Yemen’s INGO Steering Committee calls for an urgent end to all hostilities and full humanitarian access

Yemen’s INGO Steering Committee calls for an urgent end to all hostilities and full humanitarian access
YEMEN – Fighting in Yemen is continuing despite Saudi Arabia’s recent announcement of an end to military operations, a group of leading aid agencies has warned. The ongoing conflict is preventing humanitarian organisations from delivering life-saving assistance, the agencies say.
While welcoming the announcement by Saudi Arabia of an end to ‘Operation Decisive Storm’ the INGO Forum Steering Committee in Yemen, representing 47 major aid agencies, is calling for all parties to the conflict to end the violence and seek a negotiated peace.

International humanitarian organisations working in Yemen welcome the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s recent announcement which brought Operation Decisive Storm to an end. However, we remain concerned about the ongoing effects of the continued fighting and we urgently call on all parties to the conflict to end the violence and seek a negotiated peace. All efforts must be taken to ensure that civilians and civilian infrastructure are protected and spared from the ongoing violence. We reassert that international humanitarian and human rights laws must be upheld by all parties at all times.

We call for the international community to support a coordinated and impartial response that addresses both short and long-term civilian needs across the country. In many conflicts, weapons do not cause the greatest casualties and suffering, most often the secondary impacts of war are the most devastating for civilians. Disease, hunger, the destruction of infrastructure and property are the most devastating for innocent civilians. As a country already experiencing food insecurity among 12 million people, and maternal-child health risks, it is all the more crucial the humanitarian response take into account the challenges civilians face now, as well as those we know they will face in the future.

We call for increased and safe humanitarian access necessary to ensure the delivery of life-saving supplies and assistance to those in need. International aid organizations working in Yemen are ready to respond, but have not yet been able to do so at full scale. The continued fighting has resulted in limited access for humanitarian aid workers and severely jeopardizing their safety. Recent reports indicate that three Yemeni aid workers have been killed in crossfire in Aden while trying to save the lives of critically injured civilians. The international community must call on the parties in the conflict to guarantee aid workers safe access and passage to priority areas to ensure the delivery of lifesaving assistance. We are calling on all parties to immediately open land, sea and air routes into the country in order to facilitate the delivery of life-saving aid to the millions of people who continue to suffer from the impact of the violence. Reliant on imports to meet 90 percent of national food consumption, the continued closure of land, sea and air routes is exacerbating the unfolding humanitarian catastrophe. Fuel supplies, also largely reliant on imports, are now dwindling, and the effects are being felt at all levels. Access to water, often pumped by generator, is severely reduced. Without fuel to provide electricity and water, the ability of health facilities to operate life-saving equipment is severely hampered and transportation of essential commodities, such as food to the most in need, becomes extremely challenging.

Yemen has been caught in a protracted crisis and the recent escalation of conflict is exacerbating the situation. Before the escalation of violence, over 60 percent of the population – more than 16 million, including approximately 250,000 refugees – were already reliant on aid, and nearly a million children under five were suffering from acute malnutrition. What little infrastructure the country had is facing collapse. Water, electricity, fuel and food supplies are running low and prices for these essential supplies are increasing exponentially. Many hospitals have been damaged, made inaccessible, or are not functioning due to shortages of staff and essential medical supplies and fuel. This has severe consequences not just for the injured, but also for the approximately 700,000 pregnant women in the country, people with disabilities, and those who rely on recurrent health care.
The community of international humanitarian aid agencies working in Yemen ask for the full support of the international community in our humanitarian efforts in order to pull Yemen back from humanitarian catastrophe.

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[No listing of the INGOs represented on the INGO Forum Steering Committee in Yemen – “representing 47 major aid agencies” – was identified]

Migrant Crossings – Mediterranean [to 2 May 2015]

Migrant Crossings – Mediterranean

EU: Press release – Migration: Parliament calls for urgent measures to save lives
29/04/2015 15:02 | European Parliament
The EU should do everything possible to prevent further loss of life at sea, e.g. by expanding the mandate of “Triton” operation in the Mediterranean to include “search and rescue operations at EU level”, says a resolution voted by Parliament on Wednesday. MEPs also call for a binding quota for distributing asylum seekers among all EU countries, bigger contributions to resettlement programmes, better cooperation with third countries and tougher measures against people smugglers.

Parliament urges the EU and its member states to establish a clear mandate for Triton, “so as to expand its area of operation and increase its mandate for search and rescue operations at EU level” (Triton is coordinated by the EU border agency Frontex and currently extends only 30 nautical miles from the Italian coastline).

The EU and its member states should ensure that “search and rescue obligations are effectively fulfilled”, stresses the resolution, which was approved by 449 votes to 130, with 93 abstentions.

Parliament calls for “a robust and permanent humanitarian European rescue operation, which, like Mare Nostrum, would operate on the high seas and to which all member states would contribute financially and with equipment and assets”. MEPs urge the EU to co-fund such an operation.

EU countries should also continue to show solidarity and commitment by stepping up their contributions to the budgets and operations of Frontex and the European Asylum Support Office (EASO), MEPs add. Parliament also undertakes to provide these agencies with the resources (human and equipment) needed to fulfil their obligations “through the EU budget and its relevant funds”.

Stepping up solidarity and responsibility-sharing among EU countries
Parliament regrets that the 23 April European Council did not pledge to set up a binding EU-wide solidarity mechanism. To respond to the latest tragedies in the Mediterranean with “solidarity and fair sharing of responsibility”, MEPs say that:
:: the European Commission should establish a “binding quota” for distributing asylum seekers among all EU countries,
:: member states should make full use of existing possibilities for issuing humanitarian visas and seriously consider whether to trigger the 2001 Temporary Protection Directive or Article 78(3) of the TFEU (both foresee a solidarity mechanism in the event of mass and sudden inflows of displaced persons),
:: EU countries should make greater contributions to existing resettlement programmes, and
:: the Common European Asylum System rules should be rapidly and fully transposed into national law and implemented by all participating member states.

Cooperating with third countries and fighting smugglers
The resolution calls for closer coordination of EU and member state policies in tackling the root causes of migration and more cooperation with partner countries in the Middle East and Africa.

It also calls for the strongest possible criminal sanctions against human trafficking and smuggling and urges member states and EU agencies to work more closely to detect and trace these criminal networks’ funding and identify their modus operandi, so as to prevent them from making money by putting migrants’ lives at risk.

Note to editors
The purpose of this resolution is to respond to the recent tragic events in the Mediterranean, to the European Council conclusions of 23 April 2015 and to propose a set of urgent measures to be taken immediately. The Civil Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs Committee is currently drafting a report which will reflect Parliament’s medium- and longer-term policy orientations on migration.

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Joint Statement on Protection in the Mediterranean in light of the EU Council’s Decision of 23 April 2015
27 April 2015
:: António Guterres, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
:: Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights
:: Peter Sutherland, Special Representative of the UN Secretary-General For Migration and Development
:: William L. Swing, Director-General of the International Organization for Migration

Given the intensification of boat movements and continued unbearable loss of life in the Mediterranean Sea, we…take note of the Special European Council’s decision of 23 April 2015. We acknowledge the Council’s specific undertaking to “mobilize all efforts at its disposal to prevent further loss of life at sea and to tackle the root causes of the human emergency.”

The Council’s decision is an important first step towards collective European action: the only approach that can tackle a phenomenon of such a scale, complexity and trans-national nature. It will also help pave the way for further elaboration of a new EU Migration Agenda.

A number of preliminary measures have been decided. We appreciate that the details still need to be worked out in consultation with a range of stakeholders, including the institutions we represent, and pledge our full support for developing them further.

The announced tripling of resources for the Frontex Operations Triton and Poseidon is encouraging to the extent it results in increasing rescues of migrants and refugees in distress at sea now and in the foreseeable future. While the efforts of merchant ships are to be commended and welcomed, they are not best equipped to rescue hundreds of people at a time, and are no substitute for a comprehensive and well-resourced EU-led effort with a particular focus on addressing the protection needs of vulnerable migrants and refugees, not least unaccompanied children, survivors of violence and those with special needs.

A number of proposed measures focus on disrupting the smuggling trade and stemming movements, in cooperation with third countries. But law enforcement measures must be accompanied by efforts aimed at reducing the need for migrants and refugees to turn to smugglers in the first place. The situation today calls for measures going beyond border security.

Most smuggling does not involve the crime of trafficking. This distinction is important to maintain in statements and actions initiated in response to the current crisis. Moreover, people resorting to smugglers and those falling prey to traffickers are not criminals. Those boats are carrying human beings who are entitled to their human rights and are in need of international aid and protection. All actions must scrupulously respect International Human Rights Law, International Refugee Law, International Humanitarian Law, the Law of the Sea, and ensure the dignified, safe and humane treatment of migrants.

We look forward to working with EU Member States and institutions on elaborating concrete actions respecting the rights of all migrants and refugees, and consultations to increase resettlement places on offer, on arrangements for pre- and post-arrival assistance, and on relocation to ease the burden on States on Europe’s southern border.

Efforts to deter smuggling will be in vain unless measures are adopted to address overly restrictive migration policies in Europe, as well as the push factors of conflict, human rights violations and economic deprivation in many of the countries of origin and transit. Enforcement measures need to comply with applicable standards for human rights in law enforcement and in the administration of justice.

As the EU Institutions and Member States work on development of a European Agenda for Migration, we look forward to working closely with EU and other stakeholders to expand and enhance the measures announced, with a view to setting in place a more holistic plan consistent with international norms and standards.

In this regard, we believe that additional measures are needed, beyond those already announced, to address the many factors compelling people to move in such precarious circumstances and to transform this into a truly comprehensive response. These measures would, inter alia, include: setting in place migration policies that meet real labour market needs; increasing the provision of safe and regular channels for entry, including by making family reunification more readily accessible and easier; making the Common European Asylum System work more cohesively , especially though intra-EU solidarity measures; making evidence-based and better targeted development investments in origin and transit countries; revisiting measures relating to trade practices and labour migration; stemming arms trafficking; promoting proactive peaceful settlement of disputes; and vigorously combatting all forms of racism, religious intolerance and xenophobia.

The international community has a shared responsibility to ensure the protection of migrants and refugees who are making the journey across the Mediterranean Sea. The scale, complexity and sophistication of the response should be in line with the scale and complexity of the problem. We need a truly comprehensive response that will serve as a testimony to those lost at sea and those who have survived to recount the experience.

The institutions we represent all have a stake in being part of the solution to the on-going tragedy in the Mediterranean. We are drawing up plans to increase our support in a number of indicative areas, for example by:

SRSG FOR MIGRATION AND DEVELOPMENT
:: Active diplomacy with States in Europe, Africa and elsewhere to safeguard the rights of all migrants and promote fair and equitable migration policies that contribute to sustainable development.

UNHCR
:: Stepping up operational support, as needed, in Southern and South Eastern Europe, North Africa and in the Horn of Africa
:: Supporting various proposals already made under the Central Mediterranean Sea Initiative, including: increased refugee resettlement, enhanced family reunification and other forms of admission; support for intra-EU solidarity and responsibility sharing measures, including relocation possibly through a pilot project for Syrian arrivals in Greece and Italy; and information campaigns along transit routes aimed at informing people of the risks of onward movements
:: Disseminating the SAR Guide developed with the International Maritime Organization and International Chamber of Shipping

OHCHR
:: Disseminating OHCHR’s Recommended Principles and Guidelines on Human Rights at International Borders
:: Supporting an independent inquiry into the recent tragic incidents in the Mediterranean
:: Providing advice on the human rights of all migrants at points of origin, transit and destination
:: Promoting compliance with international standards for human rights in law enforcement
:: Combatting racism, religious intolerance and xenophobia in all its forms

IOM
:: Implementing the Missing Migrants project which seeks to document loss of life
:: Cooperating with and implementing anti-smuggling and trafficking efforts
:: Setting in place a Migrant Response and Resource Mechanism along migratory routes in key sub-Saharan African countries to identify persons in need of help, offer counselling, make referrals and provide assistance, including with voluntary return for economic migrants
:: Supporting EU Regional Development and Protection Programmes
:: Following the specific call on IOM in the EU Council conclusion, working towards building capacities of and supporting countries of origin in the voluntary return and reintegration to ensure that return forms part of a comprehensive response

Progress of the World’s Women 2015-2016: Transforming Economies, Realizing Rights

Progress of the World’s Women 2015-2016: Transforming Economies, Realizing Rights
UN Women
2015 :: ISBN: 978-1-63214-015-9 :: 342 pages
Report documentation: http://progress.unwomen.org/en/2015/download/index.html#report

FOREWORD
BY PHUMZILE MLAMBO-NGCUKA, UNDER-SECRETARY-GENERAL AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, UN WOMEN
In 2014, an unprecedented number of countries provided reports on the extent to which they had been able to implement the Beijing Platform for Action, adopted 20 years ago in 1995 as a global blueprint for the achievement of gender equality.

These 167 reports, and the associated regional and global reviews, gave us the clearest reading to date of the status of gender equality across the world.

Progress of the World’s Women: Transforming economies, realizing rights, provides a timely, action-oriented counterpoint to the Beijing+20 findings. With a view to changing both economic and social institutions, it distils and confronts the most glaring gaps between the laws and policies that guarantee equal rights for women and girls, and the reality on the ground. The drive to achieve substantive equality – making rights real for women – is at the heart of this Progress report, and it provides the evidence and recommendations for public action to achieve it.

Our analysis shows that economic and social policies can contribute to fairer and more gender-equal societies, as well as stronger and more prosperous economies, if they are designed and implemented with women’s rights at their centre. For example, to increase women’s access to decent work, the removal of formal legal barriers to their employment is important, but we also need measures that free up women’s time, such as affordable childcare options and investments in basic infrastructure. We need to enable shifts both great and small in social norms, so that men can take on care work and engage in other areas that foster and demonstrate altered attitudes of responsibility.

As Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has said, ours is the first generation with the potential to end poverty.

Equally important, and intrinsically linked to that goal, it is in this generation’s reach to transform gender relations, to empower women and girls, and humanity as a whole.
We know what needs to be done to achieve equality and a 50:50 Planet by 2030. Together with the findings of the Beijing +20 review, let this report be a call to urgent and sustained action, frontloaded for the next five years, to start real, visible change, especially in the lives of the most marginalized. My hope is that everyone will be inspired to be part of a re-energized and growing movement for gender equality. With determined people from all walks of life, and with more determined leaders, gender equality can be a defining achievement of the first quarter of the 21st century.

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Press release: New report from UN Women unveils far-reaching alternative policy agenda to transform economies and make gender equality a reality
“Progress of the World’s Women 2015-2016: Transforming Economies, Realizing Rights” launches in seven cities
Date : 27 April 2015
(London, 27 April, 2015) A major report from UN Women, released today in seven locations globally, brings together human rights and economic policymaking to call for far-reaching changes to the global policy agenda that will transform economies and make women’s rights, and equality, a reality. It takes an in-depth look at what the economy would look like if it truly worked for women, for the benefit of all.

Progress makes the case that the alternative economic agenda it outlines would not only create fairer societies, it would also create new sectors of employment, for instance in the care economy.

The report is being published as the international community comes together to define a transformative new agenda for sustainable development, 20 years after the landmark Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, China, which set out an ambitious agenda to advance gender equality.

Since the Beijing Conference, significant advances have been made by many societies, particularly in advancing women’s legal rights. However, as Progress shows, in an era of unprecedented global wealth, millions of women are still consigned to work in low paid, poor quality jobs, denied even basic levels of health care, without access to clean water and decent sanitation.

Globally, only half of women participate in the labour force, compared to three quarters of men. In developing regions, up to 95 per cent of women’s employment is informal, in jobs that are unprotected by labour laws and lack social protection.

Women still carry the burden of unpaid care work, which austerity policies and cutbacks have only intensified. To build fairer, more sustainable economies which work for women and men, a future comprising more of the same will no longer do.

“Our public resources are not flowing in the directions where they are most needed: for example, to provide safe water and sanitation, quality health care, and decent child- and elderly-care services. Where there are no public services, the deficit is borne by women and girls,” said UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka.

“This is a care penalty that unfairly punishes women for stepping in when the State does not provide resources and it affects billions of women the world over. We need policies that make it possible for both women and men to care for their loved ones without having to forego their own economic security and independence,” she added.

Through solid, in-depth analysis and data, this evidence-based report provides ten key recommendations for actions that governments and others can take in order to move towards an economy that truly works for women, to the benefit of all.

Progress sets out a vision of a global economy fit for women, where they have equal access to productive resources and social protection, which provides them with sufficient income to support an adequate standard of living. In such an economy, the work that women do would be respected and valued; stereotypes about what women and men can and should do would be eliminated; and women would be able to work and live their lives free from violence and sexual harassment.

The reality, however, is very different.

The report reveals that globally, on average, women are paid 24 per cent less than men. The gaps for women with children are even wider: In South Asia, for example, the gender pay gap is 35 per cent for women with children (compared to 14 per cent for those without). Lower rates of labour force participation, gender pay gaps and lower access to pensions add to a huge care penalty for women. In France and Sweden, over their lifetime, women can expect to earn 31 per cent less than men; in Germany 49 per cent less than men; and in Turkey, an average woman can expect to earn a staggering 75 per cent less than an average man over her lifetime.

Women are clustered into a limited set of under-valued occupations. For example, 83 per cent of domestic workers worldwide are women and almost half of them are not entitled to the minimum wage. Even when women succeed in the workplace, they encounter obstacles not generally faced by their male counterparts. For example, in the EU, 75 per cent of women in management and higher professional positions and 61 per cent of women in service sector occupations have experienced some form of sexual harassment in the workplace in their lifetimes.

An economy designed with women’s needs in mind would give them an equal voice in economic decision-making: from the way in which time and money are spent in their households, to the ways in which resources are raised and allocated at the national level, to how broader economic parameters are set by global institutions.

Women are still under-represented in economic leadership positions, from trade unions to corporate boards, from finance ministries to international financial institutions. Women’s membership in trade unions is growing in some countries, but they rarely reach top leadership positions. In 2014, across six of the most influential global economic institutions, women’s representation on their boards ranged from 4 to 20 per cent.

Through case studies and concrete examples of change from Bolivia to Botswana, Progress calls for a paradigm shift in the way governments, financial institutions, businesses and civil society approach economic policy thinking and human rights, to bring about an alternative economic agenda which places women and their rights at its centre.

“The new economic agenda that UN Women is advocating for is not a pipe dream. Many countries, including low-income developing countries, are already implementing elements of this agenda,” said Shahra Razavi, Chief of UN Women’s Research and Data Section and lead author of the report. “The kind of change we need is far-reaching, but it can be done.”

In its key recommendations, Progress underlines that with the right mix of economic and social policies, governments can generate decent jobs for women (and men) and ensure that the unpaid care work that goes into sustaining all economies is recognized and supported. Well-designed social services (e.g. health, care services) and social protection measures (e.g. pensions) can enhance women’s income security, from birth to old age, and enhance their capacity to seize economic opportunities and expand their life options.

Macroeconomic policies can and should support the realization of women’s rights, by creating dynamic and stable economies, by generating decent work and by mobilizing resources to finance vital public services. Governments need to go beyond the old metrics of GDP growth and low inflation, and instead measure success in terms of the realization of human rights.

Women’s economic and social rights – the right to a decent job, to health care and a life free from violence and discrimination – are guaranteed in human rights treaties, which almost all governments in the world have signed. Governments are ultimately responsible for delivering these rights, but they cannot do it alone. International financial institutions and the private sector are among the key players that shape the economy. They all need to be held accountable by civil society and the public, to play their part.

The changes proposed in the report will not only make the economy work for women, but also benefit the majority of men for whom the economy is not working either. The report argues that progress for women is progress for all.

Global evidence on inequities in rural health protection

Global evidence on inequities in rural health protection
New data on rural deficits in health coverage for 174 countries
ILO – ESS (Extension of Social Security) Paper Series No. 47
Edited by Xenia Scheil-Adlung, ILO
2015 :: 83 pages
Summary
This paper presents global estimates on rural/urban disparities in access to health-care services. The report uses proxy indicators to assess key dimensions of coverage and access involving the core principles of universality and equity. Based on the results of the estimates, policy options are discussed to close the gaps in a multi-sectoral approach addressing issues and their root causes both within and beyond the health sector.

Foreword
While inequities in health protection are increasingly recognized as an important issue in current policy debates on universal health coverage (UHC) and in the post-2015 agenda, the rural/urban divide is largely ignored. A key reason for disregarding equity in coverage and access to health care of large parts of the population relates to the nearly complete absence of disaggregated data providing sufficient information at national, regional and global level. Only vague and fragmented information, often limited to microdata, can be found.

Given this gap in information, it is hardly possible to quantify and assess the extent of disparities and deficits experienced by rural populations as regards key aspects of their rights to health and social protection; the availability, affordability and financial protection of needed health services; and increases or decreases in inequities. Further, governments and policy-makers lack evidence to set priorities, and thus face challenges in addressing the issues that are spread over various policy domains including health, social protection, labour market and more generally economic and fiscal policies.

This paper presents and analyses for the first time related global, regional and national data. It is developed and made available by the ILO. The data allow investigating both the extent of and major causes of rural/urban inequities in coverage and access to health care. Further, it discusses impacts and policy options to achieve more equitable results.
The data development and related assessments provided in this paper are anchored in the framework of universal health protection along the lines of international legal standards, particularly the ILO Social Protection Floors Recommendation, 2012 (No. 202) and the UN Resolution on Universal Health Coverage (12 December 2012).

The paper has been developed as part of the mandate of the ILO Areas of Critical Importance (ACI) on Decent Work in the Rural Economy as well as the ACI on Creating and Extending Social Protection Floors, and has been reviewed by a significant number of experts in relevant development agencies. It highlights the needs of disadvantaged, marginalized and vulnerable rural populations and contributes to related global research products and statistics. Further, it provides guidance to ILO member States on establishing and extending social protection floors for all as a fundamental element of national social security systems.

The evidence provided in the paper suggests that inequalities in coverage and access to health care exist globally, in every region and nearly every country. In fact, the place of residence can be considered as the entry door or key barrier to accessing needed health care. Against this background, the paper aims at contributing to the development of urgently needed policy responses realizing the universal human rights to social protection and health, particularly for rural populations.
Isabel Ortiz
Director
Social Protection Department
International Labour Organization

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Press Release
Social Protection
More than half of the global rural population excluded from health care
ILO report shows huge differences in health care access between rural and urban areas worldwide.
27 April 2015
GENEVA (ILO News) – A new ILO report shows that 56 per cent of people living in rural areas worldwide do not have access to essential health-care services – more than double the figure in urban areas, where 22 per cent are not covered…

…The highest number of people in rural areas who are not covered by essential health-care services is in Africa where it amounts to 83 per cent. The most affected countries also face the highest levels of poverty.

The largest differences between rural and urban areas, however, exist in Asia. For example, in Indonesia the percentage of people that are not covered is twice as high in rural areas as in urban areas.

“Decades of underinvestment in health interrupted efforts to develop national health systems and ultimately resulted in the neglect of health in rural areas. This has a huge human cost. Health is a human right and should be provided to all residents within a country,” said Isabel Ortiz, Director of the ILO’s Social Protection Department.

Lack of health workers in rural areas
The ILO study further finds that even if access to health care is guaranteed by law, people in rural areas remain excluded from health care because such laws are not enforced where they live.

The situation is worsened by the lack of health workers in the world’s rural areas. Although half of the world’s population lives in them, only 23 per cent of the global health workforce is deployed to rural areas. The ILO estimates that 7 million out of the total 10.3 million health workers who are lacking globally are needed in these areas.

Africa and Latin America are the two regions where this problem is most acute. In Nigeria, for example, more than 82 per cent of the rural population is excluded from health-care services due to insufficient numbers of health workers compared to 37 per cent in urban areas.

Underfunding is closely linked to the unavailability of services. The ILO study shows that financial resource gaps are nearly twice as high in rural than in urban areas. The largest gaps are found in Africa. However, significant inequities also exist in Asia and Latin America.

The extent of impoverishing out-of-pocket payments (OOPs) is also high in rural areas. The study shows that rural populations in Africa and Asia are burdened with OOPs that amount to 42 and 46 per cent of total health expenditure respectively. In many Asian countries such as Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Cambodia and Sri Lanka, OOPs are two to three times higher in rural than in urban areas.

“The lack of legal coverage, insufficient numbers of health workers, inadequate funding, and high OOPs have created life-threatening inequities in many countries,” said Xenia Scheil-Adlung, Health Policy Coordinator at the ILO.

“Strengthening both the demand and supply side of services is crucial when moving towards universal health protection, particularly in rural areas. Legal health coverage is necessary, but not sufficient. Only when quality services are actually made available and affordable for all those in need can effective access to health care be ensured,” she added.

Closing the gaps
The study explains that closing rural health access gaps requires a comprehensive and systematic approach that simultaneously addresses missing rights, health workers, funding, financial protection and quality. Such an approach needs to be based on the principles of universality and equity and calls for solidarity in financing and burden sharing.

“Addressing such inequities needs to consider the specific characteristics of rural populations, including high poverty rates and informality of work. This means moving from charity to rights, the provision of health workers with decent working conditions that enhance productivity, and the minimization of out-of-pocket payments by patients to avoid poverty. It also requires complementary socio-economic and labour market policies to trigger inclusive economic growth,” said Scheil-Adlung.

The study highlights the key role that national social protection floors can play in reducing and eliminating rural/urban gaps through human rights-based approaches. In this sense, it points to the importance of ILO Recommendation 202 on social protection floors.

“This study shows that investing in rural health, as part of a national health system, is affordable and yields significant economic and social returns. Progress towards universal health protection is possible in any country, irrespective of its level of income,” Ortiz concludes.

FAO – Platform for pastoralists aims to give a voice to millions

FAO – Platform for pastoralists aims to give a voice to millions
New initiative aims to bring pastoral concerns into global policy dialogue

27 April 2015, Rome – Millions of pastoralists will benefit from a new online knowledge hub that will help them raise their voices in international policy debates and share valuable information to strengthen their agricultural livelihoods.

The Pastoralist Knowledge Hub – launched today by FAO, the European Union, Germany and other partners – will enable mobile livestock keepers to connect, to meet and discuss issues like agricultural innovations or land regulations and find shared solutions to common challenges.

“Pastoralists are able to produce food where no crops can be grown. Yet, their concerns are poorly heard by the international community,” Helena Semedo, FAO Deputy Director-General, said on Monday. “This hub is an important platform to help them project their voices, share knowledge, and affect policy debates.”

The hub also offers a growing database of research on pastoralism, contacts for a worldwide network of pastoral representatives, and discussion forums for pastoralist networks and partnering institutions.

It also includes a mechanism that lets pastoral communities nominate and select representatives to global forums such as the Committee on World Food Security.

Seven regional meetings with pastoralist networks to shape the initiative are being held until October 2015.

Rich legacy, diverse challenges
The several hundred million pastoralists who manage the world’s rangelands rely on a rich legacy of traditional knowledge and mobility to survive in the harshest environments on the planet.

They remain important producers of livestock, meat, milk, hair and hides and in many countries produce more than half of agricultural GDP.

Livestock grazing on pastoralist rangelands also provides valuable benefits to ecosystems, including helping to recycle plants back into fertile soil and controlling the growth of bush and weeds.

Examples of more well-known pastoral societies include the Bedouin of North Africa and the Arabian Peninsula, the Maasai in East Africa, the Navajo of North America, the Sherpa in Nepal, and Scandinavia’s Sami people.

Despite their importance to food production and ecosystems, pastoralists have traditionally been marginalized in decision-making on matters like the decrease of rangelands and the disruption of their mobility routes that negatively affect their lives and livelihoods.

They have frequently been subject to attempts to alter their nomadic lifestyles and often find it hard to access health services and schools

Pastoralists are also still poorly represented in decision-making processes in high-level institutions such as the United Nations and their own national governments.

Teaching and learning about child rights: A study of implementation in 26 countries – UNICEF

Teaching and learning about child rights: A study of implementation in 26 countries
UNICEF
2015 :: 88 pages
Lee Jerome, Lesley Emerson, Laura Lundy and Karen Orr
This research was commissioned and funded by the Advocacy and Child Rights Education Unit at the UNICEF Private Fundraising and Partnerships Division, Geneva. This baseline research undertaken by the Centre for Children’s Rights in Queens’ University Belfast
Full report pdf: http://www.unicef.org/crc/files/CHILD_RIGHTS_EDUCATION_STUDY_final.pdf

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Press release
Children in 15 out of 26 industrialised countries lack easy access to child rights education
GENEVA, 30 April 2015 – Education curricula in 15 industrialised countries fail to meet children’s entitlements to learn about their rights, a new UNICEF report shows. The report, Teaching and learning about child rights: A study of implementation in 26 countries, also finds that none of the countries studied ensure that all teachers are trained in child rights and are familiar with the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

“This report is a wakeup call for countries that have ratified the Convention on the Rights of the Child, to take the necessary measures to ensure systematic implementation of a child’s right to learn about her or his rights,” said Gérard Bocquenet, UNICEF Director of Private Fundraising and Partnerships.

The report, commissioned by UNICEF and undertaken by the Centre for Children’s Rights at Queen’s University Belfast, analysed the situation and identified challenges around child rights education in 26 industrialised countries and territories, including to what extent child rights are embedded in formal education settings and teacher training.

The Convention on the Rights of the Child, which applies in all of the 26 countries and territories, requires a formal commitment to make its principles and provisions widely known to adults and children alike. The 15 countries where children lack systematic access to child rights education in curricula are Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Germany, Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, Scotland, Spain and United States.

Twenty five years after the adoption of the Convention on the Rights of the Child – the most widely ratified UN Convention – much work remains to be done to ensure that child rights are widely known and implemented in schools, including in industrialised countries. The report highlights that a fundamental step towards exercising rights is knowing and understanding those rights. Implementing systematic child rights education in schools is therefore essential to realise the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

The report also shows that:
:: Seven countries (Austria, Belgium, Canada, Germany, Israel, Italy and United States) include some child rights education in school curricula but fail to do so nationwide.
:: Only 3 out of 26 countries explicitly and consistently monitor child rights education.
:: Even when children learn about rights they may not learn about the Convention on the Rights of the Child or about key aspects of what it means to have rights.

Despite these findings, the research highlights many examples of how UNICEF National Committees and civil society partners are successfully addressing all aspects of child rights education at different levels in all the countries analysed. This is being done through policy, curriculum reform, and teacher training, as well as by embedding child rights into monitoring and inspection frameworks and by transforming the whole school environment to become rights-respecting.

“A key challenge is to ensure that these examples of good practice are aligned and fully integrated throughout education systems,” said Marta Arias, UNICEF Advocacy and Policy Specialist. “The report will guide countries in this task and help them to identify the best way forward within to their national context.”

With this study, UNICEF encourages all countries to take concrete actions to comply with Article 42 of the Convention on the Rights of the Child and repeated recommendations made by the Committee on the Rights of the Child to each country.

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Background
The countries and territories studied are Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Poland, Republic of Korea, Scotland, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, and United States.

The research includes a literature review, results from an on-line survey completed by national experts in 26 countries and territories, seven country case studies (Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Hong Kong, Israel and Scotland) and a series of benchmarking statements for implementing child rights education in formal education settings.

Global Fund Launches Human Rights Complaints Procedure

Global Fund Launches Human Rights Complaints Procedure
27 April 2015
GENEVA – The Global Fund partnership has launched a human rights complaints procedure as part of its commitment to protect and promote human rights in the context of fighting AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria.

The complaints mechanism allows individuals to submit a complaint to the Global Fund’s Office of the Inspector General if any of five minimum human rights standards is believed to have been violated by an implementer of Global Fund grants, in line with the partnership’s commitment to the highest standards of accountability.

Any individual can contact the Office of the Inspector General by email, by telephone or through the Global Fund’s website. All information will remain confidential, and anyone making a complaint can also choose to remain anonymous.

All Global Fund-supported programs are required to meet minimum human rights standards aimed at guaranteeing that Global Fund investments do not infringe upon human rights, that they increase access to quality services and maximize the potential impact of health interventions.

The information in the complaint will be carefully assessed to identify the seriousness of the allegations, and whether to conduct an investigation. The Global Fund welcomes information that will enable action to improve services.

“The Global Fund needs to know about any human rights infringements in the programs we support,” said Inspector General Mouhamadou Diagne. “We encourage all to speak up using our whistle-blowing channels which are free, safe and confidential.”

The five minimum human rights standards are:
:: non-discriminatory access to services for all, including people in detention;
:: employing only scientifically sound and approved medicines or medical practices;
:: not employing methods that constitute torture or that are cruel, inhuman or degrading;
:: respecting and protecting informed consent, confidentiality and the right to privacy concerning medical testing, treatment or health services rendered; and
:: avoiding medical detention and involuntary isolation, to be used only as a last resort.

Principal Recipients are required to identify the risk that any of these standards may be violated. Where a risk is identified, they may need to develop a mitigation plan to ensure violations do not occur. Principal Recipients must also reflect these five standards in agreements with sub-recipients and suppliers and disclose to the Global Fund any cases of non-compliance with the standards.

The Global Fund partnership is committed to removing human rights barriers that reduce access to health programs, and undermine efforts to end HIV, TB and malaria as epidemics.

EBOLA/EVD [to 2 May 2015]

EBOLA/EVD [to 2 May 2015]
Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC); “Threat to international peace and security” (UN Security Council)

WHO: Ebola Situation Report – 29 April 2015
[Excerpts]
SUMMARY
:: A total of 33 confirmed cases of Ebola virus disease (EVD) was reported in the week to 26 April. Two areas, Forecariah in Guinea and Kambia in Sierra Leone, accounted for 25 (76%) of all confirmed cases reported. Improved community engagement in these areas is required to ensure that all remaining chains of transmission can be tracked and ultimately brought to an end…

COUNTRIES WITH WIDESPREAD AND INTENSE TRANSMISSION
:: There have been a total of 26,277 reported confirmed, probable, and suspected cases of EVD in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone (figure 1, table 1), with 10,884 reported deaths (outcomes for many cases are unknown). A total of 22 new confirmed cases were reported in Guinea, 0 in Liberia, and 11 in Sierra Leone in the 7 days to 26 April…

UN OHCHR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights [to 2 May 2015]

UN OHCHR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/media.aspx?IsMediaPage=true

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USA: Transparency and accountability essential in use of drones – UN human rights experts
4/29/2015
Press Releases
Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights and fundamental freedoms while countering terrorism
Sp. Rapporteur on summary executions
Sp. Rapporteur on independence of judges and lawyers
Sp. Rapporteur on torture
GENEVA (29 April 2015) – A group of UN independent human rights experts* today welcomed the US Government’s announcement of a review into two counter-terrorism operations involving the use of drones, but they stressed the need to ensure transparency and accountability.
The US Government acknowledged the accidental killing of four individuals in counter-terrorism operations conducted in January in the border regions of Afghanistan and Pakistan involving the use of drones, following declassification of information related to the operations and disclosure to the public.
“We welcome President Obama’s apology to the families. All innocent victims of drone attacks deserve such an apology, regardless of their nationality,” the experts stated…

UN Working Group adopts “Basic Principles and Guidelines on Remedies and Procedures on the Right of Anyone Deprived of His or Her Liberty by Arrest or Detention to Bring Proceedings Before Court”.
4/29/2015
Press Releases

UNICEF [to 2 May 2015]

UNICEF [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.unicef.org/media/media_78364.html

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Selected press release and news notes
One week after Nepal earthquake UNICEF warns of disease risk for children
KATHMANDU, 2 May 2015 – One week on from the earthquake in Nepal, UNICEF says the health and wellbeing of children affected by the disaster are hanging in the balance – as many have been left homeless, in deep shock and with no access to basic care. With the monsoon season only a few weeks away, children will be at heightened risk of diseases like cholera and diarrhoeal infections, as well as being more vulnerable to the threat of landslides and floods.

BURUNDI: UNICEF calls for protection of children amid protests in the capital
BUJUMBURA, Burundi, 30 April 2015 – “Children are at risk of bearing the brunt of the confrontations in and around Bujumbura, the capital of Burundi.

Children in 15 out of 26 industrialised countries lack easy access to child rights education
GENEVA, 30 April 2015 – Education curricula in 15 industrialised countries fail to meet children’s entitlements to learn about their rights, a new UNICEF report shows. The report, Teaching and learning about child rights: A study of implementation in 26 countries, also finds that none of the countries studied ensure that all teachers are trained in child rights and are familiar with the Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Life-saving UNICEF supplies reach Nepal to help 1.7 million children severely affected by earthquake
KATHMANDU, Nepal / NEW YORK, 30 April 2015 – Over the past 48 hours, UNICEF has delivered 29 metric tonnes of humanitarian supplies to Nepal including tents and tarpaulins, water purification tablets, first aid and hygiene kits, as part of ongoing efforts to reach at least 1.7 million children living in areas hardest hit by the earthquake. Over the coming days, UNICEF is planning additional aid items to arrive in Kathmandu.

Racing against time for children and families in Nepal: IKEA Foundation gives €3 million to UNICEF emergency relief efforts
GENEVA, 29 April 2015 – In the aftermath of the violent earthquake that hit Nepal with devastating force on 25 April, IKEA Foundation has contributed €3 million to UNICEF to support emergency relief efforts.

UNICEF delivers lifesaving supplies to Aden as Yemen runs out of medicine, equipment
SANA’A, Yemen/AMMAN, Jordan, 28 April 2015 – A UNICEF shipment of urgent medical supplies reached Yemen today and will benefit more than 500,000 people, mostly women and children, for the next three months.

UN Women [to 2 May 2015]

UN Women [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.unwomen.org/
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Selected Press Releases
UN Women to address gender-based violence in the aftermath of the earthquake in Nepal
UN flash appeal says USD 415 million is required to reach affected populations with life-saving assistance and protection in the next three months.
Date : 01 May 2015
…UN Women, UNICEF, UNFPA and national women’s groups will be working to support protection systems, to prevent and respond to violence and gender-based violence against children and women, particularly among displaced populations, and lead learning activities for school-aged children in safe spaces and providing psychosocial counselling services. UN Women and partners will also be providing multipurpose safe spaces for vulnerable women. In addition, UN Women will also be providing dignity kits for female-headed households and women with disabilities. Community outreach and information will be promoted in order to inform the communities of their rights and services available.

The Government of Nepal has identified 16 open spaces in the Kathmandu Valley as sites for displacement camps. The flash appeal says cramped situations and a lack of law and order may exacerbate the existing risks and vulnerabilities faced in particular by women and girls. Among the over 8 million affected people are approximately 126,000 pregnant women, 21,000 of whom will need obstetric care in the coming three months. Additionally, the appeal cautions that approximately 40,000 women are at immediate risk of sexual and gender-based violence.

UN Women will specifically work to strengthen or establish survivor-centred multi-sectorial services and referral systems to respond to gender-based violence. It will also establish women’s groups for the prevention of gender-based violence in the 16 camps, including training of facilitators, safety audits and regular meetings and monitoring. This work will also mobilize communities through gender-based violence prevention and awareness activities at the village level in 18 districts…

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Press release: New report from UN Women unveils far-reaching alternative policy agenda to transform economies and make gender equality a reality
Date : April 27, 2015
A major report from UN Women, released today in seven locations globally, brings together human rights and economic policymaking to call for far-reaching changes to the global policy agenda that will transform economies and make women’s rights, and equality, a reality. It takes an in-depth look at what the economy would look like if it truly worked for women, for the benefit of all.

WHO & Regionals [to 2 May 2015]

WHO & Regionals [to 2 May 2015]
Nepal
:: Nepal’s Ministry of Health puts a hold on foreign medical teams
The Nepalese Ministry of Health has asked that any foreign medical teams ready to deploy to Nepal should please refrain from doing so. While the Ministry has expressed gratitude for all offers of assistance, they have advised that the need for foreign medical teams has already been met. Teams en route without a designated duty station will due to this be asked to turn away. All foreign medical teams on stand-by to assist Nepal’s earthquake response should register with WHO and keep updated on the situation through WHO’s homepage and the virtual On-site Operations Coordination Centre (OSSOC) website.

:: WHO mobilizes funds for long-term spinal cord treatment after Nepal earthquake
2 May 2015 — Among the estimated 14,000 injuries incurred as a result of the April 25 earthquake, which measured 7.8 on the Richter scale and has so far resulted in 6200 recorded fatalities, approximately 1 in 3 (or around 4700) will require follow-up rehabilitation treatment. Of this number, approximately 12% have damage to their spinal cord.

:: Sixty-eighth World Health Assembly – 18–26 May 2015

:: Sierra Leone wraps up four-day health and vaccination campaign 1 May 2015
…WHO worked in close collaboration with the Sierra Leone government and partners, to plan and supervise the recent Maternal and Child Health Week national campaign. The campaign aimed to reach more than 1.5 million children under the age of 5, with life-saving immunizations. In addition, children’s nutritional levels were measured, deworming tablets were administered and HIV testing was available for pregnant women and their partners…

:: Americas region is declared the world’s first to eliminate rubella
April 2015– The Americas region has become the first in the world to be declared free of endemic transmission of rubella, a contagious viral disease that can cause multiple birth defects as well as fetal death when contracted by women during pregnancy.

:: Global Alert and Response (GAR) – Disease Outbreak News (DONs)
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus (MERS-CoV) – Saudi Arabia 29 April 2015
Meningococcal disease – Niger 29 April 2015

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:: WHO Regional Offices
WHO African Region AFRO
:: A new entity to accelerate the elimination of neglected tropical diseases in Africa
Johannesburg, 30 April 2015 – The World Health Organization is stepping up efforts to accelerate the elimination of neglected tropical diseases (NTD) in the African Region. Health experts, donors, development partners and affected countries have reached a consensus on the main components of the framework for establishing a new NTD entity. This entity will support and guide affected countries in the African region to accelerate the implementation of actions required to eliminate NTDs by 2020.
The WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti in her opening remarks underscored the need for a strong entity that will provide high quality technical support, and strengthen capacity of Member States to eliminate NTDs. Dr Moeti said, “The new NTD entity needs to be cost efficient, cross-cutting with other NTD interventions and with a stronger link with stakeholders and actors in order to achieve the set targets in 2020.”
The WHO African Region faces a huge burden of neglected tropical diseases which affects millions of people who are impoverished. The region carries half of the global burden of NTDs. The move to establish a new entity arises from the current global and regional commitment from donors, pharmaceutical companies, countries and other partners to accelerate the elimination of NTDs.
The new NTD entity will also facilitate the smooth transition of technical support to affected countries as the African Programme for Onchocerciasis Control (APOC) closes on 31 December, 2015. APOC was established in 1995 to tackle river blindness. Over the past 20 years, the work of APOC has made commendable progress in tackling river blindness (Onchocerciasis) in most affected communities. The new entity focuses on the five diseases (elephantiasis, river blindness, trachoma, bilharzia and intestinal worms) that can be treated with mass drug administration. Its operations will build on the experience gained in recent years in tackling NTDs.
In her concluding comments, Dr Moeti thanked APOC for its contribution to tackling river blindness and expressed profound gratitude to Member States, donors, communities, non-governmental development organizations and the many WHO staff that contributed significantly to this achievement. The Regional Director promised to “follow up the NTD agenda and ensure that the new entity achieves the expected results by 2020.”

:: 1 in 5 children in Africa do not have access to life-saving vaccines – 28 April 2015
:: Humanitarian crisis in the Central African Republic: lack of funding threatens the free-access to healthcare –

WHO Region of the Americas PAHO
:: Americas region is declared the world’s first to eliminate rubella (04/29/2015)
:: La Fundación Chespirito se unió a la OPS/OMS para celebrar la Semana de Vacunación en las Américas (04/28/2015)
:: 13th annual Vaccination Week in the Americas kicks off in Ecuador (04/26/2015)

WHO South-East Asia Region SEARO
:: WHO works with partners to prevent diarrhoeal diseases SEAR/PR/1597 30 April 2015
:: WHO, health partners striving to treat quake survivors in Nepal’s remote regions SEAR/PR/1596 29 April 2015
:: WHO coordinating the health response to Nepal earthquake; working to prevent spread of disease 29 April 2015
:: WHO sending in more medical supplies and assisting the arrival of foreign medical team support for earthquake-ravaged Nepal 27 April 2015

WHO European Region EURO
:: At least one in three Europeans can be exposed to asbestos at work and in the environment 30-04-2015
:: Air pollution costs European economies US$ 1.6 trillion a year in diseases and deaths, new WHO study says 28-04-2015
:: From the migration front line: interview with Lampedusa doctor 27-04-2015

WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region EMRO
:: WHO report finds systems to combat antibiotic resistance lacking 29 April 2015
:: The future of nursing and midwifery in the Region 29 April 2015
:: Closing the immunization gap in Afghanistan 26 April 2015

WHO Western Pacific Region
:: Protect your community: Get vaccinated
2015 – An estimated 1.5 million children worldwide die each year of diseases that can be readily prevented by vaccines. On World Immunization Week (24 April – 3 May), the World Health Organization (WHO) in the Western Pacific Region underscores the importance of immunization as a shared responsibility and a vital component in protecting communities.

UNFPA United Nations Population Fund [to 2 May 2015]

UNFPA United Nations Population Fund [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.unfpa.org/public/

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Press Release
Tens of thousands of pregnant women affected by Nepal quake
27 April 2015
…Responding to urgent needs
UNFPA is coordinating with the Government and humanitarian partners to respond to these needs. Emergency staff members are being deployed, and dignity kits and reproductive health kits are en route to Nepal.
“The Fund is particularly concerned about the fate of pregnant women who have been affected by this tragedy, including those who might face potentially life-threatening complications,” said UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, in a statement on the disaster. “All efforts will be exerted to support their safety and the safety of their babies.”

UNDP United Nations Development Programme [to 2 May 2015]

UNDP United Nations Development Programme [to 2 May 2015]
30 Apr 2015
UN and Government of Nepal launch 415 million dollar appeal for relief following earthquake
The UN including the UN Development Programme and the Nepali Government made an appeal today for financial aid to provide urgent relief for people affected by the earthquake that struck Nepal Saturday morning.

Regional cooperation, working with demand countries key to ending wildlife crime, say African nations
Better coordinated intelligence and law enforcement, involving communities in Africa and working with transit and destination markets outside of the continent must be at the heart of all efforts to tackle the alarming illegal trade in wild flora and fauna, African States said at the closing of the International Conference on Illegal Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora in Africa.

29 Apr 2015
Congo Republic burns its entire stockpile of seized ivory
The Government of Congo today incinerated nearly five tons of poached ivory, fuelled by seized timber, in a strong demonstration of Africa’s opposition to wildlife crime

African leaders to develop common plan for stopping wildlife crime
African Heads of State, government representatives and experts are gathering at the International Conference on Illegal Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora in Africa where they will develop a common roadmap to end wildlife trafficking on the continent.

 

UNEP United Nations Environment Programme [to 2 May 2015]

UNEP United Nations Environment Programme [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.unep.org/newscentre/?doctypeID=1
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Selected Press Releases
Regional Cooperation, Working with Demand Countries Key to Ending Wildlife Crime, Say African Nations
At the closing of the International Conference on Illegal Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora in Africa.
30/04/2015

Zambia’s Forest Ecosystems Contribute $1.3 Billion to the National Economy, Higher than Previously Thought
Economic Study Boosts Zambia’s Efforts under its National REDD+ Process
28/04/2015

New Handbook Explores How Trade Can Drive the Transition to a Green Economy
Global Trade Reached US$23.4 Trillion in 2013, Highlighting Financial Power that Could be Harnessed for Sustainable Development.
28/04/2015

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African Leaders to Develop Common Plan for Stopping Wildlife Crime
Conference to seek advancement of Africa-wide strategy to tackle illegal trade in wild fauna and flora.
Brazzaville, 27 April 2015 – African Heads of State, government representatives and experts are gathering at the International Conference on Illegal Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora in Africa where they will develop a common roadmap to end wildlife trafficking on the continent.

Conference website
The Conference will seek to advance the first-ever Africa-wide strategy and action plan to tackle the illegal trade in wild fauna and flora, to be further considered at the next African Union Heads of State Summit later this year.

The four-day event is organised under the leadership of the Republic of Congo, in partnership with the African Union Commission (AUC), and with support from the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES), the African Development Bank, the Lusaka Agreement Task Force and the United Nations Office on Drug and Crime (UNODC), among others.

“Forests and wildlife are part of our common African heritage but are disappearing at an alarming pace,” said His Excellency Denis Sassou Nguesso, the President of the Republic of Congo. “We have a duty to work together, as a continent, to safeguard our unique biodiversity for present and future generations and to craft strong collective solutions to address this calamity.”

The value of wildlife crime, comprising fauna and flora, and including logging, poaching and trafficking of a wide range of animals, amounts to many hundreds of billions of US dollars a year, according to estimates of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, UNEP and INTERPOL…

CBD Convention on Biological Diversity [to 2 May 2015]

CBD Convention on Biological Diversity [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.cbd.int/press-releases/

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Notifications
SCBD/SAM/DC/CS/BT/84611 (2015-048)
Notification to: CBD National Focal Points, SBSTTA Focal Points, and relevant international, regional and national organizations
Submission of information related to sustainable use of biodiversity: bushmeat and sustainable wildlife management
Action required by 2015-06-15

SCBD/TSI/RS/YX/LZ/84650 (2015-047)
Notification to: All National Focal Points under the Convention and its Protocols and relevant stakeholder organizations
Online Forum on the Contribution of Collective Action of Indigenous Peoples and Local Communities to Biodiversity Conservation and Resource Mobilization, 1-15 May 2015

USAID [to 2 May 2015]

USAID [to 2 May 2015]
http://www.usaid.gov/news-information/press-releases

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Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR) – 2015
The 2015 QDDR builds on the foundation established by the 2010 QDDR to ensure that our civilian leadership pursues a process of persistent improvement. Secretary Kerry has asked for the 2015 QDDR to “be a blueprint for America’s success in this new world,” and “a product that guides a modern State Department and USAID and empowers our frontline diplomats and development professionals to get the job done.”
Drawing on input from a broad range of internal and external stakeholders, the 2015 QDDR lays out a plan for fully applying American civilian power to advance U.S. national interests as articulated in the 2015 National Security Strategy, and improving the efficiency, effectiveness, and accountability of our work.
:: Message from the Secretary of State
:: Executive Summary of the 2015 QDDR
:: FULL 2015 QDDR report