ETHIOPIA EL NINO EMERGENCY

Similar documents
ETHIOPIA Humanitarian Situation Report

EMERGENCY AND HUMANITARIAN ACTION (EHA) WEEKLY UPDATE WHO COUNTRY OFFICE ETHIOPIA: (Week 35, August 2009)

UNICEF HUMANITARIAN ACTION ETHIOPIA IN 2007

SOMALIA. Summary of UNICEF Emergency Needs for 2009*

HEALTH CLUSTER. Summary Report. Prioritization of woredas for the drought related emergency health response. Dereje Ayana 2/22/2016

ANGOLA Humanitarian Situation Report April 2017

Cumulativ e results (#) 1,460,000 1,832,000 9,200,000 4,329,000. Cluster Target. Cumulative results (#) 304,300* 141,636** 303, ,636**

MALAWI. Humanitarian. Situation Report. 6.5 million People food insecure. Highlights

Total Results. Target 35,093 2,244 24, , ,100, ,260, , , , , , , ,317

Swaziland Humanitarian Situation Report September 2017

EASTERN AND SOUTHERN AFRICA. Zimbabwe

WFP and the Nutrition Decade

UNICEF Senegal Situation Report 25 May 2012

Madagascar El Niño Drought Humanitarian Situation Report April 2017

Figure 3. Figure 2. Figure 1

Nutrition Policy. Presentation to Executive Board. February 2017

Lesotho Humanitarian Situation Report October 2016

ANGOLA El Niño Drought Humanitarian Situation Report January - June 2017

# of Schools occupied by displaced people (Reports from District Education Managers) UNICEF has dispatched a total value of supplies USD181,467

NEPAL. Summary of UNICEF Emergency Needs for 2009*

WFP Ethiopia Drought Emergency Household Food Security Monitoring Bulletin #3

Humanitarian Situation Report Horn of Africa Measles Outbreak Response

ANGOLA Humanitarian Situation Report

SOMALIA CONSOLIDATED APPEAL $121,855,709 for 67 projects Leo Matunga

UNICEF Senegal Situation Report 25 September 2012

CHILDREN OF HAITI : AFTER THE QUAKE

FROM HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE TO RESILIENCE

Philippines Humanitarian Situation Report

UNICEF HUMANITARIAN ACTION ZIMBABWE IN 2008

ZIMBABWE. Summary of UNICEF Emergency Needs for 2009*

Ethiopia s New Harmonised Nutrition Plan Saves Children s Lives

Zimbabwe Humanitarian Situation Report #6 30 June 2016

EMERGENCY AND HUMANITARIAN ACTION (EHA)

POLICY BRIEF. Situation Analysis of the Nutrition Sector in Ethiopia EXECUTIVE SUMMARY INTRODUCTION

Ethiopia: Dashboard - Sector Response and Contextual Indicators (July 2017)

EMERGENCY AND HUMANITARIAN ACTION (EHA)

Somalia Initial Rapid Needs Assessment (SIRNA)

ETHIOPIA Humanitarian Situation Report

IMPROVING NUTRITION SECURITY IN ASIA An EU-UNICEF Joint Action

Somalia Initial Rapid Needs Assessment (SIRNA)

UNICEF SOMALIA SITUATION REPORT APRIL 2017 SOMALIA SITREP # 5: APRIL 2017 SITUATION IN NUMBERS 1. Target achieved (%)

Philippines Humanitarian Situation Report

Nutrition. October Issue. National Strategy. Page 1

World Food Programme (WFP)

MOZAMBIQUE Humanitarian Situation Report July-September 2017

Health. goalglobal.org

Humanitarian Responses: Women, Girls and Gender Equity

MALAWI Humanitarian Situation

UNICEF SOMALIA HUMANITARIAN SITUATION REPORT No. 7 1 to 31 July UNICEF Somalia/HornConnect children participated in the Mogadishu Book Fair

Sector Indicator UNICEF Sector/Cluster UNICEF Target

Evaluation of the Kajiado Nutrition Programme in Kenya. May By Lee Crawfurd and Serufuse Sekidde

PAKISTAN: NORTH WAZIRISTAN DISPLACEMENT July 17, 2014

MALAWI. Humanitarian. Situation Report. Highlights. 6,692,114 million People are food insecure

Malawi. Year-end Humanitarian Situation Report January December 2017

West and Central Africa

COUNTRY OFFICE MONTHLY REPORT EMERGENCY AND HUMANITARIAN ACTION (EHA) / ETHIOPIA PROGRAMME. MONTH OF June 2009

UNICEF Annual Report Ethiopia

ANGOLA Humanitarian Situation Report February 2018

WFP Ethiopia Drought Emergency Household Food Security Monitoring Bulletin #2

Zimbabwe Humanitarian Situation Report No 3 31 March 2016

EMERGENCY AND HUMANITARIAN ACTION (EHA) WEEKLY UPDATE WHO COUNTRY OFFICE ETHIOPIA: (Week 23, June 2009) HIGH LIGHTS:

WFP Ethiopia Drought Emergency Household Food Security Bulletin #1

ANGOLA. Summary of UNICEF Emergency Needs for 2009*

KENYA DONOR UPDATE 6 OCTOBER 2005

CLASSROOM DISCUSSION QUESTIONS

MALI Humanitarian Situation Report

Somalia Drought Response Reporting period (1 st January 2018 to 28 th February 2018)

BRIEFING NOTE. Amhara region briefing note. Regional

HUMANITARIAN IMPLEMENTATION PLAN (HIP) EMERGENCY TOOLBOX

WHE Situation Report. June, 2018 Situation Report No M KEY FIGURES HIGHLIGHTS. There has been significant decrease in the

Somalia Humanitarian Situation Report

South Sudan Cholera Outbreak Situation Report

Monthly Humanitarian Situation Report SENEGAL Date: September 2013

UNICEF Pakistan. Flood Relief and Early Recovery: Fortnightly Situation Report. 7 to 18 January 2011

ADDRESSING MALNUTRITION IN YEMEN

Somalia. Humanitarian Situation Report. Highlights 520,000. US$ million. May , ,000. UNICEF Appeal 2014

WHO Updates Essential Nutrition Actions: Improving Women s, Newborn, Infant and Young Child Health and Nutrition

Sahel. 3 June Mauritania Mali Niger. Burkina Faso

NUTRITION In action. 11 June Diane E. Holland Nutrition Section, Programme Division, UNICEF

UNICEF YEMEN CRISIS SITUATION REPORT 24 June 7 July, 2015

Sudan Nutrition Sector Bulletin December 2015 March 2016

Progress on CLTSH in Ethiopia: Findings from a National Review

UNICEF s Response to the Ebola Crisis. Presenta(on to the Execu(ve Board, Informal Session, 11 September 2014

Economic and Social Council Distr.: Limited

Emergency type: Rohingya Refugee Crisis

Child Friendly Spaces in Emergencies

Invest in Nutrition Now A Smart Start for Our Children, Our Future

Philippines Humanitarian Situation Report

Yemen conflict HIGHLIGHTS HEALTH SECTOR 4,255 DEATHS *** REFUGEES 21.1 MILLION* IN NEED 21,288 INJURED

Lao PDR. Maternal and Child Health and Nutrition status in Lao PDR. Outline

STATEMENT OF LYNN STRATFORD SENIOR VICE PRESIDENT, PROGRAM AND COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT UNITED STATES FUND FOR UNICEF

Emergency type: Rohingya Refugee Crisis

SUN DONOR NETWORK Methodology and Guidance Note to Track Global Investments in Nutrition

Executive Board of the United Nations Development Programme, the United Nations Population Fund and the United Nations Office for Project Services

World Health Organization Emerging and other Communicable Diseases, Surveillance and Control

659 LAB CONFIRMED CASES

IMMUNIZATION IN HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE and PARTNER COORDINATION. GAVI Board - 13 June 2017, Geneva

Emergencies are often characterized by a high

Zimbabwe. Humanitarian Situation Report. 4 million People facing food and nutrition insecurity from January - March 2017 (ZimVAC, July 2016)

COUNTRY PRESENTATION NEPAL

Transcription:

*Following the belg assessment in June 2016, a revision of the Humanitarian Requirements Document is expected to be released in July, with possible needs and funding revisions. The Situation Ethiopia has been experiencing one of the worst droughts in decades. The main rainy season (kiremt rains) that is vital for producing over 80 per cent of Ethiopia s agricultural yield in an industry that employs 85 per cent of the country s workforce failed in 2015, and a powerful El Niño weather event continues to wreak havoc on children s lives and their families livelihoods. Humanitarian needs have more than tripled in the last year. According to the latest 2016 Humanitarian Requirements Document (released in December 2015), more than 10 million people (over 10 per cent of the total population) are now in need of urgent food relief assistance. And this year approximately 6 million children are at risk from hunger, disease and lack of water in Ethiopia as a result of the El Niño related drought. Some drought-affected areas received unusually heavy rains in April, May, and June which has led to flash floods and landslides worsening the already dire situation for affected communities. Casualties and injuries have been reported, as well as livestock deaths and road inaccessibility, which has impeded delivery of food and water aid. Malnutrition rates have greatly increased 458,000 children are expected to be treated for severe acute malnutrition, a sharp increase from the 250,000 cases that UNICEF prepares for in a normal year. A further 2.5 million children and pregnant and lactating women are expected to be treated for moderate acute malnutrition. Other humanitarian shocks: In a country that already hosts the largest refugee population in Africa (734,931 as of April 2016) there is a concern that the slow onset drought emergency could lead people, particularly pastoralists, to move in search of food, water and pasture from one region to another. As experience tells, this could trigger tensions between various ethnic groups in some regions, as it recently has between Oromo and Somali ethnic groups. It is expected that some 485,000 people will be affected by flooding. Approximately 150,000 people are expected to be displaced due to flooding, drought or conflict, which will lead to critical needs for food, shelter and non-food items. How the El Niño related drought in 2016 compares to the Horn of Africa 2011 food crisis: During the Horn of Africa crisis, 4.5 million people in Ethiopia were in need of food aid compared to 10.2 million this year. In 2011, the total severe acute malnutrition (SAM) cases were 328,750 compared to the projected 458,000 cases for 2016. The numbers of refugees being hosted by Ethiopia has more than doubled since 2011 too approximately 300,000 in 2011, to 737,979 refugees from South Sudan, Somalia, Eritrea, Sudan and elsewhere as of May 2016. Causes Ethiopia is highly vulnerable to climatic hazards particularly drought and floods. Such hazards and associated disasters are not unique phenomena to Ethiopia, but what makes them unique is the scale of their consequences in terms of loss of life and damage to properties, livelihoods and to the national economy. Food insecurity is recurrent and seasonal in Ethiopia; predominantly in the months of February-May, but the situation varies in severity. Based on past experience, Ethiopia has put systems in place to address the needs of the vast majority of Ethiopians affected during recurrent food insecure periods. These include community based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM) services delivered through the Health Extension Programme to treat severe acute malnutrition; the Productive Safety Net Programme, which provides cash and food transfers to 8 million vulnerable beneficiaries; as well as Mobile Health and Nutrition Teams in the Afar and Somali regions. However, the El-Nino exacerbated drought is so extreme that this year s lean season will be much more severe, placing even more pressure on families that are already struggling to cope with food insecurity and lack of clean water.

Implications on Children At a time when Ethiopia had made progress for its children across multiple fronts, El Niño threatens to diminish gains made in nutrition, health, child protection and education for millions of children across drought and flood-affected areas. Between 2000 and 2014, child mortality rates were cut by two-thirds in Ethiopia and stunting rates were reduced dramatically from 58 per cent to 40 per cent. However, if the effects of El Nino are not mitigated, millions of children stand to lose out on their health, education, wellbeing and future. Emergency facts and figures at a glance* Overall number of people in need of food assistance Overall number of children at risk hunger, disease and lack of water 10.2 million (in addition to the 8 million who will receive cash and food assistance through the Productive Safety Net Programme) 6 million Children under five and pregnant and lactating women who will benefit from treatment for moderate acute malnutrition in 2016 Children under five who will benefit from treatment for severe acute malnutrition in 2016 School-age children and adolescents who are unable to access quality education opportunities because of the drought People who require access to safe drinking water and basic latrine facilities. Children in need of protection from abuse, neglect, exploitation and violence 2.5 million 458,000 2.1 million 5.8 million 1 million Number of refugees in the country 737,979 Funding Appeal Throughout 2016, the level of humanitarian need in Ethiopia is expected to remain very high, requiring sustained response from the Government, humanitarian agencies and donors. We therefore urge the international community to continue their support and assistance to those in need of emergency assistance in Ethiopia, with the added objective of building resilience in order to save lives. UNICEF is appealing for urgent funds for the scale-up of humanitarian activities in 2016 in Ethiopia, including for hundreds of thousands of refugee children. The funding gap urgently needs to be covered in order to continue providing life-saving Nutrition, WASH and Health as well as Education and Child Protection services to keep children in school and safe from violence, exploitation and abuse. Child Protection and Education are currently the most underfunded areas. The UNICEF 2016 Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) appeal for Ethiopia is for US$106 million, of which approximately US$99.7 million has been raised. Out of the total UNICEF HAC appeal, US$97.5million is for the drought response, but this figure will be revised upwards shortly due to increased needs. The overall funding requirement as per the joint Government and partners Ethiopia Humanitarian Requirements Document for 2016 is US$1.5 billion.

Humanitarian Strategy: Partnerships and Prepositioning The Government of Ethiopia is leading the humanitarian response, supported by partners including UNICEF, WFP, OCHA, NGO partners and donors. A coordinated response by the Government and its key international development partners, including UNICEF, is vital throughout 2016. In line with its core commitments for children in humanitarian action, UNICEF is supporting the Government in scaling-up its response to mitigate the impact of the current drought on children and women and working closely with the Government and partners to ensure that children have access to education, health and nutrition care, safe water, sanitation and hygiene services, and protection support during emergencies. UNICEF commends the Government of Ethiopia for building the resiliency of their nation to mitigate the shock of food insecurity, drought and flood as well as their efforts to host and provide a safe place for refugees from Somalia, Sudan, South Sudan and Eritrea. Prepositioned supplies: To respond to any rapid onset crisis in a timely manner, UNICEF has prepositioned stocks in Addis Ababa and at two regional hubs to address the needs of 120,000 people. These stocks include essential supplies such as emergency drug kits, water treatment/purification chemicals, ready-to-use therapeutic food, school-in-a-bag kits, tents and non-food items. UNICEF is currently mobilizing additional resources to procure additional emergency shelter and non-food items. These supplies will be used to provide immediate assistance to drought-affected and flood-affected populations based on requests from regional governments. UNICEF has established long-term agreements with suppliers of key emergency supplies and for drilling shallow boreholes, which enables urgent response as needed. UNICEF Emergency Response Child protection children at risk: UNICEF has been implementing child protection in emergencies drought response in six regions since March 2016 and 70 per cent of the funding requirement of UNICEF has been achieved. The implementing partners include the Ethiopian Ministry of Women s and Children s Affairs, the Ethiopian Bureau of Labour and Social Affairs, Child Fund, and Save the Children. UNICEF provides child protection in emergency services including psychosocial support through child friendly spaces, identification and referral of children at risk of or victims of abuse, violence and exploitation, and through working with communities to prevent and/or respond to family separation, at-risk migration, child marriage, gender based violence and other protection issues. Education disruption in learning: UNICEF is a co-coordinating agency for the Emergency Education cluster, supporting the Ministry of Education to ensure that assistance across the six affected regions is efficiently targeted and delivered. An essential component of this is the gathering and analysis of data on the impact of the drought on schools and educational institutions to inform a sector-wide emergency response plan. UNICEF recruited and deployed an education cluster coordinator in order to strengthen Ministry of Education and regional education coordination capacity to respond to the emergency. UNICEF assists the Regional Education Bureaus in six regions with the provision of primary school teaching and learning materials, temporary learning spaces, WASH services to schools as well support to offset the additional costs schools are bearing to stay open during the drought. Further, communities hosting displaced families and their children have been provided with temporary learning facilities, attached to existing primary schools, in order to accommodate increased numbers of school children. UNICEF has advocated for the Government to support school feeding programmes and the Government has commenced these programmes in Priority 1 woredas (districts) in the six affected regions. As a response to acute watery diarrhea emergency, UNICEF distributed brochures and posters to the Addis Ababa Regional Education Bureau for distribution in schools, as well as to sub-cities and woredas to help protect school children from being infected by the disease.

Nutrition: UNICEF, the Nutrition cluster lead, coordinates the overall nutrition emergency response and provides nutrition supplies including ready-to-use therapeutic food (RUTF), F-75 and F-100 therapeutic milk and drugs for the treatment of children with severe acute malnutrition. UNICEF has procured 543,631 cartons of RUTF for the treatment of SAM in this drought response, in preparation for the anticipated increase in SAM caseload. This is one of the largest purchases of RUTF for a country in UNICEF history and represents 22 per cent of the global order for 2015. To date in 2016, UNICEF has procured a further 73,344 cartons of RUTF out of a global procurement estimated at 565,623 cartons, which corresponds to 13 per cent of the global supply. UNICEF supports the treatment of malnourished children through the community-based management of acute malnutrition (CMAM), along with training, quality assurance (supervision) and coordination with other partners. Regular nutrition screening helps ensure that malnutrition in children is caught and treated early, thereby reducing cases of severe acute malnutrition and life-threatening complications. UNICEF supports bi-annual nutrition surveys that are conducted in the six drought-affected regions, Amhara, Afar, Tigray, Oromia, Somali and SNNP. UNICEF supports training to strengthen infant and young child feeding in emergencies (IYCF-E) as part of CMAM and supports promotion of good IYCF practices through community based nutrition, mother-to-mother counselling and public outreach using local radio UNICEF continues to provide support for countrywide, twice a year vitamin A supplementation among children 6 to 59 months and deworming of children 24 to 59 months, as well as support for Ethiopia food fortification, including universal salt iodization efforts Health preventing and responding to disease outbreaks: UNICEF and partners support the Ministry of Health and Regional Health Bureaus to maintain a minimum level of preparedness against increased health hazards from drought and flooding, to improve case management and to build the capacity of the health system to effectively respond to and recover from the emergency and ensure improved access to health care services. UNICEF provides financial support, supplies (vaccines and medicines) and technical assistance to partners (including supporting training for health workers) for the prevention of major causes of child illnesses and deaths such as acute watery diarrhoea and other diarrhoeal diseases, vaccine preventable diseases like measles, as well as other diseases such as scabies and meningitis. In response to outbreaks of acute watery diarrhea, UNICEF has supported the cost of running treatment centres as well as provided supplies which include drugs and 73 case treatment center (CTC) kits to Addis Ababa Regional Health Bureau, as well as SNNP, Somali and Tigray regions. Each kit is composed of 10 beds for inpatients, medical supplies, tents, water containers, chemical sprayers with disinfectant and cleaning supplies. The kits are used to establish temporary clinics to isolate and treat patients with acute watery diarrhea. UNICEF supports mobile health and nutrition interventions and teams in the Somali and Afar regions for pastoralist communities, which are providing medical consultations and essential life-saving preventive interventions including for children under five and pregnant and lactating women. WASH: UNICEF as WASH cluster lead supports the Government and WASH cluster in the collection of real time information on the status of water supply facilities in some of the most drought-affected communities, which helps in triggering rapid response to address urgent needs. UNICEF supports the rehabilitation, maintenance and upgrade of water supply systems (including wells and boreholes) and provides household water purification and treatment chemicals to increase access to clean water for drought-affected and flood-affected people. UNICEF works to increase access to improved water and sanitation facilities in schools and health facilities and to increase awareness of good hygiene and sanitation in communities especially those affected by public health emergencies such as scabies and acute watery diarrhea. UNICEF supports the Government in scaling up water trucking activities in chronically affected areas to fill gaps while the rehabilitation of non-functional water supply systems is carried out.

WASH in schools programmes are being provided in Priority 1 woredas to reduce the rate of school dropouts and to provide sanitation and hygiene facilities to reduce the incidence of disease outbreaks. Background of UNICEF in Ethiopia UNICEF Ethiopia s cooperation with Ethiopia began in 1952 and the office was established in 1958. Since then, UNICEF has continued to work closely with the Government of Ethiopia and other partners in the realisation of the rights of the children and women in Ethiopia based on the programmes and projects developed and agreed upon by the Government of Ethiopia and UNICEF. UNICEF works in all regions of the country in the areas of Health, Nutrition, WASH, Education and Child Protection and will continue this work under the new Country Programme (July 2016 June 2020). UNICEF and partners UNICEF Ethiopia works with partners including governments, UN agencies, NGOs and communities to provide emergency relief in line with the Core Commitments for Children in emergencies. Among its key donors and partners are the Governments of Canada, Germany, Japan, Italy, Sweden, United Kingdom and the United States, HRF, CERF, ECHO and EU among others, as well as UNICEF National Committees. Facts about Ethiopia Media interviews Languages spoken by staff are mainly English and French. Other languages are: Amharic, Arabic, Danish, Dutch, Fula, Italian, Mandinka, Portuguese, Spanish, Swahili and Wolof. For further information: Latest Humanitarian Situation Report available here: http://www.unicef.org/ethiopia/emergency.html Humanitarian Requirements Document: http://www.unicef.org/ethiopia/eco_ethiopia_hrd_2016.pdf Humanitarian Action for Children 2016 appeal for Ethiopia: http://www.unicef.org/appeals/ethiopia.html