THISDAY

Donors Pledge $670m at UN Conference to Support Lake Chad Region

Seek durable solutions to crisis in Nigeria, three others

- Abimbola Akosile

A global United Nations-supported humanitari­an conference in Oslo has generated more than $670 million in pledges that will help sustain critical relief operations in Africa’s Lake Chad Basin over the next two years and beyond across four counties where millions are in need of aid; giving voice to people affected by conflict and crises in the region.

Formally known as the Oslo Humanitari­an Conference on Nigeria and the Lake Chad Region, the donors’ forum also agreed on the need to address longer-term developmen­t requiremen­ts and to seek durable solutions for the crisis-hit countries in the vast Basin-region: Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon.

The conference saw the participat­ion of some 170 representa­tives from 40 countries, UN, regional organisati­ons and civil society organisati­ons. It was co-hosted by Norway, Nigeria, Germany and the UN and followed a civil society meeting with large participat­ion from local organisati­ons work- ing in Nigeria, Chad, Niger and Cameroon.

Speaking at the forum in Oslo, Norway at the weekend, the UN Emergency Relief Coordinato­r and Under-Secretary-General for Humanitari­an Affairs, Stephen O’Brien, said, “Without our increased support, affected communitie­s will face a life of hunger, disease, gender-based violence and continued displaceme­nt.”

“But there is another future within grasp: as the internatio­nal community scales up support, we can stop a further descent into an ever-deepening crisis with unimaginab­le consequenc­es for millions of people,” he added.

According to UN estimates, about 17 million people are living in the most affected areas across the four countries. Of them, some 10.7 million people are in need of immediate humanitari­an assistance, with 8.5 million in North-eastern Nigeria alone, having been made witness to years of violence as a result of Boko Haram’s insurgency.

The region is also threated by fa mine, with children at height ed risk of severe acute malnutriti­on.

The resources pledged at the conference, according to a UN release, will help scale up responses to reach the most vulnerable people with a special attention focused on the protection needs of women, children and youth, as well as the need for longer-term support and durable solutions for the displaced population­s. At the conference, 14 donors pledged $458 million for relief in 2017 and an additional $214 million was announced for 2018 and beyond.

Expressing appreciati­on for the contributi­ons, O’Brien said: “The UN and our partners are ready and mobilised to further scaleup ourlife-savingresp­onse –the people in the region have no time to wait.”

The Spokesman for UN Secretary- General António Guterres said the UN chief welcomed the donor pl edges made, and stressed the need for sustained support to humanitari­an, human rights, developmen­t and security needs in the region.

With return movements of internally displaced people–some 950,000 since August 2015 – and refugee returnees from neighbouri­ng countries under way in B or no, Adam aw a and Yo be states in north-eastern Nigeria, the Office of the UN High Commission­er for Refugees( UN H CR) co-presented with the Government of Nigeria, a paper out lining a vision in Oslo for ensuring protection, access and lasting solutions for them.

“The two strategies of protection and solutions should go hand in hand. To do this we need access […] this is the very big challenge ,” stressed UN High Commission­er for Refugees Filippo Gran di, who also attended the conference.

The paper also noted that many protection issues in areas of displaceme­nt and potential return can contribute to violence and instabilit­y, and advocated for prioritizi­ng measures to ensure physical security, freedom of movement and humanitari­an access.

The document also proposed strengthen­ed response to sexual and gender-based violence as well as protection of children from violence exploitati­on and abuse.

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