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NAIROBI, April 1 (Xinhua) -- The United Nations has
granted about 2 million U.S. dollars from its newly launched standing emergency
fund to the World Health Organization (WHO) to quickly boost programs to stem
suffering and death in drought-hit Horn of Africa.
A statement from the UN Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the grant would enable WHO
to strengthen immunization campaigns augment disease surveillance and train more
health professionals in Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia.
"When we think of life-saving aid, vaccinations are
often the first thing that comes to mind. In major emergencies such as the
drought now affecting East Africa, diseases that cost less than one dollar to
prevent, kill," said Deputy Emergency Relief Coordinator Margareta Wahlstrom in
a statement received here Saturday.
She said the 1.7 million dollars grant, the second to
be allocated from the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) will seethe
individual disbursements per country amount to 70,000 dollars for Djibouti,
450,000 dollars for Eritrea, 350,000 dollars for Ethiopia, 430,000 dollars for
Kenya, and 404,540 dollars for Somalia.
"Immediate funding for immunizations and surveillance
will help us prevent unnecessary deaths," said Wahlstrom.
OCHA said that the allocation of CERF funds for WHO's
projects in East Africa is part of the global response to the drought, the worst
in decades, which has effected 7.5 million people in an area where 18 million
are already chronically undernourished while decimating livestock herds.
"Additional CERF disbursements for East Africa are
currently under consideration. The United Nations will launch a consolidated
appeal for emergency humanitarian funding for the drought-stricken region on
April 7 in Nairobi," the statement said.
As of its March 9 launch, 36 donors had pledged 256
million dollars to the CERF, a key reform of UN relief sought by
Secretary-General Kofi Annan and endorsed by the 2005 World Summit to ensure
swifter responses to humanitarian emergencies, with adequate funds made
available within three to four days as opposed to up to four months or more
under current arrangements.
The first CERF grant, 200,000 dollars for the WHO in
Cote d'Ivoire, is being used to provide emergency health and sanitation
assistance in that country. Enditem |