Food security)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-01-26T00:00:002022-02-22T00:00:002022-06-17T00:00:002022-02-14T00:00:0010000000.009998659 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security22-UF-NER-51060-NR01traorem@un.org#Modibo TraoreFrench2022-08-09T00:00:002022-08-09T00:00:002023-05-15T00:00:002023-05-30T11:20:49.127Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture81965316961136618246033380115840229501Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security20199145453474420202147163491869662HealthHealth7947079477947105961854326490NutritionNutrition2082702082721642405846222683053Protection - Mine ActionMine Action50665801108674264594810212210792022-02-02T00:00:0086467422-RR-YEM-51296Yemen RR Application Feb 2022 (Ma'rib conflict)AsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-02-03T00:00:002022-02-03T00:00:002022-04-21T00:00:002022-03-02T00:00:0020000000.0019997389 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action22-RR-YEM-51296-NR01sajid@un.org#Sajjad Mohammad SajidEnglish2022-11-02T00:00:002022-11-02T00:00:002022-11-22T00:00:002023-11-27T14:32:02.917Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management350642454659610314822721558697118307Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security274262742654852297112971159422114274HealthHealth40598331443912422543632378577122489Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth728266133899296438685316456553Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector125697722331374107824524685NutritionNutrition773020773027533152269127600204902ProtectionProtection27371205284789926393234624985597754Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection369947295442894166567044836992658Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence00011502352864678846788Protection - Mine ActionMine Action96061137073940123021709243Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI20850156393648920106178703797674465Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene193331503634369200481718437232716012022-02-25T00:00:0086567022-RR-TON-51406Tonga RR Application Feb 2022 (Tonga volcano eruption and tsunami)OceaniaTongaPolynesiaPolynesiaRRVolcanoBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-02-10T00:00:002022-02-14T00:00:002022-03-07T00:00:002022-02-21T00:00:001000600.001000600 Sudden Onset22-RR-TON-51406-NR01Anne Fiona Colquhoun#Anne Fiona ColquhounEnglish2022-05-11T00:00:002022-05-11T00:00:002022-11-16T00:00:002023-01-19T00:00:002023-04-11T00:00:00Common Services - Emergency TelecommunicationsEmergency Telecommunications0000000Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector84511662011909125521644175Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene74125009124215315874114056264772022-02-15T00:00:0086767222-RR-MWI-51466Malawi RR Application Feb 2022 (Tropical Storm Ana)AfricaMalawiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-02-14T00:00:002022-12-21T00:00:002022-04-08T00:00:002022-03-03T00:00:003000000.002999997 Sudden Onset22-RR-MWI-51466-NR01bonnel@un.org#Max BonnelEnglish2022-07-14T00:00:002022-07-14T00:00:002022-11-21T00:00:002022-11-29T00:00:002023-12-19T06:43:09.86Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security440113749181502423813912181502163004HealthHealth478281049958327504802375574235132562Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth51155040355518152795460469883125401Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection199296092280851212717711098381179232Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence31596963672795238417549799338172133Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI2090638584753140107101385022325Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene525535049210304554698525531072512102962022-02-25T00:00:0086867922-UF-TCD-51209Chad UF Application Feb 2022 (Displacement)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-02-15T00:00:002022-03-30T00:00:002022-05-23T00:00:002022-03-09T00:00:009999375.00999937522-UF-TCD-51209-NR03dieudonneb@un.org#Dieudonne BamouniFrench2022-10-19T00:00:002022-10-19T00:00:002023-06-08T00:00:002023-06-30T00:00:002024-01-26T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management268712911155982328453558068425124407EducationEducation3926039263214032147140Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture12601575283517856000778510620Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security16204155003170417613211363874970453HealthHealth150522830843360398783506874946118306NutritionNutrition1780901780922231402996253080339ProtectionProtection462317264218873471138601733139218Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection82144257124711067056711634128812Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence150653427549340260094508571094120434Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI22302824505427903325611511169Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2965225636552883165326593582461135342022-03-04T00:00:0087067122-UF-KEN-51254Kenya UF Application Feb 2022 (Drought)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-02-18T00:00:002022-12-21T00:00:002022-04-04T00:00:002022-03-10T00:00:006000000.006000001 Food Security22-UF-KEN-51254-NR01quacquarella@un.org#Giovanni QuacquarellaEnglish2022-09-23T00:00:002022-09-23T00:00:002023-07-03T00:00:002023-07-21T00:00:002023-11-07T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture453623408279444412173640977626157070Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security10648101642081215488121002758848400HealthHealth6778409160076944069616036640010625601832000Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth0400094000908223982239122248NutritionNutrition1239200123920130795120533251328375248Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection67911011780270691178824716049Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence3150217522490289797658085559110461Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene587106620512491561106689071300132549282022-03-08T00:00:0087167622-UF-HTI-51266Haiti UF Application Feb 2022 (Earthquake and violence)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanUFEarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20222022-02-18T00:00:002022-02-18T00:00:002022-04-22T00:00:002022-03-30T00:00:008000000.00795788622-UF-HTI-51266-NR01Christian Cricboom#Christian CricboomFrench2022-09-16T00:00:002022-09-16T00:00:002023-07-17T00:00:002024-02-17T00:00:00EducationEducation2232429882531224016219074592371235Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture50714160923149354817975218983Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security25213715623623894645703413270HealthHealth654518498394653255391207120465Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth52657064123293533132651679829127ProtectionProtection31243628675236315003863415386Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection837310450188237827110501887737700Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence2535683893739184293243850847881Protection - Human RightsProtection3126601291384088108251491324051Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI46361210754661284175028252022-03-10T00:00:0087267522-UF-AGO-51281Angola UF Application Feb 2022 (drought)AfricaAngolaMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-02-18T00:00:002022-02-18T00:00:002022-04-22T00:00:002022-03-14T00:00:006000000.006000000 Food Security22-UF-AGO-51281-NR01edo.stork@undp.org#Edo StorkEnglish2022-12-12T00:00:002022-12-12T00:00:002023-07-10T00:00:002023-11-22T10:55:12.457EducationEducation1307886013938169224491737131309Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture15779104272620618281111222940355609NutritionNutrition22958362233202428132512753250852Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene160651866734732182812336841649763812022-03-09T00:00:0087368422-UF-HND-51277Honduras UF Application Feb 2022 (Food insecurity)AmericasHondurasLatin America and the CaribbeanCentral AmericaUFEconomic DisruptionConflict-related20222022-02-20T00:00:002022-06-01T00:00:002022-06-02T00:00:002022-03-14T00:00:005000000.00499477922-UF-HND-51277-NR01palmae@un.org#Erlin PalmaEnglish2022-10-04T00:00:002022-10-04T00:00:002023-06-13T00:00:002023-10-11T09:57:28.617Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture465022506900445096501410021000HealthHealth42454588551013094279365097107890209199ProtectionProtection72213512073739115518943967Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection10825678115031315648381799429497Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence713294002779939912178125782022-03-08T00:00:0087468222-UF-SDN-51627Sudan UF Application Feb 2022 (Post conflict needs)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaUFPost-conflict NeedsConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-02-22T00:00:002022-02-22T00:00:002022-05-25T00:00:002022-03-29T00:00:0020000000.001994575222-UF-SDN-51627-NR01elhassan2@un.org#Tarig ElhassanEnglish2022-11-01T00:00:002022-11-01T00:00:002023-07-20T00:00:002024-02-24T02:25:45.97EducationEducation3171237732089314413713181263901HealthHealth1061399005119619011046993723204192400382NutritionNutrition9442409442411540728806144213238637Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection18421919193402358112092479044130Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1697239840956564225332909733192Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI14459120062646515562131092867155136Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3697524991619663952626008655341275002022-03-25T00:00:0087567322-RR-MDG-51622Madagascar RR Application Feb 2022 (TC Batsirai & TC Emnati)AfricaMadagascarEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-02-25T00:00:002022-03-09T00:00:002022-04-21T00:00:002022-03-21T00:00:004500000.004480519 Sudden Onset22-RR-MDG-51622-NR01rakotoson@un.org#Rija RakotosonFrench2022-07-29T00:00:002022-07-29T00:00:002022-12-20T00:00:002023-03-27T15:45:41.113Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management4007001100720100017202820Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000EducationEducation618624364295749184593312362Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture498524507435529047751006517500Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security13582165653014712899158002869958846HealthHealth53335538151071504516464640109804216954Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth5532556411096750383281583126927Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection315283839903065116642318221Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence100264016421500200235025144Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI24003700610037205000872014820Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene14702450392015302550408080002022-03-16T00:00:0087670522-RR-UKR-51803Ukraine RR Application Mar 2022 (Conflict)EuropeUkraineEastern EuropeEastern EuropeRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20222022-03-01T00:00:002022-03-01T00:00:002022-07-13T00:00:002022-03-25T00:00:0060503889.0060503889 Fast-tracked Allocation22-RR-UKR-51803-NR01mahmoud14@un.org#Samir MahmoudEnglish2022-10-04T00:00:002022-10-04T00:00:002023-03-24T00:00:002023-10-06T00:00:002024-03-15T11:51:33.027EducationEducation6046206046258092058092118554Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture12763681495711934657585010807Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security277605680334403214666383878472224HealthHealth6117620100026217661280228670289950552126Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth46009840010300025200141991167191270191Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector744411217186617326228483017448835Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector25002500500025005000750012500ProtectionProtection14400712808568014400106920121320207000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection2518596953488032321202705259187471Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence780689476747679378654554453218Protection - Human RightsProtection200015000170002000100001200029000Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1819164934831251785490112107966191091Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene72802224011296813692793166823859616827742022-03-18T00:00:0087768122-UF-MMR-51342Myanmar UF Application Mar 2022 (Multiple)AsiaMyanmarSouth-Eastern AsiaSouth-Eastern AsiaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-03-03T00:00:002022-03-31T00:00:002022-05-24T00:00:002022-03-21T00:00:0012000000.001200267022-UF-MMR-51342-NR01Danielle Parry#Danielle ParryEnglish2023-01-03T00:00:002023-01-03T00:00:002023-07-17T00:00:002023-09-15T00:00:002024-01-12T13:07:34.377EducationEducation1739915517554189392401917936733Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture23704277664722894670695913606Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security300084970279710300215661286633166343HealthHealth27416142054162129410236755308594706Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth90112202269683671057307NutritionNutrition1592601592614701344864918765113ProtectionProtection13854260803993414670268954156581499Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection39178503144209461171109057207101416Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence416155519711677174561913321104Protection - Mine ActionMine Action1528997732506216893144473134056402Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI764814397220458099148452294444989Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5493107421623553701223717607338422022-03-16T00:00:0087869122-UF-COD-51517DR Congo UF Application Mar 2022 (Multiple)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-03-09T00:00:002022-06-01T00:00:002022-07-05T00:00:002022-03-22T00:00:0023000000.002300750922-UF-COD-51517-NR01alhaique@un.org#Angelica AlhaiqueFrench2023-02-14T00:00:002023-02-14T00:00:002023-07-31T00:00:002023-10-13T00:00:00EducationEducation3254362833171308663223118864359Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture10200149202512015280226003788063000HealthHealth99350114620213970103697123391227088441058Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector58093864967358203514933419007NutritionNutrition755427050256035140802011525140ProtectionProtection216876723688923198947160391497180420Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection15752768165202074411522189638416Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence401652487865043368692717564044129087Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4590743147890545001147480974911865452022-03-17T00:00:0088267822-RR-MOZ-52564Mozambique RR Application Apr 2022 (Tropical Cyclone Gombe)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-04-01T00:00:002022-04-11T00:00:002022-05-12T00:00:002022-04-18T00:00:004000000.004018682 Sudden Onset22-RR-MOZ-52564-NR01dinoi@un.org#Sergio DinoiEnglish2022-08-04T00:00:002022-08-04T00:00:002023-02-27T00:00:002023-04-21T00:00:002023-08-08T11:37:21.47Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security14495102052470015210111242633451034HealthHealth321522425056402342744067574949131351Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth470614118188247753330534080659630Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI137819977237581183385432037644134Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene14090939423484206651409034755582392022-04-13T00:00:0088368022-RR-SSD-52708South Sudan RR Application Apr 2022 (Abyei conflict)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-04-19T00:00:002022-04-19T00:00:002022-05-24T00:00:002022-05-03T00:00:009997233.0010016221 South Sudan crisis 2013-22-RR-SSD-52708-NR02Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglish2022-08-25T00:00:002022-08-25T00:00:002023-02-28T00:00:002023-03-14T00:00:002023-12-05T15:42:36.403Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2535999903534929200122964149676845NutritionNutrition416216043226545120051855022872ProtectionProtection11700132942499418065213073937264366Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection60852840892561543590974418669Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence12258092034793762441418116215Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI23982208644484625980226034858393429Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene13570820321773164751549031965537382022-04-27T00:00:0088570022-RR-SDN-52762Sudan RR Application May 2022 (Food insecurity and drought)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-05-03T00:00:002022-05-11T00:00:002022-07-11T00:00:002022-05-24T00:00:0020000000.0020000094 Food Security, AA - ad-hoc AA or early action22-RR-SDN-52762-NR02elhassan2@un.org#Tarig ElhassanEnglish2022-11-01T00:00:002022-11-01T00:00:002023-03-15T00:00:002023-04-15T00:00:002023-08-30T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture3447555068158515703447555274758722301723800NutritionNutrition2055202055220954400006095481506Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1450041460412910451511211856013367226277672022-05-13T00:00:0088668622-RR-COL-52811Colombia RR Application May 2022 (Conflict)AmericasColombiaLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20222022-05-03T00:00:002022-05-03T00:00:002022-06-07T00:00:002022-05-13T00:00:003000000.00300051322-RR-COL-52811-NR01Claudia Rodriguez Burrell#Claudia Rodriguez BurrellEnglish2022-10-10T00:00:002022-10-10T00:00:002023-03-13T00:00:002023-03-31T00:00:002023-08-24T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture166173339188195383722Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security42953999829443633866822916523HealthHealth80528386164388607100881869535133ProtectionProtection6761882519501916224362335242853Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection652706527800408004145312022-05-09T00:00:0088769722-RR-KEN-52746Kenya RR Application May 2022 (Food insecurity and drought)AfricaKenyaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-05-03T00:00:002022-06-13T00:00:002022-07-06T00:00:002022-06-02T00:00:004000000.004000000 Food Security, AA - ad-hoc AA or early action22-RR-KEN-52746-NR02quacquarella@un.org#Giovanni QuacquarellaEnglish2022-08-24T00:00:002022-08-24T00:00:002023-03-22T00:00:002023-04-28T00:00:002023-08-11T12:33:32.273Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture95259780193051039086661905638361Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security408839027990464559461059118581HealthHealth5218232254844366647659350125826210262Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth865615690243469198205592975754103NutritionNutrition2881202881231550347786632895140Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection211083429442234104132756219Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence11160202283138811857265053836269750Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene727407577014851075772788011545733030832022-05-26T00:00:0088869222-RR-ERI-53046Eritrea RR Application May 2022 (Drought)AfricaEritreaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-05-10T00:00:002022-06-13T00:00:002022-07-05T00:00:002022-05-26T00:00:004007829.00400782922-RR-ERI-53046-NR01alice.macharia@un.org#Alice MachariaEnglish2022-09-12T00:00:002022-09-12T00:00:002023-02-27T00:00:002023-03-25T00:00:002023-05-15T10:23:20.087Early RecoveryEarly Recovery555530078562667761641284121403Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture1316254502817665316087530019190894367547NutritionNutrition209720209722182845852641347385Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3376820210539782481925343501621041402022-05-23T00:00:0088968922-RR-SSD-52855South Sudan RR Application May 2022 (Early action for floods)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-05-06T00:00:002022-06-02T00:00:002022-06-14T00:00:002022-05-25T00:00:0015000000.0014990010 AA - allocation under AA framework22-RR-SSD-52855-NR03Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglish2022-09-26T00:00:002022-09-26T00:00:002023-02-24T00:00:002023-03-14T00:00:002023-07-28T14:10:56.673Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management365652874765312344192606660485125797Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture029042290420193601936048402HealthHealth58931915561504875909588515147610298097Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth15812486406721828258694769751764NutritionNutrition25360253629104556746610002Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1203271639196970120461901622935Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI25340220464738627454238845133898724Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3654624378609243364925641592901202142022-05-18T00:00:0089068822-RR-CMR-52854Cameroon RR Application May 2022 (Cholera)AfricaCameroonMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-05-13T00:00:002022-05-13T00:00:002022-06-13T00:00:002022-06-03T00:00:001719880.00172049522-RR-CMR-52854-NR01amidou.doumbia@un.org#Amidou DoumbiaFrench2022-08-09T00:00:002022-08-09T00:00:002023-02-24T00:00:002023-06-30T00:00:002023-07-12T14:37:53.503HealthHealth709617350244465322145811990344349Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1135521203452338971172221258812431034770002022-05-25T00:00:0089169322-RR-SOM-52744Somalia RR Application May 2022 (Food insecurity and drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-05-13T00:00:002022-06-13T00:00:002022-07-05T00:00:002022-06-02T00:00:0014000000.0014000043 Food Security, AA - ad-hoc AA or early action22-RR-SOM-52744-NR02afifa@un.org#Afifa IsmailEnglish2022-08-24T00:00:002022-08-24T00:00:002023-03-01T00:00:002023-03-17T00:00:002023-06-22T15:12:22.077Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security130234123854261130234123854261108522HealthHealth23488690961325847271988126690398678724525NutritionNutrition3337403337434737298496458697960ProtectionProtection1253751887712506137831628925060Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene5591630778866946147738218996951863892022-05-26T00:00:0089268522-RR-NGA-52749Nigeria RR Application May 2022 (Food Insecurity)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20222022-05-13T00:00:002022-05-13T00:00:002022-06-02T00:00:002022-05-24T00:00:0015000000.0015000000 Food Security, AA - ad-hoc AA or early action22-RR-NGA-52749-NR01swinimerg@un.org#George SwinimerEnglish2022-09-14T00:00:002022-09-14T00:00:002023-02-23T00:00:002023-05-30T12:16:17.323Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security21115131973431220603302245082785139HealthHealth131155245965574142075683071037136611NutritionNutrition4344850304847853104103867156971205449Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene712825002912131182506576491401552614662022-05-19T00:00:0089370322-RR-YEM-52742Yemen RR Application May 2022 (Food Insecurity)AsiaYemenWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20222022-05-17T00:00:002022-05-16T00:00:002022-07-12T00:00:002022-06-02T00:00:0020000698.0020000624 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security22-RR-YEM-52742-NR02merghani@un.org#Randa MerghaniEnglish2022-08-25T00:00:002022-08-25T00:00:002023-02-28T00:00:002023-08-09T16:09:53.313Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture19041184433748417263190133627673760HealthHealth402521570455956400562510565161121117Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector131508321214711221095172172743198NutritionNutrition744983047480278262127562205824280626Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection7997342911426811631221123822664Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence000670758071251412514Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene793085196013126884778574301422082734762022-05-25T00:00:0089469522-RR-COD-53127DR Congo RR Application May 2022 (Ebola)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20222022-05-17T00:00:002022-05-17T00:00:002022-07-06T00:00:002022-06-03T00:00:002000000.002000002 Sudden Onset22-RR-COD-53127-NR02alhaique@un.org#Angelica AlhaiqueFrench2022-08-24T00:00:002022-08-24T00:00:002023-03-01T00:00:002023-04-06T00:00:002023-05-04T12:58:28.56Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000HealthHealth148117145538293655160113167402327515621170NutritionNutrition17395452284181385726704954ProtectionProtection10225710939531196210103287186688419701713166381Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence64007500081400120307800090030171430Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene188811416333044192771511634393674372022-05-27T00:00:0089570422-RR-SSD-52756South Sudan RR Application May 2022 (Food Insecurity)AfricaSouth SudanEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20222022-05-19T00:00:002022-05-19T00:00:002022-07-14T00:00:002022-06-03T00:00:0015000000.0015000028 Food Security, AA - ad-hoc AA or early action South Sudan crisis 2013-22-RR-SSD-52756-NR04Rawad El Zir#Rawad El ZirEnglish2022-09-26T00:00:002022-09-26T00:00:002023-03-27T00:00:002023-05-30T12:17:58.617Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture8703725212233915987596230455318051657210Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security88806170150501177081801995035000HealthHealth1099025591716581911581592623208438374257Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector7665936817033736390001636333396NutritionNutrition3814038144476310703554639360Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene45635476199325449604555561051601984142022-05-27T00:00:0089670222-RR-MRT-53067Mauritania RR Application May 2022 (Food insecurity and displacement)AfricaMauritaniaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-05-19T00:00:002022-05-31T00:00:002022-07-12T00:00:002022-06-08T00:00:004000000.004000001 Food Security22-RR-MRT-53067-NR01cyprien.balaya@undp.org#Cyprien BalayaFrench2022-08-25T00:00:002022-08-25T00:00:002023-05-01T00:00:002023-05-04T00:00:00Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management2332116634982527203745648062Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture36292327595638903308719813154HealthHealth2332116634982527203745648062NutritionNutrition1700510093270981645112531770444802Protection - Human RightsProtection2332116634982527203745648062Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI6604400506011004840594011000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene478066821146251701388919059305212022-06-03T00:00:0089769622-RR-DJI-53179Djibouti RR Application May 2022 (drought)AfricaDjiboutiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-05-24T00:00:002022-05-24T00:00:002022-07-06T00:00:002022-06-10T00:00:002001741.00200174122-RR-DJI-53179-NR01babikir@un.org#Hanane BabikirEnglish2022-08-24T00:00:002022-08-24T00:00:002023-03-09T00:00:002023-04-30T00:00:002023-07-05T11:55:42.413Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture793014520224507910136402155044000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security37952410620530472330537711582NutritionNutrition2311023112184497371579468ProtectionProtection135101351367359242655616Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence1029266336927919166112453028222Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene10413389414935497213657346294956482022-06-07T00:00:0089870722-RR-ETH-52743Ethiopia RR Application May 2022 (Food Security)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-05-25T00:00:002022-06-22T00:00:002022-07-20T00:00:002022-06-16T00:00:0012000000.0011999748 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Food Security22-RR-ETH-52743-NR02bruna.bambini@un.org#Bruna BambiniEnglish2022-11-01T00:00:002022-11-01T00:00:002023-03-15T00:00:002023-04-17T14:54:17.143Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security17528311604868816841299384677995467HealthHealth117078108066225144112483103829216312441456Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector395312856468095372533151568768136863NutritionNutrition165140165141626342682053137045Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection813760561419311368138352520339396Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence596176772136711023523906246782022-06-14T00:00:0089969422-RR-BFA-53665Burkina Faso RR Application Jun 2022 (Food security)AfricaBurkina FasoWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20222022-06-08T00:00:002022-06-08T00:00:002022-07-06T00:00:002022-06-22T00:00:005999735.006000039 Food Security, Special Allocation22-RR-BFA-53665-NR03knutson@un.org#Kristen KnutsonFrench2022-09-29T00:00:002022-09-29T00:00:002023-03-21T00:00:002023-03-28T00:00:002023-06-12T00:00:00Common Services - LogisticsLogistics0000000Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture222625574783612275761369818481Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security421573738679543451244001485138164681HealthHealth457213217477895508364060591441169336NutritionNutrition24391192441026423162864270967119Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3698036983850754711397150952022-06-17T00:00:0090069822-RR-NER-53587Niger RR Application Jun 2022 (Food security)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20222022-06-08T00:00:002022-06-08T00:00:002022-07-06T00:00:002022-06-23T00:00:008000000.007999999 Food Security22-RR-NER-53587-NR02traorem@un.org#Modibo TraoreFrench2022-09-29T00:00:002022-09-29T00:00:002023-03-31T00:00:002023-05-18T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture95519407951363149551943245138764275078Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security131336468196011366967332040240003Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth24266648907412751307774352852602NutritionNutrition10462010462112894491173822200ProtectionProtection443423512279464945260773102258968Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence33170610372070470067707807Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI376422175981367424696143121242022-06-15T00:00:0090271122-RR-UGA-53777Uganda RR Application Jun 2022 (Karamoja drought)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-06-10T00:00:002022-08-01T00:00:002022-08-10T00:00:002022-07-05T00:00:004000000.004000000 Food Security22-RR-UGA-53777-NR01rekha.shrestha1@un.org#Rekha ShresthaEnglish2022-09-16T00:00:002022-09-16T00:00:002023-02-28T00:00:002023-05-31T13:17:39.327Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0159215920340834085000Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security21783139983578123721182764199777778HealthHealth205020205022133982312957050072Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth4969343993936817746105781123527162895NutritionNutrition7696407696481485142096223581300545Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection196989828671780114829285795Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence7977107371871410019224563247551189Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene250622222447286260382313149169964552022-06-30T00:00:0090373722-RR-NPL-53977Nepal RR Application Jun 2022 (Anticipatory Action)AsiaNepalSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-06-14T00:00:002022-06-14T00:00:002022-12-01T00:00:002022-10-12T00:00:003186691.003186691 AA - allocation under AA framework22-RR-NPL-53977-NR01yakubu.alhassan@un.org#Yakubu AlhassanEnglish2023-05-22T00:00:002024-01-11T05:21:26.637Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth000554273932933293Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector15151194463459714696220423673871335Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0002440138331627316273Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI020020001153115313532022-10-02T00:00:0090469922-RR-MLI-53741Mali RR Application Jun 2022 (Food insecurity)AfricaMaliWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-06-15T00:00:002022-06-15T00:00:002022-07-11T00:00:002022-07-05T00:00:008000000.008000003 Food Security22-RR-MLI-53741-NR02guegma@un.org#Franck Lasmani GuegmaFrench2022-09-28T00:00:002022-09-28T00:00:002023-05-03T00:00:002023-06-30T00:00:002023-07-18T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture15026156983072415486163383182462548Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security22503002250302640739100273173498203NutritionNutrition0296512965103086030860605112022-06-28T00:00:0090571622-RR-TCD-53949Chad RR Application Jun 2022 (Food security)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20222022-06-24T00:00:002022-06-24T00:00:002022-09-14T00:00:002022-07-15T00:00:008000000.008000000 Food Security22-RR-TCD-53949-NR04dieudonneb@un.org#Dieudonne BamouniFrench2022-11-21T00:00:002022-11-21T00:00:002023-03-31T00:00:002023-06-19T15:40:49.37Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security309202957560495335094043073939134434NutritionNutrition1628201628220305305723362396442022-07-11T00:00:0090670922-RR-LKA-54074Sri Lanka RR Application Jun 2022 (economic disruption)AsiaSri LankaSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRREconomic DisruptionConflict-related20222022-06-28T00:00:002022-07-12T00:00:002022-08-01T00:00:002022-07-19T00:00:005000000.00499998822-RR-LKA-54074-NR01olmedo@un.org#Maria Ena OlmedoEnglish2023-01-26T00:00:002023-01-26T00:00:002023-04-12T00:00:002023-09-07T15:10:20.177EducationEducation4567735946036475428384838094416Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture0189181891803657365722575Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security12318271003941811497312064270382121HealthHealth057288572880295122951286800NutritionNutrition0000301030103010Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection43552197655250083266827414826Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene75135175316250451782021824712606735111242022-07-14T00:00:0090771022-RR-CAF-53935CAR RR Application Jun 2022 (CAR Food insecurity)AfricaCentral African RepublicMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20222022-06-28T00:00:002022-07-23T00:00:002022-08-08T00:00:002022-07-14T00:00:0015000495.0015000495 Food Security22-RR-CAF-53935-NR01massomacolomina@un.org#Evelyne ColominaFrench2022-10-28T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:002023-05-15T00:00:002023-05-31T00:00:002023-07-26T13:07:04.043Common ServicesCoordination and support services14979183823336115658190633472168082Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture308092200752816379612384061801114617Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security255753175957334276373624263879121213HealthHealth1438517871617217898132283112647298NutritionNutrition2856028563094030945950ProtectionProtection302163147661692314763183663312125004Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection59440594460210602111965Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence14919112672618630181362696645092636Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene127081086723575125481898231530551052022-07-11T00:00:0090870622-RR-BDI-54064Burundi RR Application Jun 2022 (Rift Valley Fever)AfricaBurundiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRAnimal DiseaseMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-06-30T00:00:002022-06-30T00:00:002022-07-20T00:00:002022-07-15T00:00:001000000.00100100022-RR-BDI-54064-NR01Saadia Yahouza Iro Kode#Saadia Yahouza Iro KodeFrench2022-10-28T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:002023-05-15T00:00:002023-06-12T14:30:33.93Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture249647929210425636168143187179355283611HealthHealth7980861122140930116232740741903063312362022-07-12T00:00:0090971422-RR-AFG-54169Afghanistan RR Application Jun 2022 (earthquake)AsiaAfghanistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20222022-06-30T00:00:002022-06-30T00:00:002022-09-02T00:00:002022-07-14T00:00:0010000000.0010000000 Sudden Onset22-RR-AFG-54169-NR01haqbayan@un.org#Gul Zamir HaqbayanEnglish2023-01-27T00:00:002023-01-27T00:00:002023-03-31T00:00:002023-04-30T00:00:002023-10-26T11:30:51.52EducationEducation2482821825046848911850033546Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture24491201154460622302205544285687462HealthHealth4367259547103219397135571495427198646Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene678615225012011163302524111157132358242022-07-12T00:00:0091070822-RR-MLI-54124Mali RR Application Jul 2022 (Menaka displacement)AfricaMaliWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-07-07T00:00:002022-07-07T00:00:002022-08-01T00:00:002022-07-26T00:00:004000000.00399999922-RR-MLI-54124-NR03guegma@un.org#Franck Lasmani GuegmaEnglish2022-12-06T00:00:002022-12-06T00:00:002023-04-25T00:00:002023-05-15T00:00:002023-05-17T14:01:54.3HealthHealth12667192353190222628204524308074982Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth934842111355913663314714513458693ProtectionProtection32643136640048964704960016000Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection1617186180315493115803383Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence4154339775515130158742100428555Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI2293211044032338218445228925Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene89267607165339997792317920344532022-07-18T00:00:0091171222-RR-BGD-54477Bangladesh RR Application Jul 2022 (floods)AsiaBangladeshSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-07-18T00:00:002022-07-18T00:00:002022-09-01T00:00:002022-08-05T00:00:005000000.00500001322-RR-BGD-54477-NR01shahidur.rahman@one.un.org#Kazi Shahidur RahmanEnglish2022-11-29T00:00:002022-11-29T00:00:002023-05-04T00:00:002023-08-10T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture20280263304661018730249454367590285Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security59298741771334755640877708134116267591Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth0002385238372622226222NutritionNutrition40467040467425664659189157129624ProtectionProtection000177109401111711117Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection7118522461936468267461609144283237929Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence6814572610762206603142232148Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene92253103693195946933421056911990333949792022-08-01T00:00:0091271522-RR-COD-54660DR Congo RR Application Aug 2022 (M23 Displacement)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-08-05T00:00:002022-09-08T00:00:002022-09-13T00:00:002022-08-29T00:00:0013000000.001299848522-RR-COD-54660-NR03alhaique@un.org#Angelica AlhaiqueFrench2022-12-14T00:00:002022-12-14T00:00:002023-06-30T00:00:002023-07-15T00:00:002024-01-29T00:00:00Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture3600691010510600081601416024670Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security17440129763041618911139633287463290ProtectionProtection11847174102925716552213563790867165Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection155031655171581785020951994537103Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence22482940518861633036919914387Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI8640576014400936062401560030000Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene782948329016158482707886551713623329462022-08-24T00:00:0091371322-RR-COL-54690Colombia RR Application Aug 2022 (Floods La Mojana)AmericasColombiaLatin America and the CaribbeanSouth AmericaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-08-11T00:00:002022-08-11T00:00:002022-09-01T00:00:002022-08-24T00:00:002000000.002004856 Sudden Onset22-RR-COL-54690-NR02Claudia Rodriguez Burrell#Claudia Rodriguez BurrellEnglish2022-12-05T00:00:002022-12-05T00:00:002023-06-23T00:00:002023-09-22T10:57:51.117Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security31225935905729425143808517142HealthHealth312819214223424508169592146743809Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene295548157770311944867605153752022-08-17T00:00:0091471722-RR-GMB-54900Gambia RR Application Aug 2022 (Floods)AfricaGambiaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-08-24T00:00:002022-09-09T00:00:002022-09-13T00:00:002022-08-31T00:00:001000000.001001643 Sudden Onset22-RR-GMB-54900-NR01yasuhiro.tsumura@wfp.org#Yasuhiro TsumuraEnglish2023-01-11T00:00:002023-01-11T00:00:002023-05-29T00:00:002023-08-10T10:36:02.53Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security5306478610092584052681110821200Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene139381290126839153361458729923567622022-08-26T00:00:0091572322-RR-NER-54991Niger RR Application Aug 2022 (Drought - Anticipatory Action)AfricaNigerWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-08-25T00:00:002022-08-25T00:00:002022-10-25T00:00:002022-10-05T00:00:009500000.009513802 AA - allocation under AA framework22-RR-NER-54991-NR03traorem@un.org#Modibo TraoreFrench2023-05-26T00:00:002023-05-26T00:00:002023-09-13T00:00:002023-06-30T00:00:002024-01-10T00:00:00EducationEducation62230622338000380010023Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture344003589470294362155356089775160069HealthHealth5234860013834897798561883332667Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth70511111816433465431087712693NutritionNutrition6812190822589411797330444484170735ProtectionProtection11128139112503912798179063070455743Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence0003288329165796579Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene156041130026904162421176128003549072022-09-21T00:00:0091671822-RR-PAK-54917Pakistan RR Application Aug 2022 (Floods)AsiaPakistanSouthern AsiaSouthern AsiaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-08-26T00:00:002022-09-08T00:00:002022-09-27T00:00:002022-09-19T00:00:0010067153.001007143322-RR-PAK-54917-NR01iqbalf@un.org#Fatima IqbalEnglish2023-03-02T00:00:002023-03-02T00:00:002023-06-30T00:00:002024-02-01T17:20:35.943Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture42361801041224654065977950118609241074HealthHealth5507255548110620665382500891546202166Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth8038362448142831106185221100327285470116NutritionNutrition113332201011534211686496522213386328728Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene539236179111571451808593681111762268902022-09-14T00:00:0091771922-RR-HTI-54830Haiti RR Application Aug 2022 (Gang Violence)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRViolence/ClashesGeophysical20222022-08-29T00:00:002022-08-29T00:00:002022-10-11T00:00:002022-09-09T00:00:005000000.00500001822-RR-HTI-54830-NR02Christian Cricboom#Christian CricboomEnglish2023-01-27T00:00:002023-01-27T00:00:002023-07-24T00:00:002023-07-31T00:00:00EducationEducation313443333564679197035000269705134384Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security14313210933540613560263663992675332NutritionNutrition83004337126378991130122200334640Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection19201764368424903915640510089Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene45080529209800046920550801020002000002022-09-07T00:00:0091872122-RR-SOM-55116Somalia RR Application Sep 2022 (Drought)AfricaSomaliaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20222022-09-01T00:00:002022-10-14T00:00:002022-10-19T00:00:002022-09-14T00:00:0010000000.00999980422-RR-SOM-55116-NR03afifa@un.org#Afifa IsmailEnglish2023-01-10T00:00:002023-01-10T00:00:002023-06-13T00:00:002023-06-23T00:00:002023-10-24T10:12:33.413Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000HealthHealth56967861451431125279681977134773277885NutritionNutrition7836507836588196143150231346309711Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence5631132169510211105802079122486Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3106727459585263239331152635451220712022-09-07T00:00:0091972022-RR-MOZ-55016Mozambique RR Application Sep 2022 (Response to internal displacement)AfricaMozambiqueEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-09-06T00:00:002022-09-20T00:00:002022-10-11T00:00:002022-09-30T00:00:004893025.00488919522-RR-MOZ-55016-NR02dinoi@un.org#Sergio DinoiEnglish2023-01-27T00:00:002023-01-27T00:00:002023-07-24T00:00:002023-12-04T14:58:45.6Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management883380341686711221120152323640103Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security6010451810528627451331140721935HealthHealth1798801798819500159943549453482ProtectionProtection5724601111735858683011688728622Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI28002237503733022540584210879Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene107521911429866116482070732355622212022-09-23T00:00:0092072822-RR-MWI-55260Malawi RR Application Sep 2022 (Cholera)AfricaMalawiEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-09-20T00:00:002022-09-20T00:00:002022-11-30T00:00:002022-10-05T00:00:00998890.001000000 Sudden Onset22-RR-MWI-55260-NR02heidi.carrubba@undp.org#Heidi CarrubbaEnglish2023-01-23T00:00:002023-01-23T00:00:002023-07-03T00:00:002023-07-31T00:00:002023-12-19T09:16:27.727HealthHealth441854298187166459814452790508177674Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4120347523887264300350271932741820002022-09-30T00:00:0092173222-UF-NGA-55396Nigeria UF Application Sep 2022 (Malnutrition)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaUFDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-09-22T00:00:002022-12-22T00:00:002022-12-22T00:00:002022-10-05T00:00:0010000000.001000000022-UF-NGA-55396-NR02swinimerg@un.org#George SwinimerEnglish2023-03-17T00:00:002023-03-17T00:00:002024-02-05T00:00:002024-03-11T15:39:15.933Common ServicesCoordination and support services02024202407067062730Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture010500105000105001050021000HealthHealth1000474708014712712358888277211865358992NutritionNutrition4990004990056650177096233746283646Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene1561611095982657591807921291923099845757432022-10-03T00:00:0092273922-RR-TCD-55359Chad RR Application Sep 2022 (Floods)AfricaChadMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-09-23T00:00:002022-09-23T00:00:002023-01-12T00:00:002022-12-01T00:00:009000394.00900039422-RR-TCD-55359-NR01dieudonneb@un.org#Dieudonne BamouniFrench2023-06-29T00:00:002023-06-29T00:00:002023-08-29T00:00:002024-03-11T20:24:03.543EducationEducation984958810437170551471720227639Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security17376109762835217599129693056858920HealthHealth253102431749627268592479351652101279Multi-Sector Refugee AssistanceMulti-Sector14232128842711614232153712960356719Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection67271091781865151204771915537Protection - Gender-Based ViolenceGender Based Violence390061011000110020116002162031621Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI28045149454299029982171724715490144Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene3736724910622774047826988674661297432022-11-28T00:00:0092372922-RR-COD-55354DR Congo RR Application Sep 2022 (Cholera)AfricaDemocratic Republic of the CongoMiddle AfricaMiddle AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-09-28T00:00:002022-11-25T00:00:002022-12-01T00:00:002022-10-13T00:00:002000000.002000011 AA - ad-hoc AA or early action, Sudden Onset22-RR-COD-55354-NR04alhaique@un.org#Angelica AlhaiqueFrench2023-06-23T00:00:002023-06-23T00:00:002023-05-29T00:00:002023-10-31T00:00:002024-03-11T00:00:00HealthHealth369342641163345384592750065959129304Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene10567476522182196109987796461896333718292022-10-10T00:00:0092472222-RR-SDN-55370Sudan RR Application Oct 2022 (Floods)AfricaRepublic of the SudanNorthern AfricaNorthern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-10-03T00:00:002022-10-03T00:00:002022-10-19T00:00:002022-10-13T00:00:006000000.00600161122-RR-SDN-55370-NR03dominiek.benoot@un.org#Dominiek BenootEnglish2023-03-02T00:00:002023-03-02T00:00:002023-09-11T00:00:002024-02-01T17:23:35.797EducationEducation76001857785108001951099518780HealthHealth68664659711346357146568663140128274763Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI255112087546386309382455055488101874Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene155651052026085166381094827586536712022-10-07T00:00:0092572422-RR-ZWE-55485Zimbabwe RR Application Oct 2022 (Measles response)AfricaZimbabweEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRMeaslesBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-10-03T00:00:002022-10-24T00:00:002022-10-28T00:00:002022-10-25T00:00:001500000.00150864722-RR-ZWE-55485-NR01atupele.kapile@one.un.org#Atupele KapileEnglish2023-01-27T00:00:002023-01-27T00:00:002023-07-20T00:00:002023-11-07T10:10:59HealthHealth305153030515331089903108996160522022-10-19T00:00:0092672722-RR-CUB-55712Cuba RR Application Oct 2022 (Emergency response Hurrican Ian)AmericasCubaLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRStormBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-10-10T00:00:002022-10-10T00:00:002022-11-30T00:00:002022-11-01T00:00:007798043.00782773422-RR-CUB-55712-NR01liudmila.curbelo@one.un.org#Liudmila CurbeloEnglish2023-01-16T00:00:002023-01-16T00:00:002023-09-11T00:00:002023-11-22T10:55:56.987EducationEducation266550266552508902508951744Food Security - AgricultureAgriculture8373763968476973953841645811130580Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security5129320547625676948105204029252134508903Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth28515170914560625318129208154526200132Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI775628987367436405276463405170794Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene24120101306125426222661097521320182574442022-10-21T00:00:0092973022-RR-HTI-55716Haiti RR Application Oct 2022 (Cholera)AmericasHaitiLatin America and the CaribbeanCaribbeanRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-10-17T00:00:002022-10-17T00:00:002022-12-01T00:00:002022-10-31T00:00:007000000.00703853922-RR-HTI-55716-NR03Nadja Kristina Gueggi#Nadja Kristina GueggiEnglish2023-02-22T00:00:002023-02-22T00:00:002023-08-09T00:00:002023-08-15T00:00:002023-10-17T14:25:33.58Common Services - Humanitarian Air ServicesCoordination and support services0000000HealthHealth217482962851376226843085253536104912Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene620187280413482264550757761403262751482022-10-27T00:00:0093072522-RR-UGA-55796Uganda RR Application Oct 2022 (Ebola)AfricaUgandaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRREbolaMeteorological, Hydrological and Climatological20222022-10-25T00:00:002022-10-25T00:00:002022-11-21T00:00:002022-11-14T00:00:003000000.00300000022-RR-UGA-55796-NR02rekha.shrestha1@un.org#Rekha ShresthaEnglish2023-02-14T00:00:002023-02-14T00:00:002023-08-09T00:00:002024-03-14T12:08:56.337Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security119890921071330111924494556HealthHealth134117124325258442114278123278237556495998Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene51904460309793454024479101019341998682022-11-07T00:00:0093172622-RR-KGZ-55989Kyrgyzstan RR Application Oct 2022 (Displacement)AsiaKyrgyzstanCentral AsiaCentral AsiaRRDisplacementConflict-relatedMan-made20222022-10-27T00:00:002022-10-27T00:00:002022-11-22T00:00:002022-11-04T00:00:001000000.00101029022-RR-KGZ-55989-NR01Zhypar Myrzanalieva#Zhypar MyrzanalievaEnglish2023-01-27T00:00:002023-01-27T00:00:002023-08-03T00:00:002023-10-05T09:45:52.033Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security7681741315094738778561524330337Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI549558110747155910302137Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene2360628298823202002432273102022-11-02T00:00:0093273322-RR-NGA-56022Nigeria RR Application Oct 2022 (Flood)AfricaNigeriaWestern AfricaWestern AfricaRRFloodBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-10-31T00:00:002022-12-21T00:00:002022-12-22T00:00:002022-11-14T00:00:005500000.00549366822-RR-NGA-56022-NR03swinimerg@un.org#George SwinimerEnglish2023-02-14T00:00:002023-02-14T00:00:002023-08-31T00:00:002024-03-11T15:38:29.197Camp Coordination and Camp ManagementCamp Coordination / Management30192365538434902792628211666Early RecoveryEarly Recovery43233066738949203411833115720HealthHealth348425154586387385586029198849185236Multi-Purpose CashMulti-Sector998999825235823833381Protection - Child ProtectionChild Protection41674089825640035011901417270Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI20917198074072424037220454608286806Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4208042943850234986546135960001810232022-11-10T00:00:0094073122-RR-ETH-56128Ethiopia RR Application Nov 2022 (Cholera)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRCholeraBiological (human disease outbreak and other health emergency)Natural Disaster20222022-11-18T00:00:002022-12-19T00:00:002022-12-12T00:00:002022-12-01T00:00:004000000.00399980822-RR-ETH-56128-NR03noviera@un.org#Laksmita NovieraEnglish2023-03-24T00:00:002023-03-24T00:00:002023-08-31T00:00:002023-10-17T10:43:32.723HealthHealth487234575394476498744761497488191964Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene749174592412084177393483811257742466152022-11-29T00:00:0095674422-RR-ETH-56719Ethiopia RR Application Jan 2023 (Drought, conflict)AfricaEthiopiaEastern AfricaEastern AfricaRRDroughtMeteorological, Hydrological and ClimatologicalNatural Disaster20232023-01-12T00:00:002023-01-25T00:00:002023-02-13T00:00:002023-01-30T00:00:0010000000.001000365222-RR-ETH-56719-NR01hetou@un.org#Serin HetouEnglish2023-06-22T00:00:002023-06-22T00:00:002023-10-30T00:00:002023-12-07T00:00:00HealthHealth4901434707149608574901434901439802861941143NutritionNutrition113140113141131501131522629ProtectionProtection12000665126651500077502275035415Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI1320389912219414667106172528447478Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene4574926564723134722528039752641475772022-12-31T00:00:0095775123-RR-TUR-57543Türkiye RR Application Feb 2023 (Earthquake)AsiaTürkiyeWestern AsiaWestern AsiaRREarthquakeGeophysicalNatural Disaster20232023-02-15T00:00:002023-02-15T00:00:002023-03-03T00:00:002023-02-21T00:00:0010200000.0010200241 Fast-tracked Allocation, Sudden Onset23-RR-TUR-57543-NR01Benedetta Di Cintio#Benedetta Di CintioEnglish2023-05-31T00:00:002023-05-31T00:00:002023-12-05T00:00:002024-02-01T17:08:06.823EducationEducation5412905412954130054130108259Food Security - Food AssistanceFood Security2488995366507855492369335440937810261566575Health - Sexual and Reproductive HealthHealth00017125232875250000250000ProtectionProtection179067624661474160430785544Shelter and Non-Food ItemsEmergency Shelter and NFI21261169203818117595134813107669257Water, Sanitation and HygieneWater Sanitation Hygiene51022545061055285099747312983092038372023-02-16T00:00:00