Category: United Nations

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 28 February 2025 News release Recommendations announced for influenza vaccine composition for the 2025-2026 northern hemisphere influenza season

    Source: World Health Organisation

    The World Health Organization (WHO) today announced the recommendations for the viral composition of influenza vaccines for the 2025-2026 influenza season in the northern hemisphere. The announcement was made at an information session at the end of a 4-day meeting on the Composition of Influenza Virus Vaccines, a meeting that is held twice annually. 

    WHO organizes these consultations with an advisory group of experts gathered from WHO Collaborating Centres and WHO Essential Regulatory Laboratories to analyse influenza virus surveillance data generated by the WHO Global Influenza Surveillance and Response System (GISRS). The recommendations issued are used by the national vaccine regulatory agencies and pharmaceutical companies to develop, produce, and license influenza vaccines for the following influenza season. 

    The periodic update of viruses contained in influenza vaccines is necessary for the vaccines to be effective due to the constant evolving nature of influenza viruses, including those circulating and infecting humans.

    The WHO recommends that trivalent vaccines for use in the 2025-2026 northern hemisphere influenza season contain the following: 

    Egg-based vaccines

    • an A/Victoria/4897/2022 (H1N1)pdm09-like virus;
    • an A/Croatia/10136RV/2023 (H3N2)-like virus; and
    • a B/Austria/1359417/2021 (B/Victoria lineage)-like virus.

    Cell culture-, recombinant protein- or nucleic acid-based vaccines

    • an A/Wisconsin/67/2022 (H1N1)pdm09-like virus;
    • an A/District of Columbia/27/2023 (H3N2)-like virus; and
    • a B/Austria/1359417/2021 (B/Victoria lineage)-like virus. 

    The recommendation for the B/Yamagata lineage component of quadrivalent influenza vaccines remains unchanged from previous recommendations:

    • a B/Phuket/3073/2013 (B/Yamagata lineage)-like virus.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: A letter from a mother in Gaza: Hardships, heartbreak and hope

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Health

    ‘‘This story doesn’t start from day one. It starts from nine months ago – the day I learned I was going to be a mother.”

    That day was in November 2023, around a month into the war in Gaza. Ala’a is among an estimated 155,000 pregnant women and new mothers in the Gaza Strip who for the past year have been forced to give birth under fire, in tents, while fleeing bombs and often without assistance, medication or even clean water.

    “The sound of the rockets and bombs was louder than my happiness, but I decided that with my little baby, we would overcome all difficulties,” she wrote in a letter thanking the tireless health staff who helped her deliver her baby in a field hospital in Khan Younis.

    “We will survive whatever happens.”

    UNFPA

    A letter from a mother in Gaza.

    Catastrophic situation

    The situation for pregnant women in Gaza is catastrophic: Exhausted, weak from hunger, with health services nearly completely destroyed and none of the hospitals fully operational, they have few places to turn for care and treatment.

    After hundreds of attacks on medical facilities, just 17 out of 36 hospitals are even partially functioning.

    Fuel and supplies are also running dangerously short, health-care workers are being killed or forced to flee and those that remain are stretched thin at a time when Gaza’s whole population is facing a surge in injuries, illnesses and diseases, including the first case of polio in over 25 years.

    Perils of displacement

    More than 500,000 women in Gaza have lost access to vital services like pre- and postnatal care, family planning and treatment for infections. Among them, over 17,000 pregnant women are on the brink of famine.

    “After seven months, I was forced to leave my home and live in a tent,” Ala’a continued in her letter. “I cried a lot, feeling that my brave baby would never see the walls of his room that I had always dreamed of preparing for him.”

    But, her anguish didn’t end there, as she was soon evacuated yet again.

    “It was a cry from the depths of my heart [that I had] to give birth out of my home,” wrote Ala’a. “After 50 days I fled under fire, running, screaming and crying because of the bombs. At that moment, I feared I might lose my baby.”

    Some 1.9 million people are currently displaced in Gaza, many of whom have already been forced to move multiple times over the past year. Since the start of the war, miscarriages, obstetric complications, low birth weight and premature births are reported to have risen at alarming rates, mainly due to stress, malnutrition and a near-total lack of maternity care.

    Recalling her time escaping the bombardments, Ala’a wrote, “We are here, starting from nothing – no shelter, no home, not even a destiny. We built a tent again, and we promised each other again that we must survive, whatever happens.”

    A glimmer of light

    “Two weeks later I felt some pain…It was labour pains! [I thought] ‘No. It’s too early, I want to give birth at home.’”

    After four days of labour, Ala’a visited a field hospital in Khan Younis run by UK-Med, a humanitarian non-governmental organization (NGO) that has a specialised maternity unit supported by the United Kingdom and the UN agency for sexual and reproductive health, UNFPA.

    “I came for a check-up and everything was great,” she continued. “The midwife and nurses were kind and warm. I spoke to Dr. Helen, and she encouraged me to come and give birth there.”

    When the time came, they made sure Ala’a delivered her baby safely.

    “I went directly to the hospital at 2am and all the midwives were ready. But, they told me there was no way for a natural birth, it was too dangerous.”

    UNFPA provides the hospital’s maternity unit with reproductive health kits and supplies and ensures staff can offer comprehensive care, including for obstetric emergencies.

    Ala’a and her newborn Mohammad have recovered well, despite the ongoing war and lack of clean water, food or security.

    “It was the best decision to come here to give birth,” she wrote. “I like that they smile all the time even though they are under pressure. They are a great team.”

    © UK-Med

    More than 500,000 women in Gaza have lost access to vital health services.

    Health care under fire

    The impact of the war in Gaza on women and girls is staggering: More than 500,000 women have lost access to vital services like pre- and postnatal care, family planning and treatment for infections; over 17,000 pregnant women are in severe stages of hunger.

    UNFPA and its partners are dedicated to providing reproductive health support, distributing life-saving medicines, medical equipment and supplies and deploying teams of midwives and health-care workers at both official and makeshift camps.

    Six mobile maternal health units have also been set up in field hospitals to deliver emergency obstetric care to mothers and their newborns wherever they are. But it is impossible to provide continuous support without a ceasefire, full access to health services and sustained funding.

    Despite all the hardships she has endured, Ala’a refuses to lose heart.

    “From Mohammad, my son, thanks for everything,” she wrote, expressing gratitude to the staff at the hospital.

    “We are grateful for you. I hope that we meet again in better times.”

    Donate to UNFPA here.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 28 February 2025 Joint News Release New WHO and ITU standard aims to prevent hearing loss among gamers

    Source: World Health Organisation

    “Everyone can take steps today to ensure good hearing health throughout their life,” said Dr Jérôme Salomon, WHO Assistant Director-General, Universal Health Coverage, Communicable and Noncommunicable Diseases. “The WHO/ITU safe listening standard supports governments, manufacturers, civil society, and other stakeholders to foster safe listening environments, so that people of all ages can protect their ears and hearing, and even when playing video games, do not risk hearing loss.” 

    Video gameplay and esports are rapidly becoming one of the largest entertainment industries worldwide. About 3 billion people play video games on devices such as personal computers, video game consoles, and mobile phones, yet most devices and games lack safe listening features to protect users from harmful noise. However, gamers risk permanent hearing loss from prolonged exposure to loud sounds while gaming or listening to music. Children are particularly vulnerable due to their lower sound tolerance and growing interest in gaming. 

    Through the provision of information, warnings and safe listening features, the new standard aims to inform video game players of the risk to hearing loss from loud video gameplay activities and raise awareness about how they can practice safe listening. 

    “As video gaming and esports continue to grow and gamers use a wider array of devices to access their content, safe listening standards are vital to help protect the hearing of users, especially children, from sounds which could damage their hearing,” said Seizo Onoe, Director, Telecommunication Standardization Bureau, International Telecommunication Union. “Creating effective technical standards requires collaboration which leverages each other’s strengths. We are grateful to our partners at WHO for their insight and experience advancing safe listening, and are pleased to launch this update on World Hearing Day.” 

    Standards protect hearing for all types of video game players 

    The WHO-ITU Global standard on safe listening for video gameplay and esports is designed to protect hearing for all types of video game players, across a wide range of gameplay scenarios and equipment. The standard provides separate guidelines for video gameplay devices (video game consoles, handheld or mobile devices and personal computers, headphones and headsets), and video game software.  

    For video gameplay devices, the standard recommends: 

    • Sound allowance tracking to measure the player’s sound exposure.  
    • Safe listening messages that provide players with information on sound usage, including predictions on when their sound limit will be reached. 
    • A user-friendly volume control system that can be easily adjusted. 
    • A “headphone safety mode” that automatically adjusts the volume when a player changes between headphones and loudspeakers. 

    For video gameplay software titles, the standard recommends: 

    • Safe listening warnings and messages for players about the risk of hearing loss from loud sounds and prolonged exposure during gameplay activities.  
    • Independent volume controls for different sound categories, allowing players to adjust levels and mute various sounds within the game. 
    • Adapting the soundtrack, genre and sound design of each game with safe listening features 
    • A “headphone safety mode” within the software that is capable of detecting a switch of audio output between headphones and speakers and automatically reduces the volume.  

    The new standard was developed under WHO’s Make Listening Safe initiative which seeks to improve listening practices especially among young people, drawing on the latest evidence and consultations with a range of stakeholders including experts from WHO, government, industry, consumers, and civil society.  

    Notes to editors 

    About the World Health Organization  

    Dedicated to the health and well-being of all people and guided by science, the World Health Organization leads and champions global efforts to give everyone, everywhere, an equal chance at a safe and healthy life. We are the UN agency for health that connects nations, partners and people on the front lines in 150+ locations – leading the world’s response to health emergencies, preventing disease, addressing the root causes of health issues and expanding access to medicines and health care. Our mission is to promote health, keep the world safe and serve the vulnerable. 

    About the International Telecommunication Union

    The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is the United Nations specialized agency for information and communication technologies (ICTs), driving innovation in ICTs together with 194 Member States and a membership of over 1,000 companies, universities, and international and regional organizations. Established in 1865, it is the intergovernmental body responsible for coordinating the shared global use of the radio spectrum, promoting international cooperation in assigning satellite orbits, improving communication infrastructure in the developing world, and establishing the worldwide standards that foster seamless interconnection of a vast range of communications systems. From broadband networks to cutting-edge wireless technologies, aeronautical and maritime navigation, radio astronomy, oceanographic and satellite-based earth monitoring as well as converging fixed-mobile phone, Internet and broadcasting technologies, ITU is committed to connecting the world. Learn more: www.itu.int  

    “,”datePublished”:”2025-02-28T10:30:00.0000000+00:00″,”image”:”https://cdn.who.int/media/images/default-source/headquarters/teams/uhc—communicable-noncommunicable-diseases-(ucn)/noncommunicable-diseases-rehabilitation-and-disability-(ncd)/sensory-functions-disability-and-rehabilitation-(sdr)/147_who-russia.jpg?sfvrsn=4803540e_3″,”publisher”:{“@type”:”Organization”,”name”:”World Health Organization: WHO”,”logo”:{“@type”:”ImageObject”,”url”:”https://www.who.int/Images/SchemaOrg/schemaOrgLogo.jpg”,”width”:250,”height”:60}},”dateModified”:”2025-02-28T10:30:00.0000000+00:00″,”mainEntityOfPage”:”https://www.who.int/news/item/28-02-2025-new-who-and-itu-standard-aims-to-prevent-hearing-loss-among-gamers”,”@context”:”http://schema.org”,”@type”:”NewsArticle”};
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    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 28 February 2025 Joint News Release Humanitarian access improves quality of polio vaccination campaign in the Gaza Strip

    Source: World Health Organisation

    A five-day mass polio vaccination campaign in the Gaza Strip concluded on Wednesday, reaching nearly 603 000 children under 10 years of age with novel oral polio vaccine type 2 (nOPV2) following comprehensive, simultaneous access to all five governorates during the ongoing ceasefire. The campaign was conducted as part of emergency efforts to end an ongoing poliovirus outbreak and prevent further spread in the Gaza Strip. 

    During this round, an additional 40 000 children were vaccinated as compared to the previous two rounds conducted in September and October 2024, after poliovirus was detected in the Gaza Strip. The ceasefire enabled health workers to reach more children who had missed vaccinations due to displacement during the phased approach, living in areas that previously required special coordination for access, or being unreachable during the October 2024 round due to insecurity in North Gaza, including Jabalia, Beit Lahiya, and Beit Hanoun.

    Strong community engagement and awareness of vaccination benefits had maintained high immunization rates in the Gaza Strip, where 89% of children received the third dose of oral polio vaccine in 2023, before the conflict.  This round drew upon 1660 vaccination teams, 1242 of which were mobile, and deployed 1242 social mobilizers. Despite bad weather conditions, families welcomed the initiative and brought their children to points where they could receive the polio vaccine. 

    The campaign was conducted by the Palestinian Ministry of Health and implemented with support from the World Health Organization (WHO), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), and other partners.

    As part of the Global Polio Eradication Initiative’s commitment to mount a robust poliovirus outbreak response, surveillance for disease in children and for virus circulation in the environment has also been intensified since July 2024. It was this timely surveillance that detected ongoing environmental circulation of the virus, and the need to conduct additional vaccination to protect children. 

    As the ceasefire provides an opportunity to resume critical public health functions, working to recover Gaza’s previously strong disease surveillance and routine immunization are the best ways to protect children from polio and other vaccine-preventable diseases. Ending polio hinges on fully vaccinating every last child with polio vaccines.  Ensuring uninterrupted access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene, and proper nutrition will protect children from many diseases including polio.

    WHO, UNICEF and partners continue to call for a lasting ceasefire that leads to long-term health and peace.  

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Secretary-General’s video at the beginning of Ramadan [scroll down for French and Arabic versions]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Download the video: https://s3.us-east-1.amazonaws.com/downloads2.unmultimedia.org/public/video/evergreen/MSG+SG+/SG+RAMADAN+31+JAN+25/3334567_MSG+SG+RAMADAN+31+JAN+25.mp4

    I send my warmest wishes as Muslims around the world begin observing the Holy Month of Ramadan.

    Ramadan embodies the values of compassion, empathy and generosity.

    It is an opportunity to reconnect with family and community.

    A chance to remember those less fortunate.

    To all those who will spend this sacred time amid displacement and violence, I wish to express a special message of support.

    I stand with all those who are suffering.

    From Gaza and the wider region, to Sudan, the Sahel and beyond.

    And I join those observing Ramadan to call for peace and mutual respect.

    Every Ramadan, I undertake a solidarity visit and fast with a Muslim community around the globe.

    These missions remind the world of the true face of Islam.

    And I always come away even more inspired by the remarkable sense of peace that fills this season.     

    In this Holy Month, let us all be uplifted by these values and embrace our common humanity to build a more just and peaceful world for all. 

    Ramadan Kareem.

    *****
    Je présente mes vœux les plus chaleureux aux millions de musulmans du monde entier qui entament le mois sacré du Ramadan.

    Le Ramadan incarne les valeurs de compassion, d’empathie et de générosité.

    Il est l’occasion de renouer avec sa famille et sa communauté.

    Il est aussi l’occasion de penser aux personnes moins bien loties.

    Je tiens à adresser à toutes celles et ceux qui passeront cette période sacrée au milieu des déplacements et de la violence un message particulier de soutien.

    Je suis aux côtés de tous ceux qui souffrent.

    Qu’ils soient de Gaza et de la région, du Soudan, du Sahel, et au-delà.

    Je me joins à tous ceux qui observent le Ramadan pour appeler à la paix et au respect mutuel.

    Chaque Ramadan, je rends visite à une communauté musulmane dans le monde pour témoigner ma solidarité et partager leur jeûne.

    Ces missions permettent de rappeler au monde le vrai visage de l’Islam.

    J’en reviens toujours plus inspiré par le remarquable sentiment de paix qui règne pendant cette saison.

    En ce mois sacré, puisons dans ces valeurs et dans notre humanité commune afin de bâtir un monde plus juste et pacifique pour tous.

    Ramadan karim.

    *****

    أبعث بأحر تمنياتي إلى المسلمين في العالم أجمع بمناسبة حلول شهر رمضان الفضيل.
          
         فشهر رمضان يجسد قيم التراحم والتعاطف والسخاء.
     
              وهو فرصة لإعادة التواصل مع العائلة والمجتمع.

               وفرصة لتذكر من هم أقل حظاً.
        
           وأود أن أبعث برسالة دعم خاصة إلى جميع أولئك الذين سيقضون هذه الأوقات المباركة وسط أجواء النزوح والعنف.

               وأعرب عن تضامني مع كل أولئك الذين يعانون.
            
       من غزة والمنطقة بأسرها، إلى السودان ومنطقة الساحل وما وراءها.
         
          وأضم صوتي إلى أصوات صائمي رمضان في الدعوة إلى السلام والاحترام المتبادل.
        
           وقد دأبتُ في كل رمضان على القيام بزيارة تضامن وعلى الصيام مع أحد التجمعات المسلمة في أنحاء مختلفة من العالم.
           
      وهي زيارات تذكر العالم بالوجه الحقيقي للإسلام.
             
      ودائما ما أعود محملا بالمزيد من الشعور الرائع بالسلام الذي يفيض به هذا الموسم الرمضاني.

               دعونا، في هذا الشهر الفضيل، نتخذ جميعا من هذه القيم وسيلة للتسامي ونتمسك كلُّنا بإنسانيتنا المشتركة لبناء عالم أكثر عدلاً وسلاما للجميع.

               رمضان كريم.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Cross-Border Trade and Economic Immigration In Central Africa

    Source: International Organization for Migration (IOM)

    Yaoundé — On February 25,2025, The International Relations Institute of Cameroon (IRIC) hosted a workshop on Migration and Trade, organized by the WTO Chair of IRIC and the International Organization for Migration (IOM). This event, which had as theme “Cross-Border Trade and Economic Immigration in Central Africa,” aimed to strengthen participants’ capacities on the links between trade and migration. 

    With the overall objective of building a collaborative reflection between academics and practitioners on the correlation between cross-border trade and population immigration within the Central African sub-region, this workshop served as a genuine peer-learning platform. Participants could discover innovative initiatives and projects in different national contexts, thus promoting better integration of these concepts into their strategies and policies.

    In addition to the participation of representatives from public administrations responsible for trade issues in Central African countries, the workshop comprised four distinct sessions, was enriched by the contributions of Mr. Abdel Rahmane DIOP, Chief of Mission of IOM in Cameroon, and Professor Alain Didier OLINGA, holder of the WTO Chair.

    IOM Cameroon presented two critical tools for the monitoring of cross-border movements: the Migration Information and Data Analysis System (MIDAS) and the Flow Monitoring component of the Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM). MIDAS is an innovative border management system that allows for the real-time collection and analysis of migration data. Furthermore, the Flow Monitoring component enables the tracking and analysis of mobility trends at strategic points, thereby enhancing the understanding of migration dynamics within the sub-region.

    During the first session of the workshop, participants established a shared understanding of the significant connections between trade and migration, along with the relevant consultation frameworks. The second session concentrated on identifying strategies that multilateral organizations can adopt to optimize the interrelationships between cross-border trade and immigration in Central Africa. The third session provided a comprehensive overview of the migration challenges impacting the economies of the sub-region. Lastly, the final session was dedicated to formulating policies addressing cross-border trade and migration.

    In addition to migration and economic issues, the gender dimension was emphasized through detailed presentations. These discussions highlighted the essential role of women in the economic sector, articulated the importance of their empowerment, and underscored the necessity of mitigating the vulnerabilities they encounter.

    Partners, including IOM and WTO, have reiterated their commitment to assisting the countries of Central Africa in the implementation of effective cross-border trade and migration strategies and policies. They aim to leverage innovative tools to foster more effective border management and to enhance the understanding of migration dynamics.

    Joëlle TSANGA, IOM Cameroon 2025
     

    ***

    For further information, please contact: 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: From Protecting Civilians to Combating Crime, Preventing Conflict, United Nations Police Play Vital Role in Peacekeeping, Security Council Told

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    Note: Complete coverage of this afternoon’s meeting of the Security Council will be available 28 February.

    United Nations police are a critical part of the Organization’s peacekeeping architecture and must be adequately prepared, equipped and resourced to meet current and future challenges, the Security Council heard today, as it met to discuss UN support to conflict-affected countries.

    Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, said that today’s meeting offers the opportunity to discuss a critical question:  “How can we position United Nations police to be prepared for the future and the challenges that, even as they evolve, retain many known aspects?”  Such challenges, he noted, include lack of adherence to the rule of law, corruption, disregard for international law, transnational organized crime and human-rights violations.  Further, he underlined the need to work collectively to ensure that United Nations police are properly prepared, equipped and resourced “to meet whatever tomorrow brings”.

    Gap between Mandates, Capacity to Deliver

    However, he emphasized that “the gap between peacekeeping mandates and what the missions can, in practice, actually deliver has become increasingly apparent”.  Yet, the Action for Peacekeeping agenda continues to help close this gap, as do the areas prioritized within the Action for Peacekeeping Plus agenda.  Detailing several of these, he added that “rigorous and transparent monitoring of the performance and impact of peacekeeping operations provides the foundation for improving our operations”.  Through such an agenda, he concluded, “we are better placed to address today’s challenges to peace and security and, ultimately, to improve the lives of the people we serve”.

    “Although our footprint may be smaller today”, said Faisal Shahkar, United Nations Police Adviser, the tasks and responsibilities of the United Nations police remain complex.  This includes support to develop host-State policing capacities and institutions that underpin long-term stability and the rule of law.  Noting the need to enhance trust between missions, host-State Government institutions and host populations, he said that it is vital to address mis- and disinformation.  He also called for investment in training, highlighting the United Nations Police Commanders Course — “the crown jewel in the United Nations Police Training Architecture”.

    He also pointed out that United Nations police help reinforce the capacities of their host-State policing counterparts and support their operations, detailing several examples of this — including in the Central African Republic.  There, United Nations police provided extensive training for internal security forces, with a particular emphasis on human rights, gender-based violence and security in preparation for upcoming elections. Underlining the importance of skilled and knowledgeable police commanders, he urged:  “We need your support in ensuring that such officers — including highly skilled women and Francophone officers — are made available.”

    Maintaining Security towards Elections in Central African Republic

    Providing further detail on the situation in that country, Christophe Bizimungu, Chief of the Police Component of the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA), said that the security situation there will undoubtedly be impacted by upcoming elections.  “In addition to physical security measures, we will contribute towards the prevention of election violence — particularly violence against women and hate speech,” he said.  Noting that United Nations police primarily focus on civilian protection, he said it is ready to support electoral security and ensure that civilians are not affected during this period.

    Ensuring Lasting Calm in Cyprus

    Mingzhu Xu, Senior Police Adviser, United Nations Peacekeeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP), also provided country-specific information on United Nations police activities.  She said that as one of the longest-running active missions UNFICYP has consistently upheld efforts to prevent the recurrence of conflict, contribute to the maintenance of law and order and facilitate a return to normal conditions.  While its role has expanded beyond monitoring and reporting in the last five years, she emphasized that the Force’s most-important role is conflict prevention: “Every day, UNPOL officers engage with a multitude of actors in the buffer zone, employing community-oriented policing to defuse tensions, broker compromises and generally keep the peace.”

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: US funding cuts confirmed, ending lifesaving support for women and girls

    Source: United Nations 2

    Humanitarian Aid

    The United States has cut $377 million worth of funding to the UN reproductive and sexual health agency, UNFPA, it was confirmed on Thursday, leading to potentially “devasting impacts”, on women and girls.

    “At 7pm on 26 February, UNFPA was informed that nearly all of our grants (48 as of now) with USAID and the US State Department have been terminated,” the UN agency said in a statement.

    “This decision will have devastating impacts on women and girls and the health and aid workers who serve them in the world’s worst humanitarian crises.”

    The USAID grants were designated to provide critical maternal healthcare, protection from violence, rape treatment and other lifesaving care in humanitarian settings.

    This includes UNFPA’s work to end maternal death, safely deliver babies and address horrific violence faced by women and girls in places like Gaza, Sudan and Ukraine.

    From Afghanistan to Ukraine

    The UN agency partners with 150 countries to provide access to a wide range of sexual and reproductive health services.

    Its goal is ending unmet needs for family planning, preventable maternal death, gender-based violence and harmful practices, including child marriage and female genital mutilation, by 2030.

    “These termination notices include grants for which we had previously received humanitarian waivers, as they were considered lifesaving interventions for the world’s most vulnerable women and girls,” UNFPA said.

    The grants funded programmes in countries including Afghanistan, Chad, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Mali, Sudan, Syria and its neighbouring countries, as well as Ukraine.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Police units need strong support says UN peacekeeping chief

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    By Vibhu Mishra

    Peace and Security

    The head of UN peacekeeping operations on Thursday called for more investment in the UN Police service, highlighting the mounting challenges officers face in conflict affected regions.

    Briefing ambassadors in the Security Council, Jean-Pierre Lacroix, Peace Operations chief, emphasised that UN Police are critical to sustaining peace, operating in increasingly difficult conditions, in the face of organized crime, corruption, human rights violations and weak institutions.

    Each of us here in this Chamber – Member States, Council members, host countries, and military, police and financial contributors – have a stake in the success of peacekeeping operations,” he said.

    “This is never truer than at times like these, when multilateralism is facing significant headwinds,” he added, urging sustained effort to ensure peacekeeping remains relevant and responsive to today’s challenges.

    Bridging the gap

    Mr. Lacroix noted that the gap between peacekeeping mandates and operational realities has grown, stating that efforts under the Action for Peacekeeping (A4P+) initiative have helped narrow it, improving the effectiveness of police components in UN missions.

    In the Central African Republic (CAR) for instance, UN Police are strengthening national security forces to protect civilians and uphold the rule of law, while in disputed Abyei, they have been instrumental in implementing a strategy to support rule of law to address governance challenges between Sudan and South Sudan.

    The UN is also enhancing police training and operations.  

    A revised UN Police Commanders Course was piloted recently in the Kenyan capital Nairobi, and a collaboration with the Elsie Initiative has improved gender-sensitive living areas in field missions, encouraging more women to serve.

    Technology and innovation

    Mr. Lacroix further highlighted the importance of technology and innovation in peacekeeping, which have enhanced situational awareness and coordination across missions.

    Through A4P+, we are better placed to address today’s challenges and improve the lives of the people we serve,” he said, calling for greater investment in police training, capacity-building and resources.

    UN Photo/Eskinder Debebe

    Jean-Pierre Lacroix (on screen), Under-Secretary-General for Peace Operations, briefs the Security Council.

    Making a difference

    UN Police Adviser Faisal Shahkar highlighted the work of UN Police in making a tangible difference in host countries by building local capacities and reinforcing the rule of law.

    “In South Sudan, UNMISS Police, with specialized support from the UN Standing Police Capacity, elaborated an integrated strategic election security support plan providing essential technical advice to enhance security preparations for future elections in the country,” he said.

    He noted also capacity building initiatives by UNMISS Police for South Sudanese women officers to enhance their skills to assume leadership positions.

    Mis- and disinformation risks

    Despite these successes, trust between UN missions, host governments, and local populations remains a challenge, particularly due to misinformation and disinformation, Mr. Shakhar said.

    “Although our footprint may be smaller today than when I last briefed you [in November 2023], the United Nations Police’s tasks and responsibilities remain complex,” he said, calling on Member States for sustained leadership and continued political engagement.

    UNMISS

    UNMISS women police officers provide support during a protection of civilian mission in Juba, South Sudan.

    Impact on the ground

    Ambassadors also heard briefings from the heads of police components of the UN peacekeeping missions in the Central African Republic – MINUSCA, and in Cyprus (UNFICYP).

    Commissioner Christophe Bizimungu highlighted MINUSCA’s police efforts in stepping up efforts to ensure security ahead of the 2025 elections, supporting local security forces in preventing electoral violence, particularly against women.  

    It is also tackling rising hate crimes against the Muslim community in Haut Mbomou, where armed Azande militias pose a growing threat, as well as addressing seasonal livestock farming-related violence, deploying specialised units to prevent conflicts.

    UNFICYP Senior Police Adviser Xu Mingzhu, informed Council members of the Mission’s police role in preventing conflict and building trust, particularly through enhanced cooperation between Republic of Cyprus Police and Turkish Cypriot Police.

    The Mission is supporting exchange of information through joint contacts, while also helping ensure the safety of the buffer zone and facilitating civilian activities.

    UN Photo/Nektarios Markogiannis

    MINUSCA police officers interact with community members.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 27 February 2025 Departmental update Protecting key populations from abrupt disruptions to essential HIV services

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Prevention, testing and treatment services for HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections (STI) have driven unprecedented progress in improving population health over the past two decades, with millions of new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths averted.

    Foreign aid investments in the global HIV response, such as the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Fund on AIDS, TB and Malaria, have been pivotal to this success, also contributing significantly to progress towards elimination of hepatitis B and C, and STI control. However, abrupt disruptions to foreign aid and service delivery threaten these gains, putting millions of people at risk – especially people living with HIV and key and vulnerable populations.

    Many essential evidence-based prevention interventions, including HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), harm reduction services for people who inject drugs, and community-led programmes have been permanently halted.

    Early reports shared with WHO indicate that prevention and treatment services for key populations are those most affected. Reports include the closure of health centres delivering prevention, testing and treatment interventions for key populations previously supported by U.S. funding. These disruptions are resulting in staffing shortages, supply chain interruptions, and increased barriers to access, leaving key populations – including gay men and other men who have sex with men, sex workers, people who inject drugs, people in prisons, and trans and gender diverse individuals – vulnerable to infection and death, as well as increased stigma and discrimination.

    These developments compromise the ability of service providers to deliver on foundational WHO recommendations that: 

    • all people living with HIV should receive same-day antiretroviral treatment (ART) both to improve their health and to prevent further transmission by achieving sustained viral load suppression; 
    • there should be uninterrupted access to ART for all populations, including key populations living with HIV, during service disruptions; and 
    • person-centred approaches should be implemented and non-judgemental, discrimination-free environments created to foster trust, encourage consistent engagement in care, and support re-engagement for those who may have dropped out of treatment.

    Essential prevention services must remain a priority

    Ensuring that key populations can access prevention services that are free of discrimination is central to HIV, hepatitis and STI responses. Community-based services have consistently proven effective in increasing access and acceptability of programmes, buffering the effects of stigma and discrimination. These programmes facilitate the delivery of interventions that have been proven effective through rigorous scientific research, and that are recommended by WHO to protect people from new infections and harm.

    Core WHO-recommended essential prevention services include condoms and lubricants; testing for HIV, hepatitis B and C, and other STIs; HIV post-exposure prophylaxis and pre-exposure prophylaxis; and harm reduction activities including distribution of needles and syringes, of naloxone to prevent deaths from overdose, and opioid agonist maintenance treatment programmes.

    Commitment to sustainable financing and integrated health systems

    As countries and ministries of health work to mitigate the impact of service disruptions, they must pursue long-term solutions, including sustainable domestic financing to protect these vital health services. This is essential for maintaining the downward trend in HIV incidence and mortality, and to progress toward hepatitis elimination and STI control. 

    WHO also emphasizes the value of an integrated approach to HIV, bringing together stigma and discrimination-free services for tuberculosis, viral hepatitis, sexual and reproductive health, and noncommunicable diseases under the umbrella of strong primary health care. Integrating HIV leads to resource optimization and improvements in overall population health. 

    WHO remains committed to supporting national governments, partners, and donors in adapting to shifting donor support to safeguard the health and well-being of those most vulnerable to HIV, viral hepatitis and STIs.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Haiti: Over one million displaced by gang violence

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI

    Humanitarian Aid

    Ongoing gang violence in Haiti has displaced more than a million people, nearly a tenth of the population, or three times more than last year, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in the country said on Thursday. 

    Every number presented “is a new record,” said Ulrika Johnson, speaking from neighbouring Dominican Republic to journalists at UN Headquarters in New York.

    The suffering that this is causing is immense, and I would say it is really heartbreaking to see, to witness, to listen to victims of violence,” she added.

    An ‘unprecedented crisis’

    The “unprecedented crisis” in Haiti continues to unfold as funding for humanitarian operations globally dwindles following the recent decision by the United States to halt foreign aid disbursements.

    A Multinational Security Support Mission (MSS), authorized by the UN Security Council, is on the ground to assist the national police in combatting the gangs.  UN Secretary-General António Guterres recently proposed that the global body assume funding for structural and logistical support.

    Children suffer most

    Ms. Richardson said human rights violations have risen when compared to 2024. 

    Over 5,600 people were killed last year, according to the UN human rights office, OHCHR.   Sexual violence is “rampant” and UN children’s agency UNICEF reports “a staggering” 1,000 per cent increase in cases involving children between 2023 and 2024

    “The impact on women and children is enormous,” she said, noting that children comprise half of the displaced. 

    “They are really bearing the brunt of the crisis,” she continued.  “They’re also recruited by gangs. We’ve seen a 70 per cent increase in one year of how they coerce children into gangs.”

    Deportees and refugees

    Meanwhile, five million Haitians require food assistance, the number of children suffering from malnutrition and stunting has increased, and only a third of health institutions are operating.

    Haiti is also dealing with the impact of deportations. Last year, some 200,000 nationals were sent back to the country, and many had no home to go to. Haitians are also leaving their homeland, often at great risk. Reports indicate that nearly 400,000 fled last year.

    Despite the realities on the ground, and access limitations, humanitarian response continues, including in gang-controlled areas.  

    It is taking place even as the main airport in Port-au-Prince remains closed since November, affecting the movement of humanitarian goods and personnel both into the country and out from the capital city to the regions.

    “We’ve been able to set up a logistics hub in the north, and this has been very helpful, obviously, to be able to receive humanitarian goods and then trying to bring them into the capital,” Ms. Richardson said.

    US aid freeze

    In 2024, the humanitarian community launched a $600 million plan for Haiti, receiving just over 40 per cent of the funding. Around 60 per cent came from the United States.

    Obviously, the US temporary freeze and the stop work order has an impact on us,” she underlined.

    This year’s plan will call for just over $900 million to cover assistance such as food, medicine, protection, healthcare and psychosocial support for rape victims.

    She expressed confidence that if the UN and partners can mobilize this funding, “we can do our absolute best, and more than that, in terms of the seamless delivery of humanitarian aid to the people that so desperately need this aid.”  

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Gaza: Despite challenges, UNRWA says ‘unparalleled progress’ made during ceasefire

    Source: United Nations 2

    Peace and Security

    Since the ceasefire began in Gaza on 19 January, “unparalleled progress” has been made in providing desperately needed aid to families across the devastated enclave, said UN agency for Palestine refugees, UNRWA, on Thursday.

    Agency teams have worked around the clock to provide services to a people who are overwhelmed following 15 months of constant bombardment, forced displacement, and lack of critical supplies, the agency said in a press release.

    This reflects UNRWA’s commitment to supporting families in Gaza through this unprecedented humanitarian crisis,” said Sam Rose, UNRWA’s acting director of Gaza Affairs, speaking from an UNRWA health centre in southern Gaza.

    “Despite every political and logistical challenge to the Agency, UNRWA remains resolute in its mission to provide essential services to families who need them now more than ever.”

    Last October, Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, adopted two bills banning UNRWA from working in Israeli territory and enforcing a no-contact policy between national authorities and agency representatives. The laws took effect in January.

    Two million reached

    In a significant milestone, and in close coordination with other humanitarian partners, UNRWA has now provided food assistance to two million people, or over 90 per cent of the population, helping to bring some improvement to overall food security.

    The agency has also restored healthcare access to nearly 180,000 people in Khan Younis, Rafah and Gaza City through the re-opening of health centres.

    In addition, agency teams reached more than half a million with blankets, mattresses, floor mats, clothes, cooking equipment, and tarpaulins to protect from the rain.

    All agencies scale up support

    The recent polio campaign in Gaza concluded successfully, reaching over 600,000 children under the age of 10, UN Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric told journalists at UN Headquarters in New York on Thursday.

    The World Health Organization (WHO) provided supplies to three hospitals and five health partners, benefiting 250,000 people across the Strip. Additionally, WHO supported the expansion of triage and emergency departments in Al-Shifa hospital with tents and 20 extra beds.

    Children’s agency UNICEF has delivered essential health kits, paediatric medicines, and newborn supplies for over 20,000 people at Al Awda Hospital in northern Gaza.

    UN partners have also scaled up food security, distributing 860,000 cooked meals daily – a 10 per cent increase from the previous week.

    Back to school, for some

    The World Food Programme (WFP) has made subsidised bread available at 24 retail shops in the South and re-established four food distribution points in the north.

    Efforts to improve water and sanitation continue, with two water points established and expanded in North Gaza governorate, and two sections of water networks repaired in Khan Younis.

    As of Wednesday, 100,000 children have enrolled in school, marking a return to in-person learning after 16 months. A total of 165 public schools have reopened across Gaza.

    West Bank emergency: 40,000 forcibly displaced

    In the West Bank, Israeli forces’ operations in Jenin, Tulkarm, and Tubas have led to further casualties and displacement, hindering access to essential services.

    The UN stresses the importance of respecting international law and protecting civilians.

    Listen below to audio from Ajith Sunghay who is the top UN human rights official for the Occupied Palestinian Territory. He told UN News on Thursday that with 40,000 now forcibly displaced from refugee camps in the West Bank, it seems “return is not an option” for at least a year as Israel forces dig in.

    Soundcloud

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 27 February 2025 Departmental update Protecting millions of vulnerable people from essential hiv service disruptions

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Prevention, testing and treatment services for HIV, viral hepatitis and sexually transmitted infections (STI) have driven unprecedented progress in improving population health over the past two decades, with millions of new HIV infections and AIDS-related deaths averted.

    Foreign aid investments in the global HIV response, such as the United States President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the Global Fund on AIDS, TB and Malaria, have been pivotal to this success, also contributing significantly to progress towards elimination of hepatitis B and C, and STI control. However, abrupt disruptions to foreign aid and service delivery threaten these gains, putting millions of people at risk – especially people living with HIV and key and vulnerable populations.

    Many essential evidence-based prevention interventions, including HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), harm reduction services for people who inject drugs, and community-led programmes have been permanently halted.

    Early reports shared with WHO indicate that prevention and treatment services for key populations are those most affected. Reports include the closure of health centres delivering prevention, testing and treatment interventions for key populations previously supported by U.S. funding. These disruptions are resulting in staffing shortages, supply chain interruptions, and increased barriers to access, leaving key populations – including gay men and other men who have sex with men, sex workers, people who inject drugs, people in prisons, and trans and gender diverse individuals – vulnerable to infection and death, as well as increased stigma and discrimination.

    These developments compromise the ability of service providers to deliver on foundational WHO recommendations that: 

    • all people living with HIV should receive same-day antiretroviral treatment (ART) both to improve their health and to prevent further transmission by achieving sustained viral load suppression; 
    • there should be uninterrupted access to ART for all populations, including key populations living with HIV, during service disruptions; and 
    • person-centred approaches should be implemented and non-judgemental, discrimination-free environments created to foster trust, encourage consistent engagement in care, and support re-engagement for those who may have dropped out of treatment.

    Essential prevention services must remain a priority

    Ensuring that key populations can access prevention services that are free of discrimination is central to HIV, hepatitis and STI responses. Community-based services have consistently proven effective in increasing access and acceptability of programmes, buffering the effects of stigma and discrimination. These programmes facilitate the delivery of interventions that have been proven effective through rigorous scientific research, and that are recommended by WHO to protect people from new infections and harm.

    Core WHO-recommended essential prevention services include condoms and lubricants; testing for HIV, hepatitis B and C, and other STIs; HIV post-exposure prophylaxis and pre-exposure prophylaxis; and harm reduction activities including distribution of needles and syringes, of naloxone to prevent deaths from overdose, and opioid agonist maintenance treatment programmes.

    Commitment to sustainable financing and integrated health systems

    As countries and ministries of health work to mitigate the impact of service disruptions, they must pursue long-term solutions, including sustainable domestic financing to protect these vital health services. This is essential for maintaining the downward trend in HIV incidence and mortality, and to progress toward hepatitis elimination and STI control. 

    WHO also emphasizes the value of an integrated approach to HIV, bringing together stigma and discrimination-free services for tuberculosis, viral hepatitis, sexual and reproductive health, and noncommunicable diseases under the umbrella of strong primary health care. Integrating HIV leads to resource optimization and improvements in overall population health. 

    WHO remains committed to supporting national governments, partners, and donors in adapting to shifting donor support to safeguard the health and well-being of those most vulnerable to HIV, viral hepatitis and STIs.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: UN chief calls for peace and justice as Ramadan begins

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI

    UN Affairs

    As Muslims around the world prepare to mark the beginning of the Holy Month of Ramadan, UN Secretary-General António Guterres issued a call on Thursday for compassion, empathy and generosity, urging people everywhere to embrace their common humanity and work towards a more just and peaceful world.

    In this Holy Month, let us all be uplifted by these values and embrace our common humanity to build a more just and peaceful world for all,” he said in a message.

    He also extended a special message of support to those experiencing hardship, displacement and violence.

    I stand with all those who are suffering. From Gaza and the wider region, to Sudan, the Sahel and beyond,” he said, joining those observing Ramadan in calling for peace and mutual respect.

    The first day of fasting for the Holy Month in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, will be Saturday, March 1, or Sunday, March 2, depending on the sighting of the new moon, according to media reports.

    Other countries, especially in the western hemisphere, could see the Ramadan moon before Mecca due to alignments in the night sky.

    Ramadan is determined by the Islamic lunar calendar, which begins with the sighting of the crescent moon.

    Secretary-General Guterres’ video message for the begining of Ramadan.

    Solidarity visit to Bangladesh

    As part of his annual Ramadan solidarity visit, Mr. Guterres will travel to Bangladesh from 13 to 16 March, where he will meet Rohingya refugees in Cox’s Bazar, one of the world’s largest refugee settlements, his Spokesperson Stéphane Dujarric announced at the regular news briefing at the UN Headquarters.

    Mr. Guterres will also take part in an Iftar meal with refugees and members of the Bangladeshi host community, recognising the generosity of Bangladesh in sheltering nearly one million Rohingya who fled persecution and violence in Myanmar.

    During his visit, he will also visit the capital, Dhaka, where he will meet Chief Adviser in the interim government, Professor Muhammed Yunus, as well as young representatives from civil society.

    An annual tradition

    The Secretary-General has made solidarity visits an annual tradition, beginning during his decade-long tenure as UN High Commissioner for Refugees, when he regularly observed Ramadan alongside displaced and marginalized communities.

    “Every Ramadan, I undertake a solidarity visit and fast with a Muslim community around the globe. These missions remind the world of the true face of Islam,” Mr. Guterres said in his message.

    Ramadan embodies the values of compassion, empathy and generosity. It is an opportunity to reconnect with family and community…And I always come away even more inspired by the remarkable sense of peace that fills this season,” he added.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Diverse disaster risks in the Arab States have led to inspiring solutions

    Source: UNISDR Disaster Risk Reduction

    SRSG Kamal Kishore visited Kuwait in February 2025 for the Arab Regional Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction. In this article he reflects on the region’s challenges and successes.
     

    The Arab States region is known for its extremes: some of the world’s harshest conditions, but also the famous hospitality of its inhabitants. It is home to some of the wealthiest nations, but also many amongst the least-developed. It faces serious disaster risks – especially slow onset disasters like drought and desertification – but is also a source of innovative solutions.

    I spent the past week in Kuwait where disaster risk management policy makers and practitioners from 22 countries from the Arab States region came together for the 6th Arab Regional Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction. This multi-stakeholder forum was called to take stock of progress against the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction and devise ways to accelerate implementation over the next five years. Much of the success can be attributed to the generosity and professionalism of the host country, the State of Kuwait. The excellent organization of the Platform was the result of a tight partnership between the Kuwait Fire Force, the League of Arab States, and UNDRR’s Regional Office for Arab States, lining up a programme that covered a wide array of important topics for the region.

    During the five intense days of deliberations, I learned many things. In a region that is beset by many challenges, disaster risk reduction issues do not always spring to mind as the most urgent. However the region has seen some of the worst disasters over the last few years – including floods in Libya (2023), Oman (2024) and UAE (2024); earthquakes in Syria and Morocco (2023); and a string of severe droughts across much of the region.

    To say that the Arab States region is highly diverse is to state the obvious. However, this diversity goes beyond the nature of disaster risk (varying hazards, exposure, and socio-economic vulnerability) to the diverse institutional approaches adopted by countries of the region to manage disaster risk. The United Arab Emirates, in particular, have shown great leadership in the region, as champions of urban resilience and hosts of the COP28 UN Climate Change Conference.

    During the Regional Platform I had so many enlightening conversations – formal and informal – and participated in numerous events and discussions. Considering all that I learned, I have the following reflections:

    The next leap

    Most of the countries in the region have established strong national level institutions for disaster risk management (these are variously named Disaster Management Agencies, or Emergency, Crisis and Disaster Management Authorities, and so on) and many have developed multi-year strategies for disaster risk management (for example, Morocco has a strategy for 2020 to 2030).

    The next leap would be to pursue more integrative work with all development sectors. Interesting initiatives are already emanating from the region. For example: UNDRR’s Private Sector Alliance for Disaster Resilient Societies (ARISE) has helped develop and apply a resilience tool to aid the real estate sector in Dubai; and Libya and Iraq are modernizing the management of their irrigation dams.

    Play closer attention to compounding risks

    For example, sand and dust storms are getting more complex – in a region that has rapidly urbanized, not only are the impacts of these hazards evolving (such as the impacts on power transmission networks and renewable energy production), but these hazards are also combining with other threats such as soil and air pollution to create even bigger impacts.

    ABCD (Align Biodiversity, Climate Change and Desertification) of Comprehensive Risk Management 

    This is a region where on-the-ground integration of the three Rio Conventions – Biodiversity, Climate Change, and Desertification – really comes alive. However, taking such a comprehensive approach requires that we align all of these interests across regional, national and sub-national institutions.

    Blend tradition and innovation

    The region is home to centuries of traditional wisdom to deal with extreme conditions and natural hazards – for example, this can be seen in how traditional housing and clothing have evolved to combat extreme heat. Traditional systems of finance such as Islamic Finance (and the notion of Zakat) provide a solid foundation for society’s financial resilience, particularly for the poorest. At the same time, many countries in the region are at the forefront of cutting-edge innovation – from advances in water management to the application of AI.

    We can draw on both traditional wisdom and modern innovation to achieve disaster risk reduction objectives.


    The energy and enthusiasm I witnessed during this past week gives me a sense of optimism that if we stay the course, this region can not only demonstrate on-the-ground disaster risk reduction results, but can also inspire action across the world.

    The Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, in June this year, will give an opportunity for all of the regions to share the outcomes of the Regional Platforms, and I look forward to the contributions arising from the Arab States Regional Platform.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Human Rights Council: Türk calls out ‘dehumanizing’ narratives on Gaza

    Source: United Nations 2

    Mr. Türk – making his closing remarks during the session reporting on the Occupied Palestinian Territory at the Human Rights Council – said he was deeply troubled by the “dangerous manipulation of language” and disinformation that surrounds discussions over the Palestine-Israel conflict.

    We need to make sure that we resist all efforts to spread fear or incite hatred, including abhorrent, dehumanizing narratives, whether they’re insidious or explicit,” he said.

    “My Office will continue to work for justice for every victim and survivor by establishing and documenting the facts and standing firmly for accountability and the rule of law without exception.”

    Eritrean troops continue grave violations in Ethiopia

    The rights body then turned its focus to Eritrea on Thursday, where despite some long-awaited progress in improving the lives of ordinary Eritreans, the country’s authorities remain responsible for widespread alleged serious crimes including inside neighbouring Ethiopia, the forum heard.

    Ilze Brands Kehris, UN Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, said that the Eritrean Defence Forces have continued to carry out grave crimes in Ethiopia’s Tigray region and elsewhere with total impunity.

    Our Office (OHCHR) has credible information that Eritrean Defence Forces remain in Tigray and are committing violations, including abductions, rape, property looting, and arbitrary arrests,” she told the Council, before calling for the immediate withdrawal of Eritrean soldiers.

    After a rapprochement between former enemies Eritrea and Ethiopia in 2018, Asmara sent troops to fight alongside Ethiopian federal troops against separatist rebels during the two-year conflict in Tigray, Amhara, Afar and Oromia.

    No justice in sight

    “In the current context, there is no likely prospect that the domestic judicial system will hold perpetrators accountable for the violations committed in the context of the Tigray conflict and in other cases,” the UN official told the Council, the world’s foremost human rights body.

    In a debate seeking to address the Council’s longstanding concerns about Eritrea’s human rights record, Ms. Brands Kehris acknowledged the efforts being made by the authorities in boosting essential health services to more than one million newborns, children and women last year with the help of the UN – and in ratifying the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in December.

    Conscription abuses continue

    However, “serious concerns remain” about Eritrea’s system of indefinite forced military conscription, the UN official continued.

    The practice has long been linked to abusive labour, torture and sexual violence which continues to compel young people to escape from the country, Ms. Brands-Kehris insisted.

    Furthermore, “the punishment of families of draft deserters remains very common – an inhumane practice, against which no steps have been taken”, she said.

    Echoing previous disturbing reports requested by the Human Rights on Eritrea’s rights record, the UN official said that detention without trial “remains the norm” – with many politicians, journalists, religious believers and draft deserters held incommunicado.

    There is no evidence that impunity will be tackled for well-documented past human rights violations, the senior UN official said.

    In response for Eritrea, Habtom Zerai Ghirmai, Chargé d’affaires a.i. to the UN in Geneva, denied the accusations, calling them exaggerated and misleading.

    Sudan: We are looking into the abyss, Türk warns

    Next in the spotlight was the plight of Sudan’s war-ravaged people who have been subjected to appalling crimes by all parties to the conflict – some possibly constituting war crimes and other atrocity crimes.

    Today, more than 600,000 Sudanese “are on the brink of starvation”, said rights chief Volker Türk. “Famine is reported to have taken hold in five areas, including Zamzam displacement camp in North Darfur, where the World Food Programme has just been forced to suspend its lifesaving operations due to intense fighting.”

    Another five areas could face famine in the next three months and 17 more are at risk, he said, calling on all Member States to push urgently for a ceasefire and to ease the suffering of the Sudanese people.

    Presenting his Office’s annual report on the situation in Sudan, Mr. Türk noted that the armed conflict between rival militaries that erupted in April 2023 following the breakdown in a transfer to civilian rule had generated “the world’s largest humanitarian catastrophe”.

    The High Commissioner’s report details myriad violations and abuses committed in Sudan and underscores the need for accountability.

    ‘Utter impunity’

    “We are looking into the abyss. Humanitarian agencies warn that without action to end the war, deliver emergency aid, and get agriculture back on its feet, hundreds of thousands of people could die,” Mr. Türk insisted.

    He added that the spiralling situation in Sudan was “the result of grave and flagrant violations of international humanitarian and human rights law, and a culture of utter impunity”.

    “As the fighting has spread across the country, appalling levels of sexual violence have followed. More than half of reported rape incidents took the form of gang rape – an indication that sexual violence is being used as a weapon of war,” Mr. Türk explained.

    “Sudan is a powder keg, on the verge of a further explosion into chaos,” said the UN’s top human rights official.

    Responding on behalf of Sudan, Minister of Justice Moawia Osman Mohamed Khair Mohamed Ahmed, rejected allegations that the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) were responsible for any of the rights violations detailed in the High Commissioner’s report.

    Indifferent to suffering

    Sudanese civil society representative Hanaa Eltigani described multiple mass killings of civilians attributed to the Rapid Support Forces paramilitaries including in Geneina, their shelling of Zamzan displacement camp in North Darfur and other extreme rights abuses including gang rape and the forced recruitment of children, including South Sudanese refugees.

    In addition, the SAF “launched airstrikes and ground assaults, attacking Meneigo and Al-Igibesh villages in West Kordofan, bombing civilian areas in Nyala, South Darfur,” continued Ms Eltigani, Assistant Secretary-General of Youth Citizens Observers Network (YCON), insisting that while the suffering of her country’s people was “met with indifference, the flow of weapons [from abroad] continues unchecked”.

    The SAF also carried out executions in Al-Jazira, Ms. Eltigani maintained, “where victims were slaughtered or thrown alive into the Nile”.

    Taliban oppression deepens in Afghanistan

    Turning to Afghanistan, the Council then heard that the de facto authorities’ oppression and persecution of women, girls and minorities has worsened, with no signs of improvement. 

    “Some 23 million people, almost half the population, are in need of humanitarian assistance, a situation drastically worsened by the pauses and cuts to international aid,” said Special Rapporteur on Afghanistan Richard Bennett.

    The independent rights expert, who is not a UN staff member, warned that left unchecked, the Taliban was likely to “intensify, expand and further entrench its rights-violating measures on the people of Afghanistan, in particular women and girls and likely religious and ethnic minorities”.

    The lack of a strong, unified response from the international community has already emboldened the Taliban. We owe it to the people of Afghanistan to not embolden them still further through continued inaction.”

    The Taliban seized power in 2021 and since then have passed a raft of laws that have severely stifled the freedoms of women and girls.

    These include banning women and girls from most classrooms, singing or speaking outside their homes, as well as from travelling without a male guardian.

    Institutionalised oppression

    Women were also barred from studying medicine in December. Windows in residential buildings have also been banned on the grounds that women could be seen through them.

    Afghanistan is now the epicentre of an institutionalised system of gender-based discrimination, oppression, and domination which amounts to crimes against humanity, including the crime of gender persecution,” Mr. Bennett said, presenting his report. 

    Mr. Bennett urged States to ensure that any normalization of diplomatic ties with the Taliban should be dependent on demonstrated improvements in human rights.  

    “We must not allow history to repeat itself,” Mr. Bennett said. “Doing so will have catastrophic consequences in and beyond Afghanistan.”

    Independent rights experts are not UN staff, receive no salary for their work and are independent of any organisation or government.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: DR Congo: WHO tracks deadly mysterious illness

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI

    Health

    Health authorities in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and experts from the World Health Organization (WHO) are carrying out further investigations to determine the cause of another cluster of illness and deaths in Équateur province, UN officials reported on Thursday.

    In recent months, disease surveillance has identified increases in cases and fatalities on three occasions across different areas of the country, which triggered follow-up investigations to confirm the cause and provide needed support, WHO said in a statement.

    Symptoms include fever, headache, chills, sweating, stiff neck, muscle aches, multiple joint pain and body aches, a runny or bleeding from the nose, cough, vomiting and diarrhoea.

    DRC currently faces multiple challenges, with a conflict raging in the east, as Congolese armed forces face off against the Rwanda-backed M23 – with the fighting involving multiple other armed groups.

    Illness and death

    A series of outbreaks and fatalities have been occurring in Équateur province since the beginning of 2025, the UN health agency said.

    The most recent cluster occurred in the Basankusu health zone, where last week 141 additional people fell ill, with no deaths reported so far. Some 158 cases and 58 deaths were reported in the same zone earlier in February.

    In January, Bolamba health zone reported 12 cases including eight deaths.

    Major challenges

    The remoteness of affected areas limits access to healthcare, including testing and treatment, WHO said.

    Basankusu and Bolomba are around 180 kilometres apart and more than 300 kilometres from the provincial capital Mbandaka. The two localities are reachable by road or via the Congo River.

    However, poor road and communication links are major challenges, said the UN healthy agency, which continues to support local authorities in reinforcing investigation and response measures, with more than 80 community health workers trained to detect and report cases and deaths.   

    Further efforts are needed to reinforce testing, early case detection and reporting, said WHO, which remains on the ground supporting health workers, collaborating closely with health authorities at all levels.

    Increased surveillance

    The UN health agency has delivered emergency medical supplies, including testing kits, and developed detailed protocols to enhance disease investigation.

    Increased disease surveillance has identified in total of 1,096 sick people and 60 deaths in Basankusu and Bolomba fitting a broad case definition of the mysterious illness.

    In response to the latest cluster, a national rapid response team from Kinshasa and Équateur, including WHO health emergency experts, was deployed to Basankusu and Bolomba to investigate the situation.

    The experts are stepping up disease surveillance, conducting interviews with community members to understand the background and providing treatment for diseases such as malaria, typhoid fever and meningitis, WHO reported.

    Ongoing testing

    Initial laboratory analysis has produced negative results for Ebola virus disease and Marburg virus disease.

    Around half of the samples tested positive for malaria, which is common in the region, WHO said.

    Further tests are to be carried out for meningitis. Food, water and environmental samples will also be analysed for any possible contamination.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: UN agencies condemn Thailand’s deportation of Uyghurs to China

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI

    Human Rights

    The UN human rights office (OHCHR) together with refugee agency, UNHCR, on Thursday strongly condemned Thailand’s deportation of 40 Uyghurs to China, calling it a serious violation of international law and the fundamental principle of non-refoulement.

    Volker Türk, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said the forced return of the Uyghurs, who had been detained in Thailand for over 11 years, was deeply troubling.

    “This violates the principle of non-refoulement for which there is a complete prohibition in cases where there is a real risk of torture, ill-treatment, or other irreparable harm upon their return,” he said.

    Contained in Article 3 of the Convention against Torture, the principle prohibits returning individuals to a country where they face a risk of persecution, torture or ill-treatment. It is also referred to in Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and Article 14 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    The right to seek asylum and of non-refoulement are also enshrined in Article 13 of Thailand’s Prevention and Suppression of Torture and Enforced Disappearance Act, and Article 16 of the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration.

    Detained since 2014

    The deported men were part of a larger group of Uyghurs who were detained in Thailand in March 2014, after leaving China, bound for Türkiye.

    For over a decade, they were held in immigration detention centres under poor conditions.

    According to OHCHR, five members of the group have died in custody, while eight others remain detained in Thailand.

    Halt further deportations

    The UN rights chief also urged the Thai Government to halt any further deportations and ensure the protection of the remaining Uyghurs in detention.

    The Thai authorities must ensure there are no further deportations and the remaining members of the group, including potential refugees and asylum-seekers, being held in Thailand are fully protected in accordance with their obligations under international law,” he added.

    UNHCR decries forced returns

    UNHCR also condemned the deportation, saying it had repeatedly sought access to the detained Uyghurs and assurances they would not be forcibly returned – a request that has so far been denied.

    Ruvendrini Menikdiwela, Assistant High Commissioner for Protection, reiterated that it is a “clear violation” of the non-refoulement principle and the Government’s obligations under international law.

    “UNHCR calls on the Royal Thai Government to put an end to the forced return of individuals from Thailand,” she said.

    Call for transparency

    High Commissioner Türk also urged the Chinese authorities to reveal the whereabouts of the deported Uyghurs.

    It is now important for the Chinese authorities to disclose their whereabouts, and to ensure that they are treated in accordance with international human rights standards,” he said.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Activities of Secretary-General in Barbados, 19-20 February

    Source: United Nations 4

    The United Nations Secretary-General, António Guterres, arrived in Bridgetown, Barbados, from New York, on Wednesday, 19 February, to attend the forty-eighth Regular Meeting of the Conference of the Heads of Government of the Caribbean Community, also known as CARICOM.

    In the afternoon, he held a bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Mia Mottley, the host of the meeting.  They exchanged views on regional and global issues, particularly the situation in Haiti and climate change.  He also commended Barbados for spearheading efforts to advance reforms to the international financial architecture through the Bridgetown Initiative 3.0.

    In the evening, the Secretary-General spoke at the opening ceremony of the Conference.  He said that the exquisite beauty of the Caribbean is famed the world over, but that there is trouble in paradise.

    The Secretary-General noted that wave after wave of crisis is pounding the people of the Caribbean and their islands — with no time to catch their breath before the next disaster strikes.  Stressing that international solutions are essential to create a better today and a brighter tomorrow for the wonderful region and for the world, he said that he sees three key areas where, together, we must drive progress.

    First, the Secretary-General said, unity for peace and security, particularly to address the appalling situation in Haiti — where gangs are inflicting intolerable suffering on the people of Haiti.  Mr. Guterres added that he would soon report to the Security Council on the situation in Haiti, including proposals on the role the UN can play to support stability and security and address the root causes of the crisis.  He further highlighted unity on the climate crisis and sustainable development as areas where progress is needed.  (See Press Release SG/SM/22559.)

    Following the opening ceremony, the Secretary-General attended a cocktail reception and then a dinner hosted by Prime Minister Mottley.

    On Thursday morning, the Secretary-General participated in a closed session with CARICOM Heads of Government, where he exchanged views on pressing issues in the region, such as finance, climate and security, with a focus on Haiti.

    Soon after, he had a bilateral meeting Prime Minister of Jamaica, Andrew Holness.  The Secretary-General expressed his appreciation for Jamaica’s active role as Co-Chair of the UN Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Stimulus Leaders Group.  They also exchanged views on international developments and discussed the need to scale up support for the Multinational Security Support mission in Haiti, as well as climate issues and financing for development.

    Before leaving Barbados, the Secretary-General also had meetings with the Presidential Adviser of the Transitional Presidential Council of Haiti, Laurent Saint-Cyr, and with the Secretary-General of the Commonwealth, Patricia Scotland.  He returned to New York on Thursday evening, 20 February.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: New Permanent Representative of Mauritius Presents Credentials

    Source: United Nations 4

    (Based on Information Provided by the Protocol and Liaison Service)

    The new Permanent Representative of Mauritius to the United Nations, Milan J.N. Meetarbhan, presented his credentials to UN Secretary-General António Guterres today.

    Prior to his appointment, he taught at the Mauritius campus of Paris-Panthéon-Assas University and served as a consultant to the university.

    Mr. Meetarbhan previously held the position of Permanent Representative of Mauritius to the United Nations from January 2011 to January 2015.  Before that, he was Chief Executive of the Financial Services Commission from December 2005 to December 2010.Since 1995, he has been a senior adviser to the Prime Minister of Mauritius.

    Earlier in his career, he served as legal adviser in the Ministry of Finance and was later appointed as a member of the Stock Exchange Commission. He also chaired the Financial Services Consultative Committee, a government body responsible for reviewing financial sector legislation.  In addition to his public service roles, he was an Associate Professor of Law and Head of the Law School of the University of Mauritius.

    Mr. Meetarbhan holds a doctorate in international law and a diploma of advanced studies in international economic relations and international organizations law from Sorbonne University in Paris.  He also earned a specialized graduate diploma in diplomacy and international relations from the University of Paris XI.

    __________

    * This supersedes BIO/4267 of 24 January 2011.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Packed with promise: Wisam’s journey back to school in Sudan

    Source: United Nations 2

    Culture and Education

    Wisam sits in her classroom, absorbed in her work, her fingers gripping a blue-coloured pencil, carefully sketching a flower in her notebook, one of more than 100,000 displaced students in war-torn Sudan who have returned to classes, with the support of Education Cannot Wait for the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) efforts to distribute urgently needed school supplies to help them get back to learning.

    Despite the noise and bustle of classmates packing up, nine-year-old Wisam is focused on the picture she is bringing to life from her desk. When she’s finished, she puts her beloved pencils back into her bag.

    The supplies in her new backpack are a constant reminder of the hope she carries, even in the face of extreme hardship. Wisam is just one of the millions of children that have been displaced by the brutal conflict.

    I left my toys, books, uniform, bag and pencils. My uniform was beautiful.

    The country is facing the world’s largest child displacement crisis, with more than 17 million school-aged children currently out of school. Hundreds of school buildings have been damaged or destroyed since the beginning of the war in Sudan in April 2023. Many others are being used as shelters.

    With the reopening of 489 schools, nearly 119,870 children across Sudan’s Red Sea state have returned to class. ECW and partners like UNICEF continue to support girls and boys in the whole of Sudan to ensure that, even in the most challenging circumstances, displaced children can continue their education.

    Wisam has already experienced more hardship than many will in a lifetime. Forced to flee her home in Sinnar when the armed conflict reached them, Wisam and her family sought safety in Port Sudan, leaving behind nearly all of their belongings, including Wisam’s school uniform.

    © UNICEF/Ahmed Mohamdeen Elfatih

    Wisam takes part in a lesson at her new school in Port Sudan.

    Backpacks for a brighter future

    When schools finally reopened in Port Sudan, Wisam’s family could not afford the necessary school supplies. Thanks to UNICEF, with funding from Education Cannot Wait (ECW) – the global fund for education in emergencies and protracted crises in the United Nations – Wisam has received essential school supplies and even a new school uniform.

    When Wisam and her siblings enrolled in their new school in Port Sudan, their excitement to learn again was tempered by their lack of necessary school supplies. The challenges of displacement meant that they didn’t have the means to purchase everything that would be needed to thrive in the classroom.

    Fortunately, Wisam’s school is one of many in Sudan that is receiving vital school supplies thanks to ECW support. Through this initiative, which aims to ensure that all children have the tools they need to return to learning, Wisam and her siblings received new school uniforms and backpacks filled with notebooks, erasers, coloured pencils, chalk, rulers and more.

    “I love my new bag,” she said. “It’s much bigger than the one I had at home.”

    © UNICEF/Ahmed Mohamdeen Elfatih

    Thanks to UNICEF, with funding from Education Cannot Wait (ECW), Wisam is among many children in war-torn Sudan that have received essential school supplies.

    More than just school books

    To Wisam, her new backpack contains more than just her school books and supplies. It carries her dreams for a brighter, more peaceful future in her homeland that allows her to learn, grow and reach her full potential.

    Today, Wisam is a third grader that eagerly participates in class discussions and raises her hand confidently to answer questions. Her new uniform adds to her sense of pride and belonging.

    But, it’s in her moments of quiet solitude amidst the chaos that has surrounded her since the war began that Wisam truly comes alive. After the school day ends, Wisam lingers in the classroom, absorbed in her drawings. The colourful flowers, sketched with so much care, are a testament to her creativity and determination to find beauty even in difficult circumstances.

    With the new set of coloured pencils she’s received, Wisam can now express herself in ways she never could before.

    “I will share the colours with my siblings,” she said.

    In times of crisis, education is critical, not just for academic learning, but also for providing a sense of normalcy, stability and safety. Indeed, the school supplies initiative is part of ECW’s holistic response in Sudan and neighbouring countries, which is supporting the establishment of children’s safe spaces and temporary learning centres, teacher training, the provision of learning materials, mental health and psychosocial support and more.

    Home is better than here, but we can’t go back because of the war. The war is very bad.

    Schools offer displaced children like Wisam a safe space to heal from the trauma of conflict. They also help protect children from harmful practices such as child marriage, child labour and forced recruitment into armed groups, giving them the chance to pursue their dreams and build a better future.

    “Home is better than here, but we can’t go back because of the war,” she said. “The war is very bad.”

    Still, Wisam remains hopeful. With the support she has received, she now feels that education is her way forward.

    © UNICEF/Ahmed Mohamdeen Elfatih

    Third grader Wasim with her class in Port Sudan.

    Needs are escalating

    To date, ECW support has reached 135,000 crisis-affected girls and boys inSudan. ECW investments in the country total $33.7 million and support the building and rehabilitation of classrooms, provision of learning and teaching materials, teacher training, improvement of access to drinking water, gender-sensitive water and sanitation facilities and improvement of access to quality, inclusive and child-friendly education.

    ECW has also provided more than $20 million in response to the regional refugee education needs, with grants announced in the Central African Republic, Chad, Egypt, Ethiopia, Libya, South Sudan and Uganda.

    But, the needs in Sudan, and in crises around the world, are only escalating. A recent report by ECW finds that 234 million school-aged girls and boys are affected by crises and need urgent support to access quality education. This is an increase of at least 35 million over the past three years.

    For Wisam, her new backpack, once a reminder of everything she was forced to leave behind, now carries the weight of all she hopes to achieve. With each lesson, she’s stepping closer to the future she deserves, a future the nine-year-old is determined to create.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: $2.5 billion plan to deliver aid to 11 million people in DR Congo

    Source: United Nations 2

    Humanitarian Aid

    Humanitarians are calling for $2.54 billion to support operations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), amid ongoing attacks by M23 rebels in the east and a severe funding shortfall. 

    The 2025 Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) for the DRC, announced on Thursday, aims to deliver lifesaving assistance to 11 million Congolese, including 7.8 million internally displaced persons (IDPs) – among the highest displacement figures globally.

    Overall, some 21.2 million Congolese are affected by multiple crises, notably armed conflict, natural disasters, and epidemics.

    Multidimensional crises

    The HRP was launched in the DRC capital Kinshasa by the Government and humanitarian partners.

    It comes as the country is facing unprecedented multidimensional crises, characterized by three major destabilizing factors: a spiral of violence spreading from Ituri to Tanganyika provinces; the presence of M23 rebels who now control key areas of North Kivu and South Kivu, where humanitarian needs are immense, and a major funding crisis that threatens humanitarian response.

    “All warning signals are flashing red. Yet, despite immense challenges, humanitarian action continues to prove its effectiveness in saving lives every day,” said Bruno Lemarquis, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator in the DRC. 

    “We must adapt to keep delivering this vital aid without ever compromising the fundamental principles that guide humanitarian action: neutrality, impartiality, independence, and humanity,” he added.

    Support for families 

    Humanitarians said response this year aims to meet the most urgent needs and alleviate suffering through swift and effective assistance, adapted to the conditions on the ground. 

    The HRP includes treating 1.5 million children suffering from acute malnutrition, providing access to safe drinking water for five million people, and combating outbreaks of diseases such as cholera, measles, and Mpox. 

    The plan will also support the return of displaced families, restoration of livelihoods, and preparedness for climate-related shocks. Furthermore, in a context marked by extreme violence, protecting civilians and the most vulnerable – especially women and children – remains a top priority in all they do. 

    However, operations are threatened by a sharp decline in financial support. 

    ‘At a crossroads’

    Last year, humanitarians received a record $1.3 billion in funding, allowing them to reach 7.1 million in the DRC. Leading donor the United States covered 70 per cent of the funding. Washington announced in January that it was freezing all foreign aid payments for at least 90 days.

    “We stand at a crossroads. Without increased international mobilization, humanitarian needs will skyrocket, regional stability will be further jeopardized and our capacity to respond will be severely compromised,” Mr. Lemarquis said.

    The humanitarians called on the Congolese Government, the international community, and national and international humanitarian partners for a collective surge of solidarity to implement the plan with the necessary resources, access, and support. 

    “Humanitarian assistance is essential to save lives. However, it is not the solution,” said Mr. Lemarquis.

    “Real solutions are, above all, political and require targeted, sustainable actions to address the root causes of the conflicts.”

    More updates to follow 

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 27 February 2025 Integrating NCD diagnosis into remote primary care in the Maldives

    Source: World Health Organisation

    Faafu Atoll, Maldives: At the age of 46, Saira Ibrahim was diagnosed with diabetes in one of her NCD health checkups. Her father, in contrast, rarely had a checkup. Only his upcoming pilgrimage which mandated a complete health checkup revealed his diabetes at 76 years old. Her granddaughter on the other hand, at just 23 years, already has had multiple NCD focused checkups, with no symptoms and no diagnosis.

    The difference in awareness and accessibility of health checks across all three generations is a result of their home, Faafu Atoll in the Maldives, being chosen as a demonstration site for the integration of noncommunicable diseases (NCDs) into primary health care (PHC), which means accessing health care services became easier for residents. It encouraged and enabled people like Saira and her daughter to be checked regularly for multiple NCDs and use the primary health care facilities as needed. 

    Reorientating the health care system

    The project is a collaboration between World Health Organization and the Ministry of Health Maldives, emphasizing a people centred care throughout their lifetime.

    The reorientation of the primary health care system in Maldives includes a comprehensive set of services, including testing for selected NCDs such as cardiovascular diseases, cancers, chronic respiratory diseases and diabetes, lifestyle counselling services, identification and referral for common cancers, and selected mental health conditions.

    In the beginning, the scheme revealed over 90% of the eligible population had been tested for diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol and NCD risk factors such as raised blood pressure, increased blood glucose, elevated blood lipids and obesity. The result shows that 9% of the people are living with diabetes and 88% of whom were put on treatment.

    Over 14% of those people examined have hypertension and 95% of them are on treatment. Over 22% are living with high cholesterol and 73% of these are on treatment.

    Saira Ibrahim says: “Under the changes through PHC, if there are any identified changes to the patients’ health, the health centre brings the patients in for advice and gives them information on doing further investigations… They bring us into the health centre to give information too”.

    Launch of the Faafu Atoll PHC demonstration site on 18 December 2022 by the Ministry of Health and WHO. Credit: WHO

    Noncommunicable diseases in Maldives

    In recent decades, health outcomes have improved substantially in the Maldives. However, the country’s health sector faced challenges due to changing demographics, and lifestyles, including the emergence of NCDs. NCDs are estimated to account for 84% of all deaths in Maldives; diabetes is one of the leading four causes of death, alongside cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney diseases, and respiratory conditions.

    In common with other Small Island Developing States (SIDS), Maldives face pressure from commercial determinants such as tobacco marketing and a reliance on food imports, making it vulnerable to global price changes and the increasing use of ultra processed foods.

    In response, World Health Organization is supporting the Ministry of Health Maldives in reorientating health systems to ensure access to high quality, affordable, comprehensive primary health care, a step towards achieving universal health coverage.

    The impact can be seen in the Saira’s life. Since her diagnosis she needs insulin twice a day. Insulin is free of charge and usually available in the island pharmacy, each inhabited island in Faafu Atoll has both a pharmacy and a health facility. When out of stock, the insulin can be ordered from the capital, covered by health insurance.

    Areal view of Maldives islands. Credit: WHO/Vismita Gupta-Smith

    The use of technology

    A major component of the project depends on information. After any NCD diagnosis, advice is given on how to manage one’s lifestyle and take medications for that disease if needed. Health workers also do house visits, call, and encourage people to go to the health centres.

    Saira works as an attendant in a health centre. She cannot remember how she first heard about diabetes, but now, a Facebook group is one of her main sources of information. The group she is on has dozens of members, but the administrator is the island council. This gives an extra layer of reassurance that the information is up to date. There is a similar Viber group aimed at her daughter’s generation.

    Technology is also being used to support the development of an online, real time, primary health care register, which was used for early testing and monitoring of patients at the demonstration site and to build an island health profile database. The system has already been developed and implemented at the Faafu Atoll PHC demonstration site and uses the District Health Information System. Basic information such as patient history, demographic data, risk factors for NCDs, treatment given, follow up, and referral can be used to determine the health status of each island. This information along with risk of NCDs is calculated based on the WHO Package of Essential Noncommunicable Disease Interventions (PEN) package. The system has monitoring dashboards for island, atoll, and national levels.

    Expansion

    Plans are underway to expand the pilot scheme to other atolls. This expansion aims to significantly reduce the need for patients to travel to the capital city for treatment and specialized care. This system can be easily adopted by other small island developing states.

    Strengthening the integration of diagnosis and treatment of noncommunicable diseases into primary health care systems in the Faafu Atoll can provide a working model, not only for other islands in Maldives but for other small island developing states around the world.” Dr Bente Mikkelsen, Director. Department of Noncommunicable. Diseases, Rehabilitation and Disability.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 27 February 2025 Statement Third meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) Emergency Committee regarding the upsurge of mpox 2024 – Temporary recommendations

    Source: World Health Organisation

    The Director-General of the World Health Organization (WHO), following the third meeting of the International Health Regulations (2005) (IHR) Emergency Committee regarding the upsurge of mpox 2024, held on 25 February 2025, from 12:00 to 17:00 CET, concurs with its advice that the event continues to meet the criteria of a public health emergency of international concern and, considering the advice of the Committee, he is hereby issuing a revised set of temporary recommendations.

    The WHO Director-General expresses his most sincere gratitude to the Chair, Members, and Advisors of the Committee. The proceeding of the third meeting of the Committee will be shared with States Parties to the IHR and published in the coming days.

    ———

    Temporary recommendations

    These temporary recommendations are issued to States Parties experiencing the transmission of monkeypox virus (MPXV), including, but not limited to, those where there is sustained community transmission, and where there are clusters of cases or sporadic travel-related cases of MPXV clade Ib.

    They are intended to be implemented by those States Parties in addition to the current  standing recommendations for mpox, which will be extended until 20 August 2025. 

    In the context of the global efforts to prevent and control the spread of mpox disease outlined in the  WHO Strategic framework for enhancing prevention and control of mpox- 2024-2027, the aforementioned  standing recommendations apply to all States Parties

    All current WHO interim technical guidance can be accessed on this page of the WHO website. WHO evidence-based guidance has been and will continue to be updated in line with the evolving situation, updated scientific evidence, and WHO risk assessment to support States Parties in the implementation of the WHO Strategic Framework for enhancing mpox prevention and control. 

    Pursuant to Article 3 Principle of the International Health Regulations (2005) (IHR), the implementation of these temporary recommendations, as well as of the standing recommendations for mpox, by States Parties shall be with full respect for the dignity, human rights and fundamental freedoms of persons, in line with the principles set out in Article 3 of the IHR. 

    ———

    Note: The text in backets next to each temporary recommendation indicates the status with respect to the set of temporary recommendations issued on 27 November 2024.

    Emergency coordination

    • Secure political commitment, engagement and adequate resource allocation to intensify mpox prevention and response efforts for the lowest administrative and operational level reporting mpox cases in the prior 4 weeks (referred to as “hotspots”). (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Establish or enhance national and local emergency prevention and response coordination arrangements as recommended in the WHO Mpox global strategic preparedness and response plan (2024), and its upcoming iteration, and in line with the WHO Strategic framework for enhancing prevention and control of mpox (2024-2027) to maintain.  (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Establish or enhance coordination among all partners and stakeholders engaged in or supporting mpox prevention and response activities through cooperation, including by introducing accountability mechanisms. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Establish a mechanism to   monitor the effectiveness of mpox prevention and response measures implemented at lower administrative levels, so that such measures can be adjusted as needed. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Strengthen coordination and response mechanisms, particularly in humanitarian and conflict-affected areas, by engaging local and national authorities and implementing partners to ensure integrated mpox surveillance and care delivery in support of vulnerable populations, especially in areas with population displacement and inadequate access to essential services. (MODIFIED)

    Collaborative surveillance

    • Enhance mpox surveillance, by increasing the sensitivity of the approaches adopted and ensuring comprehensive geographic coverage. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Expand access to accurate, affordable and available diagnostics to test for mpox, including through strengthening arrangements for the transport of samples, the decentralization of testing and arrangements to differentiate MPXV clades and conduct genomic sequencing. (EXTENDED) 
    • Identify, monitor and support the contacts of persons with suspected, clinically-diagnosed or laboratory-confirmed mpox to prevent onward transmission. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing) 
    • Scale up efforts to thoroughly investigate cases and outbreaks of mpox to better understand the modes of transmission and transmission risk, and prevent its onward transmission to contacts and communities. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing) 
    • Report to WHO suspect, probable and confirmed cases of mpox in a timely manner and on a weekly basis. (EXTENDED)

    Safe and scalable clinical care

    • Provide clinical, nutritional and psychosocial support for patients with mpox, including, where appropriate and possible, isolation in care centres and/or access to materials and guidance for home-based care. (EXTENDED) 
    • Develop and implement a plan to expand access to optimized supportive clinical care for all patients with mpox, including children, patients living with HIV, and pregnant women. This includes prompt identification and effective management of endemic co-infections, such as malaria, chickenpox or measles. This also includes offering HIV tests to adult patients who do not know their HIV status and to children as appropriate, testing and treatment for other sexually transmitted infections (STIs) among cases linked to sexual contact and referral to HIV/STIs treatment and care services when indicated. (MODIFIED)
    • Strengthen health and care workers’ capacity, knowledge and skills in clinical and infection and prevention and control pathways – screening, diagnosis, isolation, environmental cleaning, discharge of patients, including post discharge follow up for suspected and confirmed mpox –, and provide health and care workers with personal protective equipment (PPE). (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Enhance infection prevention and control (IPC) measures and availability of water, sanitation, hygiene (WASH) and waste management services and infrastructure in healthcare facilities and treatment and care centers to ensure quality healthcare service delivery and protection of health and care workers and patients. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)

    International traffic

    • Establish or strengthen cross-border collaboration arrangements for surveillance, management and support of suspected cases and contacts of mpox, and for the provision of information to travellers and conveyance operators, without resorting to travel and trade restrictions that unnecessarily impact local, regional or national economies. (EXTENDED)

    Vaccination

    • Prepare for and implement the integrated targeted use of vaccine for “Phase 1-Stop the outbreak” (as defined in the WHO Mpox global strategic preparedness and response plan (2024) and its upcoming iteration) through identification of the lowest administrative level reporting cases (hotspots) to interrupt sustained community transmission. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Develop and implement plans for vaccination in the context of an integrated response at the lowest administrative level reporting cases for people at high risk of exposure (e.g., contacts of cases of all ages, including sexual contacts, health and care workers, key populations, and other groups at risk in endemic and non-endemic areas). This entails a targeted integrated response, including active surveillance and contact tracing; agile adaptation of immunization strategies and plans to the local context including the availability of vaccines and supplies; proactive community engagement to generate and sustain demand for and trust in vaccination; close monitoring of mpox vaccination activities and coverage, and the collection of data during vaccination activities according to implementable research protocols. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)

    Community protection

    • Strengthen risk communication and community engagement systems with affected communities and local workforces for outbreak prevention, response and vaccination strategies, particularly at the lowest administrative levels reporting cases, including through training, mapping high risk and vulnerable populations, social listening and community feedback, and managing misinformation. This entails, inter alia, communicating effectively the uncertainties regarding the natural history of mpox, updated information about mpox including about the efficacy of mpox vaccines, the uncertainties regarding duration of protection following vaccination, and any relevant information about clinical trials to which the local population may have access, as appropriate. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Address stigma and discrimination of any kind via meaningful community engagement, particularly in health services and during risk communication activities. (EXTENDED)
    • Promote and implement IPC measures and basic WASH and waste management services in household settings, congregate settings (e.g. prisons, internally displaced persons and refugee camps, etc.), schools, points of entry and cross border transit areas. (EXTENDED)

    Governance and financing

    • Galvanize and scale up national funding and explore external opportunities for targeted funding of mpox prevention, readiness and response activities, advocate for release of available funds and take steps to identify potential new funding partners for emergency response. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Integrate mpox prevention and response measures, including enhanced surveillance, in existing programmes for prevention, control and treatment of other endemic diseases – especially HIV, as well as STIs, malaria, tuberculosis, other vaccine-preventable diseases including COVID-19, and/or non-communicable diseases – striving to identify activities which will benefit the programmes involved and lead to better health outcomes overall. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)

    Addressing research gaps

    •  Invest in field studies to better understand animal hosts and zoonotic spillover in the areas where MPXV is circulating, in coordination with the animal health sector and One Health partners. (EXTENDED, with re-phrasing)
    • Strengthen and expand use of genomic sequencing to characterize the epidemiology and chains of transmission of MPXV to better inform control measures. (EXTENDED)

    Reporting on the implementation of temporary recommendations

    • Report quarterly to WHO on the status of, and challenges related to, the implementation of these temporary recommendations, using a standardized tool and channels that will be made available by WHO. (EXTENDED)

     

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: 26 February 2025 Departmental update WHO unveils updated global database of air quality standards

    Source: World Health Organisation

    The World Health Organization (WHO), in collaboration with the Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute (Swiss TPH), has unveiled the updated 2025 Air Quality Standards database. This resource compiles national air quality standards for major pollutants and other airborne toxics from countries worldwide. This latest update provides an overview of global efforts towards achieving the WHO global air quality guidelines, with 17% more countries now implementing standards for pollutants that pose a risk to human health.

    “The updated WHO Air Quality Standards database is a crucial tool highlighting global progress in setting air quality regulations to protect public health,” says Dr Maria Neira, Director, Environment, Climate Change and Health at the World Health Organization. “It provides essential data for evidence based policymaking, helping to reduce air pollutions impacts on communities worldwide.”

    Building on previous efforts, the updated database now includes data from approximately 140 countries from all WHO regions, showcasing their air pollution regulatory efforts aimed at protecting public health.

    The database is presented as an interactive tool, providing values for both the short and long-term standards for particulate matter (PM10 and PM2.5), nitrogen dioxide (NO2), sulfur dioxide (SO2), ozone (O3) and carbon monoxide (CO). These values are based on averaging times that align with WHO’s global air quality guidelines.

    WHO air quality guidelines as a tool to protect health

    The WHO guidelines were published in 2021 to reflect new evidence of the health effects of air pollution. The guidelines recommend lower air quality levels to protect populations, underscoring the need for countries to implement stricter standards and policies to mitigate air pollution and its associated health risks.

    The health sector has a critical role to play to promote public health protection through effective air quality governance. Involving the health community in the development of national air quality standards as well as in processes ensuring that air quality standards are embedded in legislation is key to maximize public health protection.

    Adopting air quality standards as best buys to prevent noncommunicable diseases

    Environmental risks account for a quarter of the disease burden worldwide – with air pollution alone being responsible for almost 7 million deaths. Many of these deaths are preventable through policies in the energy, transport, agriculture, household, industry and other sectors. Air pollution has been recognized as a major risk for noncommunicable diseases (NCDs), impacting not only the respiratory and cardiovascular systems, but many more other organs and systems.

    The costs of air pollution on the health systems are substantial, and it jeopardizes the health of the most vulnerable such as children, who are affected throughout their entire life course, as well as people with pre-existing diseases.

    By compiling national air quality standards into a single, comprehensive database, WHO aims to empower stakeholders such policy makers, public health officials, researchers and other civil society and health organizations with the information necessary to monitor progress, drive policy changes and support the implementation of effective interventions to improve air quality and safeguard public health.

    Time to commit for clean air and health

    Adopting stricter air quality standards embedded in legislation is the first step – a required best buy – countries can do to commit to combat NCDs and other health outcomes. The upcoming 2nd WHO Conference on Air Pollution and Health will provide an opportunity for countries to commit to tackling air pollution, supported by the health community call for clean air action.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Bridging Tax Gap Demands Urgent Attention, Deputy Secretary-General Tells Group of 20 Side Event

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Following are UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed’s remarks at the Group of 20 (G20) side event — Domestic Resource Mobilization:  Bridging the Tax Gap, held in Cape Town, South Africa, today:

    It is a pleasure to join you for this important discussion on domestic resource mobilization and bridging the tax gap.  This challenge stands at the heart of financing sustainable development and demands our urgent attention.

    We are not on track to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).  We have an estimated $4 trillion sustainable development financing gap annually.  Domestic public finance is essential for financing the Sustainable Development Goals, increasing equity and strengthening macroeconomic stability.

    Robust fiscal systems, including both tax and expenditure, drive economic growth, industrial transformation and environmental sustainability — contributing to alleviating poverty and reducing inequalities.  Beyond raising revenue, taxation remains fundamental to fairness, trust and sovereignty.

    Yet, after significant increases in taxation in developing countries in the decade before 2009, average tax-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratios for all developing country groups are below 2010 levels, remaining far below those of developed countries. 

    Successive shocks over the last two decades have severely impacted the mobilization of domestic resources for development.  As global crises intensify, it becomes more critical than ever to increase countries’ taxation capabilities.

    The good news is that there is a large unmet tax potential in many developing countries.  Many Governments have invested in tax reforms, demonstrating how nations can unlock unmet potential.

    Strengthening tax systems requires sustained investment in capacity development based on country needs and priorities.  As economies evolve, so must tax systems.

    The increasingly digitalized economy presents new opportunities but also poses new challenges to an international tax system that has been designed for traditional business models.

    We must develop future-ready tax policies that ensure global fair taxation without imposing excessive burdens — both on taxpayers and tax authorities.  Many organizations — including the UN, International Monetary Fund (IMF), Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), World Bank and regional and national tax bodies — are supporting countries in this effort.

    Initiatives like Tax Inspectors Without Borders help countries enhance domestic revenue mobilization.  The Addis Tax Initiative and broader multilateral and regional efforts provide platforms for collaboration, knowledge-sharing and technical assistance.

    However, political will remains insufficient — with countries not investing enough in tax system reform and administration capacity, and donors not delivering promised assistance for supporting revenue mobilization.

    The fourth International Conference on Financing for Development in Sevilla in June offers a pivotal moment to turn commitments for domestic tax reforms into actions and make tax systems more fair, transparent, efficient and effective.

    In our interconnected world, strengthening countries’ fiscal frameworks must go hand in hand with international tax cooperation. Every year, billions of dollars that should fund education, healthcare and infrastructure are lost to tax avoidance and evasion, illicit financial flows and financial crime.

    Africa alone loses approximately $88.6 billion annually to illicit financial flows — around 3.7 per cent of the continent’s GDP — draining resources vital for economic development.

    The G20 has played an important role in advancing tax transparency and tackling tax avoidance.  Expanding the automatic exchange of information and enhancing transparency in beneficial ownership remain paramount.

    But, more must be done to ensure that all countries — particularly those with limited administrative capacity — can fully participate in shaping global tax norms.

    The ongoing negotiations on a UN Framework Convention on International Tax Cooperation present a historic opportunity for progress towards a fair, inclusive, and effective international tax system.

    Through the Pact for the Future, Member States have committed to improving the inclusiveness and effectiveness of tax cooperation under the UN.  Ensuring that international tax rules reflect the diverse needs, priorities and capacities of all countries is central to this effort.

    The two early protocols in the UN Convention — on taxation of income from cross-border services in a digitalized and globalized economy and on preventing and resolving tax disputes — can demonstrate an inclusive and impactful approach.

    The UN process can strengthen global cooperation, enhance legitimacy, certainty, resilience and fairness of international tax rules, while addressing challenges in domestic resource mobilization and ensuring that all countries have a seat at the table.

    Today’s discussion is an opportunity to drive forward these critical issues.  The United Nations remains fully committed to these efforts.  Together, we can build a fairer, more transparent and more effective international tax system — one that provides every country with the means to invest in its future and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Transform Finance-Development Relationship from Vicious Cycle into Virtuous One, Deputy Secretary-General Urges Group of 20

    Source: United Nations MIL OSI b

    Following is UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed’s message, as prepared for delivery, on the occasion of the Group of 20 (G20) Finance Ministers and Central Banks Meeting Session II:  International Financial Architecture, held in Cape Town, South Africa, today:

    Let me begin by thanking our South African hosts for their warm hospitality and leadership.  Cape Town — this vibrant city where two oceans meet — could not be a more fitting location for a presidency that aims to bridge divides.

    South Africa takes the helm of the G20 at a testing time.  Global gross domestic product (GDP) this year is projected to fall below pre-pandemic averages.  Poor countries are no longer converging towards the income levels of rich countries. 

    This “new normal” of low growth affects the possibilities of developing countries to navigate the energy transition, and build resilient, fair societies.  It ultimately affects whether people will fulfill their potential or not — and whether the promise of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will be kept.

    We are especially worried about the halting effect of high uncertainty on investment, the possibility of a new inflationary shock resulting from trade disruptions, and the scope for higher-for-longer interest rates that would exacerbate the debt crisis affecting developing economies.

    To face these challenges, we need an international financial architecture that can support economies to grow, liberating them from a vicious cycle where high debt leads to low investment, low investment to low growth, and low growth back to high debt.

    We need an architecture where the cost of capital to developing countries is low, enabling capital to flow where it can be most productive.  The G20 has a unique responsibility to lead this reform.  Three key actions are essential.

    First, we must further strengthen multilateral development banks.  The G20 Roadmap for Better, Bigger and More Effective Multilateral Development Banks points us in the right direction.  Now we must accelerate.  A successful replenishment of the African Development Fund will be a crucial milestone.

    Second, we need a comprehensive approach to the debt crisis.  Member States have put forward important structural proposals in advance of the fourth International Conference on Financing for Development, which we look to the G20 to support.

    Third, we must strengthen the global financial safety net, with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) at its core, to shield all economies in a shock-prone world.  We must channel special drawing rights to where they are most needed. We urge the G20 to use its voice to support the progress and reform developing countries need.

    With the right reforms, and with sufficient political will, we can transform the relationship between finance and development from a vicious cycle into a virtuous one.  This is the promise of South Africa’s G20 presidency — and of your leadership.

    MIL OSI United Nations News

  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Amid ‘Hellscape’, Uptick in Violence in North Darfur, Senior Humanitarian Official Urges Security Council to Take Immediate Action to Protect Civilians in Sudan

    Source: United Nations General Assembly and Security Council

    12 Million People Displaced, 24.6 Million Face Acute Hunger Nationwide, Yet Aid Groups Forced to Suspend Operations in Zamzam Displacement Camp Due to Insecurity

    The “already catastrophic” situation in Sudan has worsened in recent weeks, a senior United Nations humanitarian official warned today, as she outlined alarming developments in North Darfur, and urged the Security Council to take immediate action to ensure all actors abide by international humanitarian law and protect civilians in Zamzam camp and beyond. 

    “Nearly two years of relentless conflict in Sudan have inflicted immense suffering and turned parts of the country into a hellscape,” said Edem Wosornu, Director, Operations and Advocacy Division, Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.  Ms. Wosornu briefed the 15-member body on behalf of Tom Fletcher, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator. 

    More than 12 million people in Sudan have been displaced while 24.6 million people are experiencing acute hunger, she told the Council.  In North Darfur, violence in and around the Zamzam displacement camp — which hosts hundreds of thousands of civilians — has further intensified.  Satellite imagery confirms the use of heavy weaponry there in recent weeks.  Many have been killed, including at least two humanitarian workers, she said. 

    Earlier this week, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the main provider of health and nutrition services in Zamzam, announced that it has been forced to halt its operations in the camp due to the deteriorating security situation.  The World Food Programme (WFP) has also confirmed the suspension of voucher-based food assistance due to insecurity and the destruction of the market at Zamzam. 

    Moreover, the UN Human Rights Office has verified reports of summary executions of civilians in areas that have changed hands, she went on to say.  In the south of the country, fighting has spread into new areas in North Kordofan and South Kordofan.  “We have also seen shocking reports of further atrocities in While Nile state, including a wave of attacks earlier this month reported to have killed scores of civilians,” she said, welcoming the decision by the Sudanese authorities to extend the authorization of the use of the Adre crossing for humanitarian aid. 

    United Nations 2025 Humanitarian Response Plan Requires $6 Billion

    She said that the UN’s 2025 response plan for Sudan and the region requires $6 billion to support close to 21 million people in Sudan and up to 5 million others in neighbouring countries.  “The international community — in particular members of the Council — must spare no effort in trying to mitigate this,” she stressed. 

    In the ensuing discussion, Council members expressed alarm over the increasing attacks on civilians, underscoring the harrowing plight of the Sudanese people, particularly children, and urging all parties to the conflict to put down their weapons. 

    World’s Greatest Crisis of Displaced Children 

    “Sudan is experiencing one of the most devastating conflicts of our times,” said Panama’s delegate, noting that the country is home to the world’s greatest crisis of displaced children.  Slovenia’s delegate echoed a similar sentiment, saying that Sudanese children are left with the deepest scars of this war.  “These young lives plead for an end to the massacre, for the guns that keep them awake to be silenced, and they ask for food,” he added. 

    ‘Unspeakable Violence’ against Women and Girls Must Stop 

    “This conflict has unleashed a wave of unspeakable violence against women and girls,” Denmark’s delegate also added, underscoring that survivors need urgent access to healthcare and post-rape support.  The “entrenched impunity” has become one of the main drivers of conflict, she said.  Greece’s representative said that addressing the crimes against women and girls requires gender-sensitive interventions such as specialized healthcare, psychosocial support, and legal assistance. 

    Delegates Condemn Rapid Support Forces’ Attacks in Internally Displaced Persons Camps 

    Pakistan’s representative condemned the Rapid Support Forces’ attack on the only functioning hospital in the besieged El Fasher — the Saudi Teaching Maternal Hospital — which killed over 70 people.  “RSF must immediately stop its killing campaigns in Zamzam and Abu Shouk IDP camps,” he asserted, calling on the Council to ensure the implementation of resolution 2736 (2024). 

    “It does not need to be this way”, said the delegate from the United Kingdom, urging the parties to end their military ambitions and focus on creating the conditions for peace.  While welcoming the Sudanese Armed Forces’ decision to keep the Adré border crossing open, she underscored that — with over 30 million people in humanitarian need — “it is simply not enough”. 

    The representative of the Russian Federation said that the “shortest way to settle” the humanitarian situation is via “very close cooperation” with the Sudanese Government and its related parties.  “We cannot recall a single instance where the authorities refuse to cooperate with the humanitarians,” he said.  Sudanese authorities are working on simplifying logistical chains and streamlining document processing for humanitarian cargo.  No one will provide more support to the peaceful civilians in Sudan than their Government and the army. 

    “Both belligerents have committed atrocities,” emphasized the representative of the United States, expressing concern over attacks on the Zamzam refugee camp by the Rapid Support Forces and the use of civilians as human shields by militias allied with the Sudanese Armed Forces.  “We cannot let Sudan again become a permissive environment for terrorists and transnational criminal organizations,” he added.

    The humanitarian crisis is the direct result of the conflict between the Sudanese Armed Forces and the Rapid Support Forces, France’s delegate echoed, adding that it is vital to respect the territorial integrity of Sudan.  All actors must engage in good faith in an intra-Sudanese political dialogue, facilitated by the African Union and Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD).

    Speakers Urge Ceasefire during Holy Month of Ramadan 

    Several speakers highlighted the upcoming holy month of Ramadan as an opportunity for all parties to lay down their arms, with the representative of the Republic of Korea urging all parties to immediately seize hostilities.  “If both parties to the conflict in Sudan continue to rely on a military solution and persist in the belief that political victory can be achieved on the battlefield the fragmentation of Sudan may soon become a reality,” he warned. 

    African Solutions, African-Owned Initiatives Key to Resolving Conflict 

    Algeria’s delegate also speaking for Guyana, Somalia and Sierra Leone, echoed the call for a ceasefire during Ramadan, and welcomed the transition road map announced by the Government, which includes “the formation of a civilian Government to be led by a civilian technocratic personality”. Expressing concern over the announcement by the leaders of the Rapid Support Forces to establish a parallel authority, he stressed the need to coordinate diplomatic initiatives, while preserving the central role of the African Union and the United Nations. “Foreign interferences” remain a persistent challenge in the search for a lasting solution to the conflict in Sudan, he said. 

    African solutions and African-owned initiatives must continue to play a leading role, added Angola’s delegate.  “While the root cause of this conflict is reportedly linked to the internal ethnic tensions, we must recognize that it has been exacerbated by a few external factors,” he added.  The Jeddah Process, facilitated by Saudi Arabia and United States, and the African Union’s Peace and Security Council Ad Hoc Presidential Committee on Sudan remain hopeful prospects.  

    International Community Must Do More to Alleviate Suffering 

    Several Council members called on the international community to do more to alleviate the suffering in Sudan and warned that the conflict could spill over.  China’s delegate stressed the need to fund the 2025 Humanitarian Needs Response Plan in order for Sudan to meet the challenges of food insecurity, refugee displacement and conflict spillover. 

    “We all share the responsibility of supporting the Sudan so that its crisis does not turn from a regional crisis with repercussions limited to neighbouring countries in Africa to a crisis that threatens international peace and security,” said Egypt’s delegate.  The crisis in Sudan could threaten the safety of navigation in the Red Sea, increase illegal migration to Europe, and turn Sudan into a haven for criminal groups or armed militias. 

    Kenya’s delegate said that his country has received and engaged “official delegations” from Sudan, “who reaffirm their commitment to end the war and restore Sudan to civilian administration”.  Spotlighting the recent signing of a peace charter in Nairobi — which “must be viewed in that context” — he noted that a collective of 24 groups, drawn from an inclusive cross-section of civilian, political and military actors, associated themselves with that instrument.  He emphasized, however:  “Neither President William Ruto nor the Government of Kenya has recognized any independent entity in the Sudan or elsewhere.”

    Sudan’s Speaker Cites Cooperation with UN Special Envoy, Urges Militias to End Attacks on El Fasher 

    Sudan’s representative said that on his Government’s cooperation with the Special Envoy, Sudanese authorities have facilitated meetings with the leadership in the political, civilian and diplomatic spheres without interference.  “We have facilitated a briefing for him on the dynamics of the conflict […] and presented our readiness to reach a peaceful settlement,” he said, emphasizing the neutrality and centrality of the UN.

    However, “certain elements behind the scenes” sabotaged his Government’s efforts with the aim “to achieve their demonic aims”, he cautioned, noting that the main reason for the continuation of the war is the United Arab Emirates’ support for the Rapid Support Forces. For its part, Khartoum presented a national plan to protect civilians and implement the Jeddah Agreement and resolutions 1591 (2005) and 2736 (2024).  It has also designated airports in several areas for air transport of humanitarian assistance.  Calling on the militias to end their attacks on the Sudanese capital of El Fasher — which target civilians, health facilities and basic infrastructure — he stated:  “We welcome any practical and implementable humanitarian pause.”  Nevertheless, “any ceasefire is rejected if El Fasher’s siege is not lifted”, he asserted, urging the rebels to withdraw from the areas they occupy.

    Sudan’s Government is exerting great efforts to fulfil refugee and internally displaced persons’ needs through coordination with organizations active in Sudan as well as the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. To that end, he spotlighted several projects, including rehabilitating schools, higher education and rural hospitals, providing health services, repairing water networks and restoring police stations.

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: New report flags severity of US funding cuts to global AIDS response

    Source: United Nations 2

    Health

    Shuttered clinics and health workers laid off around the world reflect the widespread, negative toll the United States funding freeze is taking on the global AIDS response, according to a new situation report released on Wednesday by the UN agency charged with responding to the disease.

    UNAIDS said that at least one status report on the impact of cuts has been received from 55 different countries up to the start of this week.

    That includes 42 projects that are supported by the US President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and 13 that receive some US support.

    Two days after President Trump’s executive order in late January declared a 90-day pause to all foreign assistance, the Secretary of State issued an emergency waiver to resume “life-saving” humanitarian assistance, including HIV treatment.

    UNAIDS reported just over a week later that there was widespread “confusion” over how the waiver was being implemented on the ground.

    The 16 reports received from UNAIDS country offices around the world during the week of 17 to 21 February show that these waivers have led to the resumption of some clinical services, such as HIV treatment and prevention of vertical transmission, in many countries that are highly dependent on US funding.

    © UNICEF/Rindra Ramasomanana

    A mother-to-be is tested for HIV in the Analanjirofo region of Madagascar.

    Many projects ineligible

    However, it’s unclear how long funding will last amid multiple reports that key US government systems and staff responsible for paying implementing partners are either offline or working at greatly reduced capacity, the UN agency said.

    In addition, critical layers of national AIDS responses are ineligible for these waivers, including many HIV prevention and community-led services for key populations and adolescent girls and young women, according to the UN agency.

    At the same time, data collection and analysis services have been disrupted in numerous countries, according to reports received last week, which note that the overall quantity and quality of HIV prevention, testing and treatment services has been eroded.

    © UNICEF/Olivier Asselin

    In Côte d’Ivoire, a woman living with HIV holds three pills she takes daily as part of antiretroviral therapy.

    Waiting times increase

    Staff working in health facilities are facing increased workloads, and patients are experiencing increased wait times to receive lifesaving services, UNAIDS said.

    Other concerns persist, from hobbled health systems to addressing gender-related priorities.

    “US Government statements to UN system organizations suggest US-funded programmes focused on gender equality and transgender populations may not resume,” according to the UNAIDS situation report.

    Fresh data analysis

    The situation report covers more granular analysis on the global AIDS response’s heavy reliance on US foreign assistance, extracted from the datasets managed by UNAIDS.

    For example, more than half of HIV medicines purchased for the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Haiti, Mozambique, Tanzania and Zambia are purchased by the US.

    Before the freeze, the US Government provided two thirds of international financing for HIV prevention in low and middle-income countries, according to estimates from the Global HIV Prevention Coalition.

    The report also named the 20 countries that rely most heavily on funding from Washington: DRC, Haiti, Mozambique, Tanzania, Zambia, Uganda, Nigeria, Rwanda, Angola, Kenya, Ukraine, Burkina Faso, Burundi, El Salvador, Zimbabwe, Togo, Nepal, Côte d’Ivoire, Eswatini and Benin.

    Services at a standstill

    Civil society and community-led interventions are central to ending AIDS and to sustaining the gains into the future, according to UN agency.

    People living with HIV and key populations at higher risk of infection, play a crucial role in maintaining the local services needed to stay healthy, UNAIDS said.

    Yet, many critical services have ground to a halt. Here are some examples:

    • Mozambique: Community workers and test counsellors supported by PEPFAR funding are not being paid. As a result, HIV testing is unavailable in most parts of the country, enrolment of new patients is on hold and efforts to support people living with HIV to adhere to their treatment have been compromised
    • Tanzania: Young people working as peer educators, community health workers or lay counsellors funded by PEPFAR have been issued temporary job termination notices
    • Rwanda: Community-level and facility-based HIV-prevention services targeting populations at high risk of HIV infection, including adolescent girls and young women, gay men and sex workers were not covered by waivers received from the US Government
    • South Africa: US-funded facilities that support gay men, such as Engage Men’s Health, remain closed
    • Ghana: All civil society organizations funded by PEPFAR have halted services to people living with HIV and key populations

    Learn more about UNAIDS here.

    On the ground in Côte d’Ivoire

    Here is an emblematic snapshot of how the UN funding freeze has already affected this West African nation of 27 million, where Washington has supported more than half the total response to assist more than 400,000 adults and children living with AIDS.

    © UNICEF/Frank Dejong

    A mother, holding her two-year-old in southwest Côte d’Ivoire, discovered she was seropositive during her pregnancy. (file)

    • The stop-work order triggered a complete shutdown of services funded by the PEPFAR programme, which covers 516 health facilities in 70 per cent of the country’s health districts and 85 per cent of people living with HIV on treatment (about 265,000 people)
    • More than 8,600 staff were affected, including 597 clinical workers (doctors, nurses and midwives) and 3,591 community workers
    • Distribution of medicines and transport of diagnostic samples ground to halt
    • US-funded services partially resumed on 12 February following receipt of waivers, but the majority of US-funded HIV-prevention services for people at high risk of infection, remain shut
    • Other national health programmes and systems are affected by the freeze, including the malaria and tuberculosis control programmes and another serving mother and child health alongside the supply chain system for medicines and diagnostics

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  • MIL-OSI United Nations: Deputy Secretary-General’s remarks at the G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Meeting Session II: Int’l Financial Architecture [as prepared for delivery]

    Source: United Nations secretary general

    Excellencies,
    Let me begin by thanking our South African hosts for their warm hospitality and leadership. 
    Cape Town – this vibrant city where two oceans meet – could not be a more fitting location for a presidency that aims to bridge divides.
    South Africa takes the helm of the G20 at a testing time. 
    Global GDP this year is projected to fall below pre-pandemic averages. 
     Poor countries are no longer converging towards the income levels of rich countries. 
    This “new normal” of low growth affects the possibilities of developing countries to navigate the energy transition, and build resilient, fair societies. 
    It ultimately affects whether people will fulfill their potential or not – and whether the promise of the Sustainable Development Goals will be kept.
    We are especially worried about the halting effect of high uncertainty on investment, the possibility of a new inflationary shock resulting from trade disruptions, and the scope for higher-for-longer interest rates that would exacerbate the debt crisis affecting developing economies. 
    Excellencies,
    To face these challenges, we need an International Financial Architecture that can support economies to grow, liberating them from a vicious cycle where high debt leads to low investment, low investment to low growth, and low growth back to high debt.
    We need an architecture where the cost of capital to developing countries is low, enabling capital to flow where it can be most productive.
    The G20 has a unique responsibility to lead this reform. 
    Three key actions are essential:
    First, we must further strengthen Multilateral Development Banks. The G20 Roadmap for Better, Bigger, and more Effective MDBs points us in the right direction. Now we must accelerate. A successful replenishment of the African Development Fund will be a crucial milestone. 
    Second, we need a comprehensive approach to the debt crisis. Member States have put forward important structural proposals in advance of the Fourth International Conference on Financing for Development, which we look to the G20 to support.
    Third, we must strengthen the global financial safety net, with the IMF at its core, to shield all economies in a shock-prone world. We must channel SDRs to where they are most needed. We urge the G20 to use its voice to support the progress and reform developing countries need. 
    Excellencies,
    With the right reforms, and with sufficient political will, we can transform the relationship between finance and development from a vicious cycle into a virtuous one. This is the promise of South Africa’s G20 presidency – and of your leadership. 
    Thank you.
    [END]
     

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