Quantcast
Channel: ReliefWeb Updates
Viewing all 23095 articles
Browse latest View live

Democratic Republic of the Congo: RDC : la Monusco s’engage à appuyer la sécurisation du parc de la Garamba

$
0
0
Source: Radio Okapi
Country: Democratic Republic of the Congo

La Monusco a mis, le week-end dernier, ses trois hélicoptères à la disposition du parc de la Garamba pour des évacuations en cas de maladie, ainsi que pour le déploiement des militaires en cas d’intervention urgente. En mission dans le territoire de Dungu, le chef de la mission onusienne en RDC, Martin Kobler, a réaffirmé la volonté de son institution d’accompagner le gouvernement congolais dans la lutte contre les groupes armés notamment les rebelles ougandais de la LRA qui commettent de diverses exactions dans ce parc.

Situé dans le district du Haut-Uelé (Province Orientale), le parc de la Garamba, estimé à plus de 5 000 km², vit actuellement sous la menace quotidienne des groupes armés étrangers ainsi que des braconniers.

Le conservateur en chef de ce parc national, Colonel Nkulu Kalala l’a confirmé dans un entretien à Radio Okapi:

«Le braconnage local ne détruit pas tellement comme les autres. La LRA qui vient de l’Ouganda est installée au centre de trafic à la recherche des pointes d’ivoire pour soutenir l’effort de guerre. Ils continuent à faire le braconnage. Les groupes armés notamment la LRA constituent une menace pour le parc. Nous sommes en train de multiplier des stratégies pour protéger l’intégrité de ce parc».

La menace s’accroit également avec le retour de la saison de pluie qui détériore les différentes routes du parc.

Considéré comme patrimoine mondial de l’Unesco, ce parc national présente une véritable richesse en faune et flore.

Avec son biotope diversifié constitué de la savane herbeuse, boisée, arborée ainsi que de la forêt, le parc de national de la Garamba héberge des éléphants de savane et de forêt, des waters bouc, des hippopotames, des girafes, des lions ainsi que des léopards.


Iraq: Carried to safety, Kobane refugee joins thousands heading to Iraq

$
0
0
Source: UN High Commissioner for Refugees
Country: Iraq, Syrian Arab Republic, Turkey

IBRAHIM KHALIL BORDER CROSSING, Iraq, October 13 (UNHCR)– When residents of the Syrian town of Kobane fled their homes, many had only minutes to decide what to take with them. Some brought jewellery, family photos or a child's favourite toy, but 55-year-old Mohammed Ali took an oxygen tank.

"I have a lung infection. I'm sick and I don't think I will live for a very long time, but at least I am here with my family," he tells UNHCR minutes after arriving in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq having crossed the border from Turkey.

He is one of more than 2,500 Kurdish Syrians from Kobane to have made the crossing since Iraq's Kurdistan Regional Government opened the border to refugees last Friday, with the authorities predicting that tens of thousands more could arrive in the coming weeks.

When ISIS fighters began advancing towards Kobane in mid-September, Mohammed and his family remained in their home on the outskirts of the town for as long as they could, despite hearing shelling and suffering shortages of food and electricity.

Even when the fighting came to surrounding villages, where people they knew were killed or driven from their homes, he refused to go. "I asked my family to leave me in my home, but they insisted on taking me with them."

Frail and unable to walk, his sons carried him to their car together with his oxygen tank and drove to the Turkish border, leaving all their possessions behind. At the border they were forced to abandon their car, and his sons carried him into Turkey.

Many of the estimated 200,000 people who fled Kobane sought safety in Turkish towns and cities across the border from Syria. Mohammed and his family travelled to the town of Mardin, trying to survive on what little money they had left.

Lying on a mattress in a vast concrete transit area just inside the Iraqi border and inhaling from his oxygen mask, Mohammed says he and his family struggled during the two weeks they spent in Turkey after leaving Syria. "It was a very bad experience. We've spent everything we had on accommodation, food and travel."

He managed to refill his oxygen tank twice while in Turkey, but says that when he sought medical assistance at a local hospital he was turned away.

Many of the hundreds of newly arrived Syrian refugees share similar stories of the hardship and high costs they faced inside Turkey. Like them, when Mohammed and his family heard the crossing to Iraqi Kurdistan was open, they left the town they were staying in and headed to the border.

After a short wait in the transit area, Mohammed is again gathered up into the arms of one of his sons and settled in the back of a bus for a three-hour drive to the Gawilan refugee camp, near the Iraqi Kurdistan regional capital, Erbil. There, he and the other refugees will be registered by UNHCR and provided with shelter and basic assistance items, including food, mattresses and blankets.

Once registered, he and his family hope to join his brother who lives and works in Erbil. Exhausted and fighting back tears, Mohammed says he knows he may never return to Kobane and see his home, but he is grateful to know that his family has found safety. "Beyond that, my future is in God's hands."

By Charlie Dunmore at the Ibrahim Khalil border crossing, Iraq

Mali: Fiches pays et fiches thématiques de l’atelier régional de capitalisation des expériences liées à la préparation et à la réponse à la crise sahel 2012

$
0
0
Source: Food and Agriculture Organization
Country: Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Côte d'Ivoire, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Senegal
preview


Oct 2014

Afin de passer en revue les actions menées par la FAO face à la crise au Sahel en 2012 et de partager les bonnes pratiques, le Bureau Sous-régional des Urgences et de la Réhabilitation de la FAO-Afrique de l’Ouest/Sahel a organisé à Dakar du 4 au 6 décembre 2012 un Atelier régional de capitalisation des expériences liées à la préparation et à la réponse à la crise.

Cet atelier a réuni dix pays : le Burkina Faso, la Gambie, le Niger, le Mali, la Mauritanie, le Sénégal et le Tchad pour la zone sahélienne ; et la Côte d’Ivoire, la Guinée et la Guinée Bissau pour les pays côtiers.

Le bilan de la réponse à la crise montre, au niveau des pays et au niveau régional:

  • Une appréciation globale de la préparation et de la réponse satisfaisante ;

  • Une alerte précoce et efficace avec les partenaires ;

  • Une analyse régulière et partagée avec les principaux acteurs ;

  • Une coordination exemplaire ;

  • Un leadership confirmé de la FAO sur les questions de la sécurité alimentaire et de l’agriculture ;

  • Un intérêt et un engagement remarquable de la FAO sur les thématiques spécifiques de la GRC/RRC et de la résilience ;

  • La réalisation d’un document cadre de stratégie axée sur le renforcement de la résilience ;

  • Une prise en compte insuffisante des questions pastorales par les acteurs impliqués ;

  • Une mobilisation de fonds complexe due, en partie, à une analyse divergente de la situation.

Ce document regroupe :

  • les fiches de capitalisation d’expériences de chacun des dix pays et du Bureau Sous-régional des Urgences ;

  • les fiches thématiques - partenariat, renforcement des capacités, genre, coordination, mobilisation des ressources et ciblage - et transversales pour le cycle de la gestion des risques de catastrophes (GRC).

Colombia: Colombia: hay que hacer algo más que simplemente escuchar la voz de las víctimas del conflicto

$
0
0
Source: Jesuit Refugee Service
Country: Colombia

Bogotá, 13 de octubre de 2014 - En respuesta al diálogo actual entre el gobierno colombiano y el grupo guerrillero izquierdista, FARC, el Servicio Jesuita a Refugiados ha instado a las partes negociadoras que no se olviden de las necesidades de los afectados por el conflicto. La aportación del JRS - presentada en el Foro Nacional de Víctimas, en Cali - pidió asistencia a las víctimas, reparación, soluciones al desplazamiento y medidas preventivas. El JRS pidió también a los estados receptores de refugiados que les ofrezcan protección internacional, y que no los obliguen a regresar a Colombia.

Iniciadas en 2012, las negociaciones de paz en La Habana están entrando en su fase decisiva. Para proporcionar a las víctimas la oportunidad de influir en el proceso, Naciones Unidas y la Universidad Nacional de Colombia organizaron una serie de mesas redondas por todo el país. La última, el Foro Nacional de Víctimas, tuvo lugar en Cali a principios de agosto, donde las víctimas se reunieron para expresar sus puntos de vista sobre décadas de conflicto, que se enviaron a los negociadores en La Habana (Cuba).

Aunque el JRS aplaudió la oportunidad de dar voz a las víctimas del conflicto, su oficina en Colombia pidió aclaraciones a las autoridades sobre cómo el acuerdo de paz podría afectar a las comunidades. La Ley 1448 de 2011, de Víctimas y Restitución de Tierras, ofrece a los afectados reparaciones, pero no garantiza su protección. Esta ley solo mira al pasado y no tiene en cuenta el futuro. En consecuencia, de acuerdo con la presentación del JRS, la ley nunca debería usarse como base para justificar el retorno de los refugiados a Colombia.

El documento del JRS al foro trató no solo la necesidad de compensaciones y asistencia humanitaria, sino que también animó a los actores involucrados en el proceso de paz a profundizar en las causas del conflicto y tomar medidas preventivas.

Enfoque humanitario y asistencia. El gobierno colombiano debe garantizar que las víctimas de las nuevas bandas criminales (BACRIM), formadas por miembros de los grupos paramilitares "oficialmente desmovilizados", sean reconocidas como tales y reciban asistencia humanitaria. Por otra parte, teniendo en cuenta que las autoridades regionales suelen tener una larga tradición en asistir a las víctimas del conflicto, habría que promover una mayor descentralización de la asistencia, junto al apoyo financiero y técnico.

Verdad, justicia y reparación. La Ley 1448 garantiza los derechos de las víctimas a recibir una reparación. Así, el JRS ha subrayado la necesidad de que el Estado garantice que este derecho se respete en su totalidad. Además, en nombre de la justicia, debe garantizarse el derecho de las víctimas a conocer la identidad de quienes cometieron crímenes contra ellas. Aparte, el JRS pide que haya escaños en el Congreso colombiano reservados a los representantes de las víctimas para así garantizar la defensa y protección de sus derechos.

Soluciones duraderas. Encontrar soluciones para las víctimas del desplazamiento forzoso requerirá de unos mecanismos a largo plazo que ayuden a miles de familias a reconstruir sus vidas. Si bien se necesitan políticas de reintegración nacional, la aplicación de estrategias debe ser impulsada a nivel local. Las comunidades marginadas afectadas por la violencia necesitarán el apoyo de las autoridades locales y regionales financiadas por el gobierno central. Si bien ya se han desarrollado políticas legales y públicas, el JRS apremió al Estado a identificar y solventar la brecha entre las políticas y su aplicación real.

Prevención, protección y medidas preventivas. De acuerdo con la presentación del JRS, el gobierno, los grupos de la sociedad civil, los medios de comunicación y los grupos del sector privado tienen que desarrollar estrategias y actividades que promuevan la paz y la reconciliación. El proceso de paz, sigue el documento, debe centrarse en las áreas que han sido históricamente excluidas y, a menudo, propensas a la violencia. El JRS pidió a las autoridades promover el estado de derecho, apoyar a las comunidades afectadas por la violencia, proporcionar alternativas a las actividades ilícitas como los cultivos de drogas y el contrabando de mercancías, y luchar contra los grupos armados ilegales, así como la corrupción local y regional dentro y fuera del sector estatal.

World: Les Etats membres de la FAO s’engagent à lutter contre la malnutrition au plan mondial

$
0
0
Source: Food and Agriculture Organization
Country: World

Le Directeur général se réjouit de l’accord intervenu sur la Déclaration et le Cadre d’action qui doivent être adoptés lors de la deuxième Conférence internationale sur la nutrition

12 octobre 2014, Rome - Les Etats membres de la FAO ont posé un important jalon dans la lutte mondiale contre la malnutrition en plébiscitant aujourd'hui un accord sur des politiques destinées à assurer l'accès de tous les habitants de la planète à des régimes alimentaires sains.

Suite à des négociations intenses, les représentants de la FAO et de l'Organisation mondiale de la santé (OMS) et les délégués des Etats membres sont parvenus à un consensus sur une Déclaration politique et un Cadre d'action volontaire comprenant plus de 50 recommandations.

"L'accord sur ce Cadre envoie un signal fort au monde: les Etats membres sont vraiment sérieux au sujet de la nutrition", a dit M. José Graziano da Silva, Directeur général de la FAO.

La Déclaration et le Cadre d'action doivent être adoptés lors de la Deuxième Conférence internationale sur la nutrition (CIN2) qui se tiendra du 19 au 21 novembre 2014 à Rome. Cette réunion intergouvernementale de haut niveau est organisée conjointement par la FAO et l'OMS.

"La CIN2 peut jouer un rôle essentiel de promotion de la sécurité alimentaire et de la nutrition", a encore dit le chef de la FAO.

Et M. Graziano da Silva de citer de récentes estimations de la FAO selon lesquelles quelque 805 millions de personnes dans le monde sont sous-alimentées alors que la moitié de la population mondiale souffre de différentes formes de malnutrition à des degrés divers.

Dans la Déclaration adoptée aujourd'hui, les pays "reconnaissent que la malnutrition sous toutes ses formes, notamment la dénutrition, les carences en micronutriments, le surpoids et l'obésité, n'affectent pas seulement la santé et le bien-être des gens (...) mais imposent aussi un lourd fardeau aux conséquences sociales et économiques négatives sur les individus, les familles, les communautés et les Etats".

Les pays se sont engagés à éradiquer la faim, prévenir toute forme de malnutrition dans le monde et accroître leurs investissements dans des interventions visant à améliorer les régimes alimentaires et la nutrition.

La Déclaration souligne que "la pauvreté, le sous-développement et le statut économique faible sont des contributeurs majeurs à la malnutrition dans les zones aussi bien urbaines que rurales".

La responsabilité première incombe aux gouvernements

Dans le Cadre d'action plébiscité par les Etats membres, ceux-ci reconnaissent que leurs "recommandations s'adressent principalement aux dirigeants, car la responsabilité première incombe aux gouvernements quant à l'action à mener au plan national aux côtés des différents partenaires, notamment les communautés affectées".

Les recommandations portent notamment sur l'élaboration et la mise en œuvre de politiques et de programmes nationaux d'amélioration des niveaux nutritionnels et d'accroissement des investissements, y compris l'aide publique au développement (APD).

Elles appellent aussi au renforcement de la production agricole durable de manière à assurer à la fois la sécurité alimentaire et l'accès à un régime alimentaire sain.

Depuis 1992, date de la première Conférence internationale sur la nutrition, des progrès importants ont été observés dans la lutte contre la faim et la malnutrition, mais ils sont restés insuffisants et mal répartis. La malnutrition est responsable de près de la moitié des décès d'enfants de moins de cinq ans, soit plus de trois millions de morts par an.

Souvent des formes variées de malnutrition se superposent et peuvent coexister dans un même pays et parfois dans une même famille. Quelque 160 millions d'enfants de moins de cinq ans souffrent de malnutrition chronique ou de retards de croissance, alors que plus de deux milliards de personnes souffrent d'une ou de plusieurs carences en micronutriments. Dans le même temps, un demi-milliard d'individus sont obèses.

Des chefs d'Etat et de gouvernements ainsi que de hauts responsables et dirigeants d'organisations, d'institutions et d'ONG diverses participeront à la CIN2. Le Pape François sera lui aussi présent, sa participation ayant été confirmée par le Saint-Siège.

World: WHO regional meeting opens in Manila to tackle health issues

$
0
0
Source: World Health Organization
Country: World

MANILA, 13 OCTOBER 2014 - The World Health Organization (WHO) Regional Committee for the Western Pacific, opened its sixty-fifth session today in Manila to review WHO's work over the past year and to discuss major health issues. The Regional Committee will also decide on measures the Organization will take to address the health and well-being of the Region's 1.8 billion people.

The items to be discussed include the following:

  • the importance of mental health and the heavy burden of mental disorders;
  • tobacco control, specifically ways to increase institutional capacity, effective policies and governance, and multisectoral actions and partnerships;
  • antimicrobial resistance and the need for a strong action plan to combat this emerging threat in the Region;
  • strengthening immunization programmes to build on achievements and improve access to vaccinations;
  • preventing and mitigating risks associated with disasters through the prevention, preparedness, response and recovery; and
  • progress reports on International Health Regulations (2005), food safety, malaria, tuberculosis, dengue, noncommunicable diseases, environmental health, violence and injury prevention, nutrition, universal health coverage and the Millennium Development Goals.

In his opening address to the Regional Committee, WHO Regional Director for the Western Pacific, Dr Shin Young-soo expressed gratitude to the Philippines, which has served as the home of the WHO Regional Office for the Western Pacific since 1951. "We doubly appreciate your hospitality in hosting this year's session of the Regional Committee," said Dr Shin.

Dr Shin underscored the importance of adapting to better serve Member States. "At the start of my second term, I looked at ways to work harder and smarter. We must be willing to constantly reinvent ourselves to fulfil our mission of service to Member States as their health needs change." Dr Shin added, "…We must find new and innovative ways to improve on our performance. We must focus not only on what Member States need now — but also anticipate their future public health needs."

Dr Shin reminded Member States that the Western Pacific Region has long been a hotspot for many emerging diseases, and how managing SARS, the first major disease outbreak of the 21st century, has made them stronger so that they are better prepared than ever for Ebola virus disease. Results from a recent survey of the Region’s members showed good preparedness to detect and respond to Ebola, and a regional emergency operations centre is on high alert.

“The risk for transmission here is low, but the consequences are high so we must be prepared,” he concluded. “The Ebola crisis drives home a simple truth — investing in health security during so-called normal times is absolutely vital.”

In his speech, President Benigno S. Aquino III of the Republic of the Philippines recalled that the last time the Philippines hosted the Regional Committee was 25 years ago, when his mother, President Corazon Aquino, welcomed delegates.

President Aquino told members, “Outbreaks of illnesses and diseases like the MERS-Corona Virus and Ebola are among the greatest challenges the world faces today.” He talked about the value that the WHO Regional Committee brings to working on these issues together. “Today we affirm: no man is an island. Similarly: no country can operate or achieve its full development in isolation from others.”

The Regional Committee meets each year to set policies and approve programmes of work and budgets. It is comprised of representatives from the Region's 37 countries and areas.

Dr Ian Smith, Executive Director of WHO's Office of the Director-General, spoke on behalf of WHO Director-General Dr Margaret Chan. His remarks focused on the current Ebola outbreak, highlighting that WHO's key arguments are "now falling on receptive ears." He also underscored some lessons already apparent from the global response.

  • The outbreak shows the world's growing social and economic inequalities.
  • Rumours and panic spread faster than the virus.
  • The world is put at risk when a deadly virus hits the destitute.
  • Decades of neglected basic health systems and services can bring a fragile country to its knees.
  • There is a lack of research and development incentive as evidenced by the absence of an Ebola vaccine.
  • The world is ill-prepared to respond to a severe, sustained and threatening public health emergency.

Dr Smith also noted that these arguments "underscore how right WHO and its Regional Offices have been in arguing for the strengthening of basic public health infrastructures, aiming for universal health coverage, and recognizing the urgent need to strengthen IHR core capacities (that help countries prevent and respond to acute public health risks that have the potential to cross borders)."

The Regional Committee meets each year to set policies and approve programmes of work and budgets. It is comprised of representatives from the Region's 37 countries and areas.

For more information, please contact

Mr Ruel E. Serrano
Public Information Office
WHO Regional Office for the Western Pacific
United Nations Avenue corner Taft Avenue, Manila, Philippines
Telephone: +632 528 9993
Email: serranor@wpro.who.int

occupied Palestinian territory: Switzerland reaffirms its pledge to the Occupied Palestinian Territory

$
0
0
Source: Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Country: occupied Palestinian territory, Switzerland

Bern, 12.10.2014 - At the Cairo Conference for Palestine on rebuilding the Gaza Strip the Federal Delegate for Humanitarian Aid, Manuel Bessler, today confirmed Switzerland's pledge to donate an average of 30 million francs per annum to the Occupied Palestinian Territory between 2014 and 2017. He also spoke of Switzerland's role as a facilitator in the Palestinian reunification process.

Mr Bessler travelled to Gaza on 30 September to ascertain the humanitarian situation on the ground there after 51 days of conflict. At the Cairo conference Mr Bessler voiced concerns about the repeated conflicts in the region and offered his condolences to the families of its many victims. Switzerland is calling on all the parties involved to break this vicious circle of violence so that the Palestinian and Israeli populations can live in security and dignity.

According to Switzerland, the resumption of peace talks based on clear parameters is a prerequisite for any two-state solution. The reconstruction of Gaza and support for Palestinians living in the occupied territories or in exile must take place within a sustainable policy framework. To this end, Switzerland stressed how essential it is to consolidate the ceasefire agreement concluded between the parties and insisted that the blockade of Gaza must be lifted. Switzerland also reiterated that the parties to the conflict must comply with international humanitarian law in all circumstances.

Between 2014 and 2017, Switzerland plans to allocate an average of 30 million francs per annum to humanitarian aid and development programmes in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, as well as to peacebuilding projects. Continuing its current programme, the main areas of intervention will be local governance, promotion of the rule of law, economic development and support for humanitarian organisations like UNRWA, the ICRC or the World Food Programme. In 2014, Switzerland also allocated an additional sum of more than 4 million francs to meet humanitarian needs caused by the conflict in Gaza.

Switzerland also welcomed the conclusion on 25 September of an agreement between Fatah and Hamas. Switzerland is monitoring the process of Palestinian reunification as a facilitator based on a mandate from the Palestinian National Consensus Government (PNCG) and in consultation with all the parties concerned. The short-term aim of this facilitation is to defuse the crisis concerning civil-sector salaries in Gaza, but its medium and long-term objective is to work towards the consolidation and reform of the public sector in Gaza and throughout the entire Occupied Palestinian Territory.

occupied Palestinian territory: Netherlands contributing to reconstruction in Gaza

$
0
0
Source: Government of the Netherlands
Country: Netherlands, occupied Palestinian territory

The Netherlands is helping reconstruction efforts in the Gaza Strip. This year the Netherlands will spend €12 million on Gaza and a total of over €50 million on the Palestinian Territories. The Dutch focus in the Palestinian Territories is on humanitarian relief, food security, water, the development of the rule of law, security and human rights. The aid is channelled via the Dutch representation to the Palestinian Authority, the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), NGOs and businesses. The Netherlands remains committed to the development of the Palestinian Territories and intends to maintain a similar level of involvement in the years ahead.

Foreign minister Frans Timmermans announced the Dutch contribution at a donor conference for Gaza held in Cairo on Sunday. ‘It’s crucial that people in Gaza can start to repair and rebuild the tens of thousands of houses that have been damaged or destroyed,’ he said. The Netherlands is making extra funds available for the import of building materials to the Gaza Strip via the UN’s Materials Monitoring Unit and for UN efforts to clear explosive ordnance. A contribution of one million dollars will enable the UN to check imports of building materials to Gaza. This initiative is designed to allay Israeli security concerns about the import of building materials and ensure that hospitals and schools can be rebuilt in the Gaza Strip.

Together with the US, the EU and its partners in the region, the Netherlands continues to urge a political solution to the situation in Gaza, so that there is no repeat of last summer’s violence. Reunifying Gaza and the West Bank is part of such a political solution. ‘By working towards a permanent ceasefire and developing projects that strengthen the Gazan economy, the Netherlands is seeking to bring a political solution closer,’ said Mr Timmermans.

He also noted that Israel’s security concerns had to be taken seriously. The Dutch-financed container scanner at Kerem Shalom will therefore play an important role in checks on imports of building materials. ‘The machine is already allowing humanitarian goods to be imported securely and from now on it will also process building materials for reconstruction,’ said Mr Timmermans. The scanner has been in use since late last year for checks on goods being traded between Gaza and Europe. Following Israel’s recent decision to allow the resumption of exports from Gaza to the West Bank, the scanner can also be used for these goods – at present chiefly agricultural and fisheries products. ‘This is an important step in the opening up of Gaza’s borders to all trade,’ said Mr Timmermans.


Sierra Leone: Ebola Virus Disease - Situation Report (Sit-Rep) – 13 October, 2014

$
0
0
Source: Government of Sierra Leone
Country: Sierra Leone
preview


Main highlights - For the 12th October 2014, a total of 125 new samples were received and analysed by the CDC Lab-Bo, the South African NICD MLU Lab-Lakka, the Canadian Lab-Kailahun & the Chinese Lab- Jui: Kailahun(3),Kenema (23),Kambia (1),Koinadugu (1),Bombali (41),Port Loko (8),Moyamba (3) and Western Area (45).Fifty-seven(57) of these samples are positive, 60 are negative whilst 8 suspected cases have been recommended for a second test base on their symptoms onset.(See table 1)
- The cumulative number of Laboratory confirmed cases are 2,849 whiles confirmed deaths is 926 with a Case Fatality Rate (CFR) based on confirmed cases of 32.5%
- The increase in deaths is as a result of the ongoing data cleaning/outcome data received from Case Management Centres (CMCs) but the outcomes still remains a problem
- Records with missing key variables are not included in table 1 below

occupied Palestinian territory: España anuncia una contribución de 36 millones de euros de ayuda a Palestina

$
0
0
Source: Agencia Española de Cooperación Internacional para el Desarrollo
Country: occupied Palestinian territory, Spain

Así lo ha anunciado el secretario de estado de Cooperación Internacional y para Iberoamérica, Jesús Gracia, en la Conferencia de Donantes para Palestina y la Recuperación de Gaza, celebrada hoy en El Cairo.

La cifra será desembolsada en el periodo 2014-2017 y, al menos, el 50% estará destinado a la reconstrucción y desarrollo de Gaza.

El secretario de estado de Cooperación Internacional y para Iberoamérica, Jesús Gracia, ha anunciado en la Conferencia de Donantes para Palestina y la Recuperación de Gaza, celebrada hoy en El Cairo, la contribución española de 36 millones de euros para Palestina para el periodo 2014-2017. De este monto, al menos el 50%, será destinado al proceso de recuperación y reconstrucción de Gaza.

La Conferencia ha sido organizada con el objetivo de recabar apoyo y financiación para el “Plan de recuperación y reconstrucción de Gaza” diseñado por la Autoridad Nacional Palestina, a ejecutar en el periodo 2014-2017.

La contribución española se canalizará en colaboración con las instituciones palestinas, Organizaciones No Gubernamentales (ONG), la Agencia de las Naciones Unidas para la ayuda a los Refugiados Palestinos (UNRWA) y el Mecanismo palestino-europeo de gestión para la ayuda socio-económica (Mecanismo PEGASE).

Durante 2014, la contribución de la Cooperación Española, a través de la Agencia Española de Cooperación (AECID) será, aproximadamente, de 7,8 millones de euros. De este total, la UNRWA recibirá de la Cooperación Española un millón de euros, especialmente dirigido a atender a la población refugiada en Gaza, adicional al ya percibido en julio de este año.

La Cooperación Española, a través de la Agencia Española de Cooperación (AECID), ha aportado hasta la fecha un total de 3.178.000 euros para responder a la crisis humanitaria en Gaza.

España mantiene históricos lazos de fuerte solidaridad con el pueblo palestino y ha sido uno de sus principales donantes en materia de Ayuda Oficial para el Desarrollo (AOD), que asciende a aproximadamente 600 millones de euros desde 2005. La continuidad de este compromiso se formalizará durante el año en curso con la prevista firma del primer Marco de Asociación País entre España y la Autoridad Nacional Palestina, que ratificará su asociación de cooperación para los próximos años.

Nigeria: Woman found in Nigerian bush was not in schoolgirl group: source

$
0
0
Source: Agence France-Presse
Country: Nigeria

10/13/2014 - 20:56 GMT

A young woman found wandering in northeast Nigeria who police said was one of more than 200 missing schoolgirls was actually abducted three months earlier, a source said Monday.

National police had said that they believed the woman, who was discovered near Mubi in Adamawa state on September 24, was among the 219 teenagers kidnapped by the Islamist group from the town of Chibok in neighbouring Borno in April.

The announcement raised hopes for the release of the schoolgirls, whose abduction caused global outrage, but Chibok elders immediately disputed the claim, saying she was not on the list of missing and did not come from the town.

Now a source with detailed knowledge of the young woman's case said she had told the authorities that she was snatched four months earlier than the schoolgirls in a separate raid.

"She is a 23-year-old woman from Mubi. She was abducted in January by Boko Haram and taken to Sambisa Forest, where they have their enclave," the source told AFP.

"She was taken as a wife by a Boko Haram member called Mohammed. She was already married before she was abducted."

Boko Haram had used the kidnapping of young women and girls as a tactic even before the Chibok raid, and the young woman's abduction appeared to fit a pattern documented by rights groups.

The young woman said she became pregnant and fell sick and that on September 19, her new husband's friends bundled her into a car and dumped her in the bush, where she wandered for four days, the source added.

She was eventually found near a village called Plefu in the Hong local government district before being taken to a police station in Mubi, the source said.

"I asked her why did her husband's friends take her and abandon her in the bush without her husband being present. She told me that it is the norm with Boko Haram. Any of the girls they keep them and use them as sex slaves.

"Each time a woman falls sick and they suspect she may not survive they will take her into the bush and abandon her to die."

The woman was now said to be in military custody in Abuja, the source added.

abu-phz/gd

Egypt: Release Arrested University Students

$
0
0
Source: Human Rights Watch
Country: Egypt

Raids Aim to Suppress Campus Dissent

(Beirut) – Egyptian authorities should release more than 110 university students arrested since the start of the school year on October 11, 2014. The arrests were apparently aimed at preventing a revival of campus protests that have erupted repeatedly since the overthrow of the former president, Mohamed Morsy, in July 2013. The arrests and subsequent activities appear to be solely directed at the students’ peaceful exercise of the right to free assembly.

Security forces arrested at least 71 students in 15 governorates on October 11, according to the Students for Freedom Observatory, an activist group formed this year to track worsening restrictions on campus political activities. The group said many students were seized from their homes in pre-dawn raids that involved uniformed police, plainclothes officers, and heavily-armed special forces units. Police arrested another 44 on October 12 after protests erupted at universities across the country, and a further 17 on October 13. Authorities have released 14 students, the observatory said, but ordered many others detained for 15 days pending investigation. One institution, Monofeya University, ordered five students suspended for organizing protests, the Observatory said.

“This mass arrest of students is a pre-emptive strike on free speech and free assembly,” said Joe Stork, deputy Middle East and North Africa director. “Universities should be safe zones for the exchange of ideas, including political debates.”

Most of those arrested apparently had participated in protests calling for academic freedom and the release of previously detained students, as well as expressing opposition to Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, the former defense minister who removed Morsy and was elected president in June.

In the 2013-2014 academic year following Morsy’s ouster, at least 14 students died in protest-related violence, according to the Egyptian newspaper Al-Ahram. Authorities delayed this academic year to mid-October to prepare for demonstrations. In June, al-Sisi issued a presidential decree that allows him to directly appoint university and faculty deans. Following a 2011 change made by Egypt’s post-revolutionary military rulers, university faculty had elected their own leadership. University deans can now dismiss faculty members for “crimes that disturb the educational process.” Cairo University, the country’s preeminent secular higher education institution, has banned all political activity. The government has hired the private security firm Falcon to guard entrances at 12 universities.

Saturday’s campaign of arrests appeared to unfold the same way across Egypt.

Police arrived at the home of Mustafa Tarek, 21, at around 2:30 a.m. on October 11, his brother, Mohamed, told Human Rights Watch. Tarek, a recent graduate in engineering from Mansoura University, had helped organize a boycott of the university’s final exams this year to protest the beating of students by campus security guards. The university was forced to reschedule the exams, his brother said.

Around two dozen uniformed and plainclothes police entered the family apartment, located near the university, and refused to show Tarek’s father a warrant when he asked for one, Mohamed said. When Mohamed objected to the police entering Tarek’s bedroom, where Mohamed’s four-year-old son was also sleeping, police punched him and his father, Mohamed said. After overturning furniture and searching drawers, the police took Tarek from the apartment. When Mohamed asked where they were taking him, the police told him that it was none of his business. Authorities questioned Tarek about whether he belonged to the Muslim Brotherhood or organized protests and ordered him detained for 15 days, Mohamed said.

Police took Islam Abdullah, 21, from his family’s home in the Shehadiyya district of Damietta at around 1:30 a.m. on October 11, according to his father, Gamal. Around 10 to 15 policemen wearing uniforms and plainclothes, some armed with assault rifles, woke the family and took Abdullah to the street, where two microbuses were waiting, the father said.

Abdullah, a fourth-year commerce student at Damietta University, is student union deputy president. His father said he did not know whether his son had participated in protests. After police arrested Abdullah, Gamal said he went to the city’s main state security building to wait. At around 3 a.m., he said, he saw police march Abdullah, his hands handcuffed in front of him, into the building. Gamal said he has received no further information about his son.

Also at around 3 a.m. on October 11, in Cairo’s Sayyida Zeinab district, police knocked on the door of Ibrahim Salah’s family apartment, according to Salah’s mother, Aisha. They asked Salah, who answered the door, for his university and personal identification cards, then searched the apartment, overturning drawers and furniture. The group included police officers and special forces troops who wore masks, she said.

After police found a clothespin that said “The Martyr Abdel Rahman Hassan,” Salah, a 23-year-old engineering student in his second year at Helwan University, told them that it referred to a friend. The officers took Salah’s mobile phone and laptop and did not respond when Aisha asked where they were taking her son. They marched Salah from the apartment, she said.

Aisha said that Salah’s older brothers visited the local police station and prosecutor’s office, but authorities have not provided any information about where he is being held or what charges he might face. A police officer told a lawyer for the family that it would be better if he did not follow them as they took Salah away, Aisha said.

“I just don’t want my son to be hurt, he’s a very good person, he doesn’t deserve that,” she said. “I’m so scared for him, I’m so scared for his sake. But I stood my ground, I didn’t break down.”

In another arrest at the same time, state security officers came to the family apartment of Ahmed Yasser, a 22-year-old computer science student in his fourth year at Helwan University, at around 3 a.m. on October 11, his sister Inas told Human Rights Watch. Three men carried weapons, including a man who stood at the door with an assault rifle, she said.

The officers who searched the apartment, in Cairo’s Medinat Nasr district, said they had come because Yasser was calling for protests on October 12, according to Inas. Yasser, a vocal supporter of Morsy, had once belonged to the university’s student union and had organized “anti-coup” protests calling for the release of detained students, Inas said. Police had earlier arrested him at a protest in May 2014, and a court sentenced him to five years in prison for protesting illegally, belonging to a banned group, and insulting the army and police. Authorities had released Yasser during the trial and had not re-arrested him following his conviction, Inas said.

On October 12, she said, prosecutors ordered Yasser, now held in Madinat Nasr’s First Police Station, to be held for 15 days pending investigation.

occupied Palestinian territory: This is how, at the last minute, the first shipment of commercial goods from Gaza to the West Bank was canceled

$
0
0
Source: Gisha
Country: occupied Palestinian territory

October 14, 2014. Two truckloads of agricultural products were expected to exit the Gaza Strip today for sale in the West Bank. The short drive to Hebron would have symbolized the first time that commercial access would have been permitted between Gaza and the West Bank since July 2007- but it didn’t happen. The trucks, one carrying sweet potatoes and the other dates, were sent back to the Strip, at a cost of tens of thousands of shekels to their respective sellers.

Despite meetings which took place between the Israeli and Palestinian agricultural coordinators, the procedures that are to regulate the marketing of products from Gaza to the West Bank were not published. This led to misunderstandings between the relevant parties, specifically as concerned demands regarding packaging and labeling. The goods cannot be re-refrigerated and so the farmers will be compelled to sell what they can on the local market and destroy the rest.

Next Wednesday, October 22, a meeting is planned for the Israeli and Palestinian agricultural coordinators along with 18 representatives of the private sector from Gaza in order to hammer out the details related to the potential marketing of goods from Gaza to the West Bank. The Palestinian side is asking that Israel publish its guidelines in an organized way on the matter and that it make the most of the scanner at Kerem Shalom to allow goods to cross in a cost-effective way.

Construction materials

Seventy-five truckloads of construction materials were expected to enter Gaza today for the private sector for the first time in a year (other than a one-time gesture last winter). The shipment of materials, all coming from Israel, was expected to be composed of 15 truckloads of cement, 10 of steel, and 50 of gravel. Two contractors were to receive the materials, denoted for the construction of housing units.

At present, it’s not clear whether construction materials will continue to flow in steadily in the future and at what pace. We don’t have details beyond what has been published by the United Nations regarding the construction materials coordination mechanism, how it will work and who will be responsible for implementing it.

Gisha expresses its hope that all the relevant criteria and procedures for any new policy on access will be published and then implemented in a speedy way that allows for the maximum possible movement and access. In other words, that these are indeed indications of an impending and full reversal of the civilian closure on Gaza.

Sierra Leone: Sierra Leone's contact tracers work to curtail Ebola outbreak

$
0
0
Source: UN Population Fund
Country: Sierra Leone

KAILAHUN/NEW YORK – As Ebola infections continue to escalate at an alarming rate in West Africa, UNFPA-trained contact tracers in Sierra Leone are playing a vital role in mitigating the public health crisis.

Ebola is one of the world’s deadliest diseases: Case fatality rates can range from 25 to 90 per cent. In Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone – the countries most affected by the outbreak – some 8,376 cases of Ebola have been reported, and 4,024 people have died, according to a 10 October report by the World Health Organization (WHO). Additional cases have been reported in Nigeria, Senegal, Spain and the United States, countries with “localized transmission” of the disease.

Yet the spread of Ebola is far from inevitable. Rapid identification, isolation and care by health workers using strict infection control measures can curtail an outbreak. Unfortunately, such measures are often difficult in countries with weak health systems – such as those worst affected by the disease.

But contact tracers in Sierra Leone are helping to speed identification, isolation and treatment. As of 10 October, UNFPA had helped train 2,100 health workers to serve as contact tracers and health supervisors in the country.

On the front lines

Since its first Ebola case was confirmed in May, Sierra Leone has seen 2,950 cases, including 930 deaths, according to WHO. Infections have been identified throughout much of the country.

Ebola can be spread as soon as an infected person develops symptoms, which can happen any time within the virus’s 21-day incubation period. Contact tracers are tasked with finding every person who has come into contact with an infected person and monitoring them for the full incubation period.

“People that have come in contact with either a dead body, somebody that has died of Ebola, or somebody that is sick of Ebola, those people, we call them contacts,” James Squire, a doctor and district medical officer in Kailahun District, said in a film released by UNFPA. “The contact tracers... monitor them on a daily basis for 21 days.”

“If there is anyone who develops symptoms, these people are then removed and put into holding centres. They are then tested, and if they are found to be positive, they are taken to treatment centres,” said UNFPA’s Representative in Sierra Leone, Bannet Ndyanabangi.

“We have partnered with telephone companies to ensure that every district in Sierra Leone has at least 100 contact tracers,” Dr. Ndyanabangi noted. “The contact tracers are then deployed. They are given telephones – cell phones – they are connected, and they report to the surveillance officers at chiefdom level.”

Intensive efforts

The process can be time-consuming and laborious.

“When they assign us to a contact, we go there two or three times a day,” said Nyuma Ensa, a contact tracer. “For some people, you go there in the morning but they are gone... So we go there in the afternoon, and meet them, we talk to them. If they are not home, we come back in the evening.”

With persistence, the contact tracers earn people’s trust. “They tell us how they feel right away when they are not feeling well. They will tell you that they didn’t sleep well. They tell us that they had a fever or headaches,” Mr. Ensa explained. When this happens, “we call our supervisor to come see their symptoms and make referrals.”

The tracers have been extremely diligent: According to a 13 October report by the Government of Sierra Leone, 98 per cent of all contacts had been seen by contact tracers in the previous 24 hours.

And their efforts are saving lives.

“On the 13th, they knew I had contact with an Ebola patient,” said Philip Jusu, a resident of Kailahun District. “On that very day, the 13th, they filled a form for me” assigning a contact tracer to his case.

“He will ask, ‘Philip, how did you sleep?’” Mr. Jusu said, describing the process. “Then he will ask me if I have a headache, if I’m feeling cold, vomiting, have frequent stool, blood in my eyes or if my eyes are red.”

When Mr. Jusu began to develop symptoms, the tracer identified the possible infection immediately.

“I was okay until after the 20th,” Mr. Jusu said. “I started feeling sick two weeks after the death of the contact. I started feeling cold, and later I had a headache.”

He tested positive for Ebola and was taken to a treatment centre. Mr. Jusu was extremely fortunate – he made a full recovery.

A tremendous contribution

Today, the impact of the Ebola outbreak extends far beyond those infected.

Health systems are overwhelmed, limiting access to routine and life-saving care. In some places, fear of health workers has exacerbated the issue. Markets and supply systems have also been severely disrupted.

Despite these problems, contact tracers are playing a critical and courageous role in the Ebola response. UNFPA is also supporting contact tracing and monitoring activities in Liberia and Guinea, among other measures.

“Surveillance is one of the most important pillars in communicable disease control and prevention,” said Abu Bakarr Fofanah, Sierra Leone’s Minister of Health and Sanitation.

“The contact tracers have helped,” Dr. Fofanah said, “and have really made a tremendous contribution.”

India: Emergency relief efforts underway to help India cyclone victims

$
0
0
Source: Christian Aid
Country: India

14 October 2014 - Christian Aid partners are involved in the relief effort now underway in the Indian states of Andhra Pradesh and Odisha after Cyclone Hudhud forced 350,000 people to abandon their homes.

Despite the mass evacuation to relief camps, at least 21 people are known to have died when winds of up to 125mph slammed into India’ s east coast at midday on Sunday.

The wind and incessant rain wrecked homes, uprooted trees, tore down power and communication lines, cut off road and rail links and flooded thousands of acres of farmland.

Fishermen and small scale farmers living in thatched huts and houses in both states were particularly vulnerable, with many of them still trying to recover financially from widespread flooding in August, and the destruction wrought by a cyclone last October.

Most of the deaths occurred in the city of Visakhapatnam in Andhra Pradesh, where houses were destroyed, and the roof blown off the city airport. Some 80 per cent of the city’s greenery was reportedly lost in the high winds.

The region is prone to cyclone activity. Of the 35 deadliest storms in recorded history, some 27 have passed through the Bay of Bengal, landing in either India or Bangladesh.

Christian Aid’s regional emergency manager, Dipankar Patnaik, said: “India’s eastern coast and neighbouring Bangladesh are routinely hit by severe storms between April and November. This is the stark reality facing some of the poorest and most vulnerable communities.

“It is an incredibly worrying time. People fear for their safety, for their loved ones and for their livelihoods. Whole communities rely on farming and fishing to make ends meet. Rice, coconut, cashew and mango crops have been ruined, and with it people’s source of income.”

Christian Aid partner Church’s Auxiliary for Social Action (CASA ) is trying to get through to some of the remote villages to set up feeding centres.

Two other partners, the Society for National Integration and Rural Development (SNIRD) and Visionaries of Creative Action for Liberation & Progress (VICALP), are co-ordinating with other aid agencies the provision of tarpaulins and water, sanitation and hygiene kits to worst hit areas.

Donations can be made to Christian Aid’s disasters and emergencies fund at www.christianaid.org.uk

Pictures available

Further information from Andrew Hogg 0207 523 2058 or 24 hour press duty phone – 07850 242950.

Notes to editors:

  1. Christian Aid works in some of the world's poorest communities in around 50 countries at any one time. We act where there is great need, regardless of religion, helping people to live a full life, free from poverty. We provide urgent, practical and effective assistance in tackling the root causes of poverty as well as its effects.

  2. Christian Aid’s core belief is that the world can and must be changed so that poverty is ended: this is what we stand for. Everything we do is about ending poverty and injustice: swiftly, effectively, sustainably. Our strategy document Partnership for Change explains how we set about this task.

  3. Christian Aid is a member of the ACT Alliance, a global coalition of more than 130 churches and church-related organisations that work together in humanitarian assistance, advocacy and development. Further details at http://actalliance.org

  4. Follow Christian Aid's newswire on Twitter: http://twitter.com/caid_newswire

  5. For more information about the work of Christian Aid visit http://www.christianaid.org.uk


Sudan: State of Emergency imposed in East Darfur

$
0
0
Source: Radio Dabanga
Country: Sudan

KHARTOUM (14 Oct.) - The Sudan Armed Forces Army have admitted that a brigadier was molested by militiamen in Ed Daein, capital of East Darfur, on Thursday. Today, the State of Emergency will be imposed in the entire state of East Darfur.

On Thursday, elements of the paramilitary Border guards, and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), commanded by the security apparatus, raided a train in Ed Daein on Thursday in search of weapons.

It was rumoured that the train, en route from Nyala to Khartoum, transported large quantities of arms and ammunition for Ma'aliya militant tribesmen in East Darfur's Adila locality. Tensions between the warring Ma'aliya and Reizeigat in East Darfur are running high these days.

Col. Sawarmi Khalid Saad, the spokesman for the Sudanese army, acknowledged in a press statement on Monday that Brig. Gen. Esam Mustafa Surour, commander of the 25th Division in Ed Daein, was severely beaten by paramilitary combatants, when he attempted to prevent them to raid the train. On Sunday, the spokesman had denied the assault.

RSF leaders said that the brigadier abused the militiamen, who then responded by molesting him. Apart from searching the train, they plundered a number of shops in the vicinity of the train station.

Curfew

The commissioner of El Daein locality, Ali El Taher Sharif, informed Radio Dabanga that the State of Emergency would be announced for East Darfur state on Tuesday.

“A curfew will be imposed from 7 pm until 7 am, to curb the widespread acts of killing, kidnapping, and plundering by outlaws”.

Liberia: SRSG statement following the death of an UNMIL international civilian infected with Ebola

$
0
0
Source: UN Mission in Liberia
Country: Liberia

Monrovia, 14 October 2014

Special Representative of the Secretary-General Karin Landgren made the following statement today:

A United Nations Volunteer, who worked in UNMIL Medical, has passed away in hospital, after testing positive for the Ebola Virus Disease [EVD] on 6 October. This is the second death in the mission due to Ebola. An earlier probable case resulted in the death of a national staff member on 25 September.

UNMIL colleagues are saddened by the tragic news as they continue to serve at this very difficult time. Our thoughts now are with the family and friends of the departed.

UNMIL has taken all necessary measures to prevent any possible further transmission within or outside the mission. The UNMIL Medical team conducted immediate and robust contact tracing to ensure all people that came into contact with both staff members while they were symptomatic are assessed and quarantined. All UNMIL staff considered at-risk have been isolated, and ambulances and other locations decontaminated.

The mission is extending the review of its actions initiated in the wake of the first, probable, case of EVD. UNMIL will continue to strengthen the mitigation measures that had until late September helped to prevent any of our personnel in Liberia from contracting Ebola, despite the fact that thousands of UNMIL military, police, and civilians live and operate in affected areas.

With Liberia facing its gravest threat since the civil war ended in 2003, UNMIL’s commitment to the country is steadfast. The mission will continue to do all that it can within its range of capabilities to help roll back the tragedy that is Ebola.

Bolivia (Plurinational State of): ACT Alliance Preliminary Appeal - Post flooding response to water-borne related diseases and food insecurity – BOL141

$
0
0
Source: ACT Alliance
Country: Bolivia (Plurinational State of)
preview


Preliminary Appeal Target: US$134,792

Balance Requested: US$134,792

Geneva, 14 October 2014

Dear Colleagues,

In the first quarter of this year, Bolivia experienced the worst flooding in 60 years. To date the situation is still difficult for affected families as a new rainy season is beginning prematurely. About 60,000 families were affected with 2,000 homes destroyed, 150,000 head of cattle lost including a larger number of small livestock. Additionally, 43,000 hectares of cultivated land was destroyed.

Families across 146 municipalities remain affected to this very day. They lack access to potable water resulting in a rise of intestinal illnesses, respiratory infections and skin irritations. There is also a high risk of dengue fever, malaria and other diseases from mosquitos. Pregnant women and children are the most affected.

The Evangelical Methodist Church in Bolivia(IEMB), through this appeal is planning to assist 450 families in the municipalities of Rurrenabaque and Yucumo in the district of Beni; and 140 families in the municipalities of Puerto Villaroel and Entre Rios in the district of Cochabamba.

The overall goal of the response is to support 450 families who have not received adequate attention from their local governments, in recuperating their food security, rehabilitation of water systems and the strengthening of preventative knowledge and psychosocial community-based support.

The objectives of the response are as follows:

1.- Medical referral & health and hygiene education for disease prevention to the 2,700 people affected by the current emergency.

2.- Support 450 families in the process of recovering their livelihoods and food security.

3.- Rehabilitate three (3) water systems (pipe lines, home taps, rebuilding distribution mains - according to the damages).

4.- Train 24 volunteers in “community-based psychosocial support” to give psychosocial attention and draw up an emergency plan directed towards the 450 participating families.

Honduras: Familias afectadas por desbordamientos de río Goascorán

$
0
0
Source: Redhum
Country: Honduras

Fuente: La Tribuna

Unas 3,500 familias resultaron perjudicadas con la crecida del río Goascorán en la Costa de los Amates en el departamento de Valle, zona sur de Honduras.

Estas personas de 16 comunidades que viven en ese sector del territorio hondureño y han perdido sus cultivos en más de 160 manzanas sembradas.

Otra de las repercusiones notorias es la falta de pasto para el ganado que mermará la producción de carne y lácteos.

Para evaluar los daños, elementos de la Comisión Permanente de Contingencias (Copeco), junto a personal del Cuerpo de Bomberos llegaron al lugar.

Con antelación, expertos advirtieron sobre el riesgo de inundaciones y deslaves que podrían evitarse con ciertas construcciones especiales que a futuro serán propuestas ante el Congreso Nacional (CN).

Niger: Lutte contre Ebola - Atelier de validation du "Plan national de préparation et de réponse à l’épidémie de la maladie à virus Ebola au Niger

$
0
0
Source: World Health Organization
Country: Liberia, Niger
preview


Dans le cadre de la préparation et de la réponse à l’épidémie de la maladie à Virus Ebola (MVE) au Niger, un atelier de validation du plan national s’est tenu à Niamey du 8 au 9 octobre 2014 dans l’auditorium Prince Sultan. Cet atelier ouvert officiellement par le Ministre de la Santé Publique Mr Mano Aghali, a regroupé tous les spécialistes en la matière du Ministère de la Santé, des autres secteurs ministériels et des partenaires.
Cet atelier, réalisé avec l’appui technique et financier de l’OMS a rassemblé plus de 60 participants de tous les secteurs tels que les représentants des différents ministères (transports, élevage, intérieur, enseignement, tourisme…) la société civile, le syndicat des agents de santé, le mouvement de la croix rouge et du croissant rouge, les ONG, Associations, le Système des Nations Unies et les Partenaires au développement.

Dans son allocution, le Représentant de l’OMS au Niger, Dr Assimawè Pana, a retracé l’histoirique de cette épidémie en Afrique de l’ouest pour rappeler l’urgence et l’importance de cet atelier dans le cadre de la prévention et de la préparation de la réponse à cette épidémie.

Il a rappelé que depuis le 23 mars 2014, date à laquelle l’Organisation mondiale de la Santé publiait la notifcation officielle d’une flambée de la maladie à virus Ebola en Guinée, cinq pays d’Afrique de l’Ouest sont frappés par l’épidémie. Il s’agit principalement de la Guinée, du Liberia et de la Sierra Leone et dans une moindre mesure du Nigeria et du Sénégal.

Le Représentant a poursuivi en signalant que fort heureusement le Niger n’a pas enregistré de cas, et a rappelé les principales recommandations de la feuille de route de l’OMS pour la lutte contre Ebola dont l’un des points phares est la mise en place d’un plan complet de préparation à la surveillance et à la riposte de la maladie à virus Ebola.

Le Représentant a également rappelé le rôle clé qu’a joué et continue de jouer le Bureau de l’OMS au Niger dans l’accompagnement des autorités sanitaires du Niger dans la préparation et la réponse à cette maladie. C’est ainsi que le Bureau de l’OMS Niger a fourni toute la documentation nécessaire et mis à la disposition du Ministère des thermo flash, des équipements de prévention personnelle, du matériel et médicaments de première nécessité.

Viewing all 23095 articles
Browse latest View live


<script src="https://jsc.adskeeper.com/r/s/rssing.com.1596347.js" async> </script>