The Sentinel

Human Rights Action :: Humanitarian Response :: Health ::
Holistic Development :: Sustainable Resilience
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Week ending 31 October 2015

This weekly digest is intended to aggregate and distill key content from a broad spectrum of practice domains and organization types including key agencies/IGOs, NGOs, governments, academic and research institutions, consortia and collaborations, foundations, and commercial organizations. We also monitor a spectrum of peer-reviewed journals and general media channels. The Sentinel’s geographic scope is global/regional but selected country-level content is included. We recognize that this spectrum/scope yields an indicative and not an exhaustive product. Comments and suggestions should be directed to:

David R. Curry
Editor &
Founding Managing Director
GE2P2 – Center for Governance, Evidence, Ethics, Policy, Practice
david.r.curry@ge2p2center.net

pdf version: The Sentinel_ week ending 31 October 2015

blog edition: comprised of the 35+ entries  posted below on 4-6 November 2015

World Migration Report 2015 – Migrants and Cities: New Partnerships to Manage Mobility

World Migration Report 2015 – Migrants and Cities: New Partnerships to Manage Mobility
International Organization for Migration (IOM)
October 2015 :: 227 pages
ISBN 978-92-9068-709-2 ISSN 1561-5502
The Report can be downloaded in English, French and Spanish
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Foreword [excerpt]
The eighth report in IOM’s World Migration Report (WMR) series─ focuses on migrants and how migration is shaping cities and the situation of migrants in cities.

While much of the current international discussion about migration trends and migration policy tends to focus on the national level, this report takes migration enquiries to the city level and aims to raise understanding of the local socioeconomic dynamics of migration and the close connection between migration and urban development.

The main chapters of the World Migration Report 2015 investigate both the challenges and opportunities arising from increasing migration to diverse urban settings. They present findings on the potential benefits of all forms of migration and mobility for city growth and development. The report showcases innovative ways in which migration and urbanization policies can be better designed for the benefit of migrants and cities.

The report particularly focuses on migrants’ situations in the cities of the Global South, broadening the current focus on the cities of the Global North. It highlights how cities and migrants can work together in order to reduce the risks of migration to cities and take advantage of growing urban diversity in such areas as community resilience building and local economic, social and cultural development through migrants’ connections between origin and host communities.

The report concludes with a set of recommendations for future city initiatives to include migrants as partners and migrants’ issues in the discussion on urbanization and the post-2015 global development framework…

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Press Release
IOM Launches 2015 World Migration Report
10/28/15
Geneva – IOM yesterday (27/10) launched its flagship World Migration Report 2015 – Migrants and Cities: New Partnerships to Manage Mobility, during the second day of the two-day high-level Conference on Migrants and Cities in Geneva.

The report, the eighth in IOM’s World Migration Report series, focuses on how migration and migrants are shaping cities and how the life of migrants is shaped by cities, their people, organizations and rules.

Speaking at the launch, Dr. June Lee, the report’s editor-in-chief, noted that while much of the current international discussion about migration trends and policy is at national level, this report takes the migration debate to the city level.

“The report focuses on how migration is shaping cities and how the situation of migrants in cities – how they live, work and shape their habitat – helps to reveal the close connection between human mobility and urban development,” she said.

The report reveals that nearly one in five of all migrants live in the world’s 20 largest cities and in many of these cities migrants represent over a third or more of the population.
According to the report, over 54 per cent of people across the globe were living in urban areas in 2014. The current urban population of 3.9 billion is expected to grow to some 6.4 billion by 2050. Migration is driving much of the increase in urbanization, making cities much more diverse places in which to live.

Addressing the notion that existing discussions on migrants and cities tend to focus primarily on the Global North and the integration of international migrants, Lee told the conference that the report takes a global perspective, with particular attention to the situation of migrants in the cities of the Global South. As a result, and for the first time in the WMR series, the 2015 report examines both internal and international migration.

A key finding of the report is that human mobility is growing and will continue to be overwhelmingly urban. “At the same time, the geography of migration flows is changing in line with changes in the global economy. For example, migrants are increasingly attracted to the cities in the countries experiencing higher economic growth in East Asia, Brazil, southern Africa and western India,” said Lee.

Increasingly, the cities of developing countries have become places of both immigration and emigration, given the growing South-South migration – population movements among low- and middle-income countries, the report shows.

Another key finding emerging from the report is that rising migration to cities brings both risks and opportunities for the migrants, communities and governments concerned. “Super-diversity brings challenges, such as residential segregation when certain ethnicities, nationalities or a socioeconomic status concentrate in particular neighborhoods of a city or metropolitan area. Although there are some positive effects of ethnic clustering, policy makers try to combat residential segregation becoming generational,” said Lee.
The report points out that multi-ethnic make-up is the normal condition of many cities in the less developed world and such cities often face mixed migration flows, with a particularly high concentration of internally displaced people and migrants stranded in transit.

Noting the reality that many cities are insufficiently resourced and motivated to become truly inclusive, the report calls for a platform for migration and urbanization to discuss how to balance knowledge, capacities and commitments towards good policymaking and practice for inclusive urban governance across countries.

“We need to consider what roles international communities and organizations play, while bearing in mind that the good practices of more advanced countries might not be globally applicable,” said Lee.

Refugee crisis in Europe and rights of children – Statement from ECPAT

Refugee crisis in Europe and rights of children
Statement from ECPAT
20 October 2015

Recent crises and war in several countries, including Syria, Afghanistan and Eritrea among others, have led to tens of thousands of refugees arriving in the European Union via southern Europe and across the Mediterranean Sea. Among them are a significant number of children, some of whom are separated from their families.

All of these children are extremely vulnerable to a range of abuses and may arrive already as victims of trafficking. It is vital that these children are identified early and afforded the protection they need to prevent further abuse and to stop them going missing. Other children arriving in Europe, with or without their families, are also extremely vulnerable to exploitation and require protection to prevent this risk becoming a reality.

In the face of this huge crisis, the importance for a robust child protection response cannot be underestimated. Whether it is criminal records checks for volunteers working with refugees or resourcing investigations to dismantle trafficking groups, whether organised or not, the necessary levels of child protection at all stages must not be diluted. The need to maintain and uphold children’s rights and child protection laws is more important now than ever in order to create a protective environment for these children on arrival, as well as working to find durable solutions for each and every one of them.

Key reports by the Fundamental Rights Agency on guardianship for children deprived of parental care in the EU highlight the need for functioning guardianship systems in order to protect children who are victims of trafficking or those who are at risk of exploitation – in line with the EU’s Strategy Towards the Eradication of Trafficking in Human Beings 2012-2016. It acknowledges the vulnerability of these children and identifies guardianship systems as an effective measure to identify victims and to prevent abuse. Yet the way in which individual Member States enforce child protection laws and operate systems of guardianship vary massively, which may mean children are put at risk.

ECPAT urges the European Commission to ensure all children affected in the refugee crisis are prioritised and protected effectively by a well-planned and resourced strategic response. Protection systems in all Member States and neighbouring countries must be consistent and work together, cross-border, to safeguard children. The European Commission must lead the way in promoting the rights of refugee and migrant children who are arriving or who are already in Europe, ensuring that – despite the challenges they face in their young lives – they are able to exercise their rights and live their lives free from the threat of abuse.

Signatories to the statement: Children’s Human Rights Center of Albania, Defence for Children-ECPAT Netherlands, ECPAT Austria, ECPAT Belgium, ECPAT France, ECPAT International, ECPAT Luxembourg, ECPAT Sweden, ECPAT UK, FAPMI-ECPAT Spain, Neglected Children’s Society-ECPAT Bulgaria, Nobody’s Children Foundation.

11 major companies to promote inclusion of persons with disabilities in the workplace – ILO

11 major companies to promote inclusion of persons with disabilities in the workplace
The new Global Business and Disability Network Charter is a global tool for businesses to promote the inclusion of persons with disabilities in the world of work
International Labour Organization News | 28 October 2015
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GENEVA (ILO News): Eleven major international companies have become the first signatories of the newly-created “ILO Global Business & Disability Network Charter ” in a ceremony held at ILO headquarters in Geneva.

The Charter expresses their commitment to promoting and including persons with disabilities throughout their operations worldwide.

It covers a wide range of areas, from protecting staff with disabilities from any kind of discrimination to making the company premises and communication to staff progressively
All signatories are members of the ILO Global Business and Disability Network , which brings businesses together to promote disability inclusion by highlighting the business advantages of employing people with disabilities. It also facilitates the exchange of knowledge and good practices between companies, company networks and the ILO.

Created in 2010, the Network acts as a facilitator and responds to requests from members to develop tools, share knowledge, and facilitate business-to-business meetings and dialogues around disability issues. It combines the interests of the ILO employer constituents and of multinational enterprises.

The signing companies are: Accenture, AccorHotels, Adecco Group, AXA Group, Carrefour Group, Dow Chemical, Groupe Casino, L’Oréal, Orange, the Standard Bank Group, and Michelin.

Charter Principles
As a member of the ILO Global Business and Disability Network, the signatory multinational enterprises support the following principles and commits to work towards their company-wide implementation:
1. Promote and respect the rights of persons with disabilities by raising awareness and combating stigma and stereotypes faced by persons with disabilities.
2. Develop policies and practices that protect persons with disabilities from all types of discrimination.
3. Promote equal treatment and equal opportunities for persons with disabilities by providing reasonable accommodation in the recruitment process, on-the-job, apprenticeships, training, job retention, career development and other relevant terms and conditions of employment.
4. Progressively make the company premises and communication to staff accessible for all employees with disabilities.
5. Undertake appropriate measures to enable current employees who acquire a disability to retain or return to their employment.
6. Respect confidentiality of personal information regarding disability.
7. Consider the needs of those persons with disabilities who face particular challenges accessing the labour market, including persons with intellectual and psychosocial disabilities.
8. Promote employment of persons with disabilities among business partners and other companies and collaborate with national employer and business networks on disability as well as with organizations working to advance the rights of persons with disabilities.
9. Review regularly the company disability inclusion policies and practices for their effectiveness.
10. Report on company efforts to promote the employment of persons with disabilities to all relevant stakeholders and share information and experiences with the members of the ILO Global Business and Disability Network. The ILO will utilize the company reports and practices in its own communication, wherever relevant.

Doing Business 2016- Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency – World Bank Group

Doing Business 2016- Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency
World Bank Group
October 27, 2015 :: 348 pages
Pdf: http://www.doingbusiness.org/~/media/GIAWB/Doing%20Business/Documents/Annual-Reports/English/DB16-Full-Report.pdf Also available as mini book (PDF, 2.4MB) (15460.3 KB PDF)

Overview
Doing Business 2016: Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency, a World Bank Group flagship publication, is the 13th in a series of annual reports measuring the regulations that enhance business activity and those that constrain it. Doing Business presents quantitative indicators on business regulations and the protection of property rights that can be compared across 189 economies—from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe—and over time.

Doing Business measures regulations affecting 11 areas of the life of a business. Ten of these areas are included in this year’s ranking on the ease of doing business: starting a business, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, getting credit, protecting minority investors, paying taxes, trading across borders, enforcing contracts and resolving insolvency. Doing Business also measures labor market regulation, which is not included in this year’s ranking.

Data in Doing Business 2016 are current as of June 1, 2015. The indicators are used to analyze economic outcomes and identify what reforms of business regulation have worked, where and why. This year’s Doing Business report continues a two-year process of introducing improvements in 8 of 10 Doing Business indicator sets—to complement the emphasis on the efficiency of regulation with a greater focus on its quality.

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Main Findings
:: Doing Business 2016: Measuring Regulatory Quality and Efficiency finds that entrepreneurs in 122 economies saw improvements in their local regulatory framework last year. Between June 2014 and June 2015, the report, which measures 189 economies worldwide, documented 231 business reforms. Among reforms to reduce the complexity and cost of regulatory processes, those in the area of starting a business were the most common in 2014/15, as in the previous year. The next most common were reforms in the areas of paying taxes, getting electricity and registering property. Read about business reforms.

:: Costa Rica, Uganda, Kenya, Cyprus, Mauritania, Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Jamaica, Senegal and Benin are among the economies that improved the most in 2014/2015 in areas tracked by Doing Business. Together, these 10 top improvers implemented 39 regulatory reforms making it easier to do business.

:: Sub-Saharan Africa alone accounted for about 30% of the regulatory reforms making it easier to do business in 2014/15, followed closely by Europe and Central Asia. Members of the Organization for the Harmonization of Business Law in Africa were particularly active: 14 of the 17 economies implemented business regulation reforms in the past year—29 in total. Twenty-four of these reforms reduced the complexity and cost of regulatory processes, while the other five strengthened legal institutions.

:: This year’s report adds indicators of quality to four indicator sets: registering property, dealing with construction permits, getting electricity and enforcing contracts. In addition, the trading across borders indicators have been revised to increase their relevance. The underlying case study now focuses on the top export product for each economy, on a very common manufactured product (auto parts) as its import product and on its largest trading partner for the export and import products.

:: Seven case studies featured in the report: Five focus on legal and regulatory features covered by new or expanded indicators being introduced this year—in the areas of dealing with construction permits, getting electricity, registering property, trading across borders and enforcing contracts. The other two analyze other areas of interest in the historical data set. See all case studies.

UNAIDS 2016–2021 Strategy – On the Fast-Track to end AIDS [by 2030]

UNAIDS 2016–2021 Strategy – On the Fast-Track to end AIDS [by 2030]
Issue date: 27 October 2015 :: 130 pages
UNAIDS PROGRAMME COORDINATING BOARD
UNAIDS/PCB (37)/15.18.rev1
THIRTY-SEVENTH MEETING
Date: 26 – 28 October 2015
WHO, Geneva

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Executive summary [excerpt]
A defining moment
1. The UNAIDS 2016–2021 Strategy comes at a critical moment in the history of the HIV epidemic and response. Evidence demonstrates that if the current, unprecedented level of HIV service coverage is simply maintained, progress will slip backwards with rising numbers of people newly infected, and more people dying from AIDS-related causes. Nevertheless, we have never had more opportunities to leverage our momentum to accelerate the response over the next five years: a new sustainable development agenda; fresh, innovative solutions; and the rise of regional, national and local leadership and institutions – including strong political commitment to the 90–90–90 treatment target. By seizing this moment, we can end the AIDS epidemic as a public health threat by 2030. The next five years provide a fragile window of opportunity to Fast-Track the AIDS response and empower people to lead dignified and rewarding lives….

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Press Release
UNAIDS Board adopts bold and ambitious strategy to end the AIDS epidemic by 2030
GENEVA, 30 October 2015—At its 37th meeting, the UNAIDS Programme Coordinating Board adopted a new strategy to end the AIDS epidemic as a public health threat by 2030. The UNAIDS 2016–2021 Strategy is one of the first in the United Nations system to be aligned to the Sustainable Development Goals, which set the framework for global development policy over the next 15 years, including ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030.

With a universal agenda, firmly grounded in evidence and rights-based approaches, the strategy maps out the UNAIDS Fast-Track approach to accelerate the AIDS response over the next five years to reach critical HIV prevention and treatment targets and achieve zero discrimination. Members of the Board from across all regions called the strategy bold, ambitious, yet achievable, and praised the highly inclusive and consultative process to develop it.

In his opening address, the Executive Director of UNAIDS, Michel Sidibé, described the strategy as an urgent call to front-load investment, to close the testing gap, to increase focus and financing for HIV prevention and to protect the health of the 22 million people living with HIV who are not yet accessing treatment. He said that the strategy would be an instrument for social justice and dignity…

…During the dedicated thematic day, the Board discussed the importance of shared responsibility and global solidarity for an effective, equitable and sustainable HIV response. It was agreed that the most critical next step for achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals will be to have clarity on the means of implementation. Participants emphasized that multisectorality and equitable, transparent and inclusive governance are central bases for effective shared responsibility and global solidarity, and that the AIDS response—and in particular UNAIDS—provides an important model to be replicated for other health, development, gender and rights outcomes…

World Health Organisation right to be wary about first malaria vaccine [Seth Berkley, Gavi and Mark Dybul, Global Fund]

World Health Organisation right to be wary about first malaria vaccine
By Seth Berkley, Gavi and Mark Dybul, Global Fund
Voices on 29 October 2015
Mosquirix is one of the most widely anticipated vaccines to have been developed. It is the first vaccine for malaria – a disease that kills more than 1,200 children every day– and has been clinically proven to provide protection against the disease. So, given that it has passed the toughest regulatory hurdles required of it, why is it only being made available in a handful of countries?

Demand for the vaccine is likely to be high. With more than 200m cases a year, malaria is endemic in almost every country in sub-Saharan Africa, as well as large parts of Asia and Latin America. Last week, two advisory bodies to the World Health Organisation, the strategic advisory group of experts on immunisation and the malaria policy advisory committee, recommended against its immediate widespread use, and many people may have been left wondering why.

But it was a smart call. While there is a potential to save many lives with this vaccine, we have reason to tread carefully. Rather than being a simple solution, Mosquirix comes with complex caveats and some outstanding questions that the clinical studies were not able to address. While some may argue that any delay in getting the vaccine out to people could end up costing lives, experts first want certainty that, in a real-life setting, it indeed brings the benefits we expect, based on what was shown in the trials.

Clinical trials found Mosquirix to be both safe and effective, providing 39% efficacy at preventing clinical cases of malaria over the course of a four-year trial. While this is low for a vaccine, it is worth remembering that given the large number of people at risk, providing protection in just four out of 10 cases could still go a very long way. Moreover, since there can be more than one episode per child, the trials found that the vaccine prevented on average 1,774 cases of malaria per 1,000 children.

However, what happens during the controlled setting of a clinical trial does not necessarily translate into a real-world situation, and here lies the concern.

To begin with, Mosquirix requires four doses. That’s a lot for a vaccine. What’s more, trials suggest that its already low efficacy is further reduced if the fourth dose is not administered, down to about 28% protection against clinical malaria and reducing its impact on severe cases of malaria to nearly zero. That is worrying because, typically, the more doses required of a vaccine the higher the dropout rate.

It then becomes a question of how reliably the vaccine can be administered – and, again, Mosquirix presents challenges. To achieve maximum effect, it should be given to children from five months, with the fourth dose given around the age of two. This is out of sync with the typical immunisation schedule for children in poorer countries, who are brought in for routine vaccination when they are six to 14 weeks old.

Delivering the vaccine will require unprecedented efforts to inform and mobilise people to bring their children to health clinics at the prescribed time to complete all four doses. But, with many of the countries in question already struggling to improve routine immunisation rates, it remains to be seen how reliably four doses of Mosquirix can be deployed.

That doesn’t mean it can’t be done. In light of how big a priority malaria is for these countries they may well indeed make it work. After all, we have seen this happen with the human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccine, another much sought after vaccine for developing countries, which is given to school-age girls to prevent cervical cancer.

But even if high coverage can be achieved, there is still a danger that news of the vaccine will give people a false sense of security and lead to a reduction in the use of other malaria interventions, which would be tragic. Insecticide treated bednets and anti-malarial medicine have already led to a 37% global decrease in malaria cases since 2000, and a 60% decline in the malaria mortality rate.

Mosquirix is no magic bullet and at best may prove to be a useful complementary tool in reducing malaria, but only one of many already being used.

All this combined is why the WHO has been so cautious, recommending that we proceed with just a few demonstration projects in three to five settings, and involving around 1 million children. This is a sensible approach; it is due diligence. With so many lives at stake, it is critical that we shed more light on these unknowns, so that we fully understand the impact of this vaccine before, or even if, we should make it more widely available.

United Nations – Secretary General, Security Council, General Assembly [to 31 October 2015]

United Nations – Secretary General, Security Council, General Assembly  [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.un.org/en/unpress/
Selected Press Releases/Meetings Coverage

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28 October 2015
SC/12101
Security Council Presidential Statement Voices Deep Concerns about Growing Insecurity, Increasing Violence, Persisting Political Impasse in Burundi
The Security Council today voiced its deep concerns about the growing insecurity, the continued rise in violence, and the persisting political impasse in Burundi, marked by a lack of dialogue among Burundian stakeholders.

28 October 2015
GA/11714
General Assembly Elects 18 Members to Human Rights Council, Confirms Six States Nominated to Programme and Coordination Committee
The General Assembly today elected 18 States to serve on the Human Rights Council, the United Nations body responsible for the promotion and protection of all human rights around the globe.

27 October 2015
GA/SHC/4144
Disability Is Not Inability, Special Rapporteurs Tell Third Committee, Urging National Reforms to Ensure Social Inclusion, Human Rights Protection
Legislative and institutional reforms must be undertaken by States to ensure coherent social systems that include – and recognize the rights of – persons with disabilities, the Third Committee (Social, Humanitarian and Cultural) heard today as it continued its consideration of the promotion and protection of human rights.

27 October 2015
SC/12098
Briefing Security Council on Syria, Relief Chief Urges Political Solution Addressing Root Causes of Conflict, Increase in Humanitarian Aid
The failure of the parties to the Syrian conflict to uphold the basic tenets of international humanitarian and human rights law had propelled the Syrian people to levels of tragedy and despair that could barely have been imagined five years ago, Stephen O’Brien, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, told the Security Council this morning.

UN OHCHR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights [to 31 October 2015]

UN OHCHR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/media.aspx?IsMediaPage=true
Selected Press Releases/Announcements

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Human Rights Committee discusses draft general comment on the right to life
30 October 2015

General Assembly Elects 18 Members to Human Rights Council, Confirms Six States Nominated to Programme and Coordination Committee
28 October 2015

Palestinian President urges the Security Council to set up a special regime for the International Protection of the Palestinian People
28 October 2015

Statement by the High Commissioner at the Special Meeting of the Human Rights Council on the occasion of the visit of the President of the State of Palestine
28 October 2015

UN OCHA [to 31 October 2015]

UN OCHA [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.unocha.org/media-resources/press-releases

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29 Oct 2015
Somalia: OCHA Operations Director: More help needed for people in protracted crises in Sudan, South Sudan and Somalia

28 Oct 2015
World: Pacific Humanitarian Partnership Meeting Puts Focus on Women and Children in Disasters
Fiji, 29 October 2015 Two hundred people involved in disaster response across the region are gathered in Suva for the annual Pacific Humanitarian Partnership meeting where the impact of disasters on women and children has been on the agenda today. The meeting was addressed by HRH Princess Sarah Zeid of Jordan on the role of reproductive, maternal, newborn, child and adolescent health (RMNCAH)…

27 Oct 2015
Syrian Arab Republic: Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, Stephen O’Brien – Statement to the Security Council on Syria

26 Oct 2015
Cameroon: Violence, refugees pile pressure on Cameroonian communities – U.N.
DAKAR, Oct 26 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – Escalating violence in northern Cameroon combined with an influx of refugees from Nigeria and Central African Republic is placing immense strain on local communities already struggling to survive, the United Nations’ aid chief said on Monday…

UNICEF [to 31 October 2015]

UNICEF [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.unicef.org/media/media_78364.html
Selected press releases

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Violence denies millions of children across Iraq access to education
BAGHDAD, Iraq 30 October 2015– The staggered start of the academic year in Iraq concludes this week with close to two million children nationwide out of school. An additional 1.2 million children age 5 to 14 years old are at risk of dropping out.

UNICEF and WFP launch mass nutrition screening as hunger threatens lives of children in South Sudan
JUBA, South Sudan, 29 October 2015 — UNICEF and the World Food Programme (WFP) launched a mass mobilization campaign today that will screen more than a quarter of a million children for acute malnutrition in Warrap state.

Attack in Yemen: UNICEF appeals to those involved to respect international humanitarian law
NEW YORK, 27 October 2015 – “The health facility reportedly attacked today in Saada, Yemen, is the 39th health centre hit since the violence escalated in March. Critical shortages of fuel, medications, electricity, petrol and water threaten to stop many more from operating.

Afghanistan and Pakistan Earthquake: Children cut off from aid – UNICEF
KABUL, Afghanistan/ ISLAMABAD, Pakistan ,27 October 2015 – Children in earthquake-hit areas of Afghanistan and Pakistan are facing further deadly threats as extreme conditions and insecurity cut off communities from aid – warns UNICEF.

45,000 children reached with early childhood development support through UNICEF/H&M Conscious Foundation partnership
NEW YORK/GENEVA, 26 October 2015 – More than 45,000 children have benefited from early childhood development (ECD) and education programmes during the first year of the UNICEF/H&M Conscious Foundation partnership.

UNHCR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees [to 31 October 2015]

UNHCR Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/search?page=&comid=4a0950336&cid=49aea93a7d&scid=49aea93a40

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Worsening weather brings more tragedy to eastern Aegean as influx continues in Greece
29 October 2015

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UNHCR warns of looming refugee crisis as women flee Central America and Mexico
Washington, D.C., 28 October 2015 (UNHCR) – Women in Central America and Mexico are fleeing their countries in rising numbers to escape a surge in deadly, unchecked gang violence, fueling a looming refugee crisis in the Americas that demands urgent and concerted action by the states of the region, the United Nations refugee agency warned Wednesday.

“The violence being perpetrated by organized, transnational criminal groups in El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and certain parts of Mexico has become pervasive,” UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres said in Washington as he issued a new report on the situation entitled “Women on the Run.”

“The dramatic refugee crises we are witnessing in the world today are not confined to the Middle East or Africa,” Guterres said. “We are seeing another refugee situation unfolding in the Americas. This report is an early warning to raise awareness of the challenges refugee women face and a call to action to respond regionally to a looming refugee crisis.”…

IOM / International Organization for Migration [to 31 October 2015]

IOM / International Organization for Migration [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.iom.int/press-room/press-releases
Selected Press Releases

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IOM Launches Updated Response Plan for Mediterranean and Beyond
10/30/15
Switzerland – IOM has released an update to its June 2015 response plan “Addressing Complex Migration Flows in the Mediterranean.”

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Mediterranean Update – Migrant Deaths Rise to 3,329 in 2015
10/30/15
Italy – IOM now estimates that the total number of migrant deaths on Mediterranean sea routes to Europe have surpassed 3,329 in the first ten months of 2015.

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IOM Ramps Up Winter Assistance for Displaced in Syria, Iraq
10/30/15
Syria, Iraq – In anticipation of upcoming winter months in the Middle East and North Africa, IOM has begun the implementation of its 2015-2016 ‘Winter Assistance Plans for Populations Affected by the Syrian and Iraqi Crises.’

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Conference on Migrants and Cities Brings Mayors, Local Actors to Centre of Migration Debate
10/30/15
Switzerland – IOM’s Conference on Migrants and Cities, which took place 26-27 October at the UN in Geneva, brought mayors and other local actors to the centre of the migration debate. It followed IOM’s milestone Diaspora Ministerial Conference held in 2013.

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U.S. Supports IOM and Partners’ Efforts to Address Child Sex Trafficking and Forced Child Labour within Ghana
10/30/15
Accra, Ghana – The U.S. Embassy in Accra and U.S. government’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons have announced the award of $5 million to the International Organization on Migration (IOM) and Free the Slaves (FTS), an international NGO working in Ghana, for activities that will support the recently signed U.S.-Ghana Child Protection Compact (CPC) Partnership.

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IOM Launches 2015 World Migration Report
10/28/15
Geneva – IOM yesterday (27/10) launched its flagship World Migration Report 2015 – Migrants and Cities: New Partnerships to Manage Mobility.

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IOM Responds to Massive Earthquake in Afghanistan, Pakistan
10/27/15
Afghanistan – IOM is responding to a massive earthquake that struck the mountainous border region between Afghanistan and Pakistan on Monday.

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Mediterranean Update: Shipwrecks off Libya, Greece
10/27/15
Italy – The Libyan Red Crescent has reported another tragedy at sea, with the recovery of over 40 corpses on Libyan beaches.

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IOM Yemen Responds to Sudden Influx of Internally Displaced into Lawdar District
10/27/15
Yemen – Fighting between Houthi and government-aligned armed groups near villages on the border of the Mukayras and Lawdar district earlier this month displaced hundreds of families from the area, pushing them further south into the Lawdar district in Yemen.

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Ghana’s Frontline Border Officials Improve Ebola Preparedness
10/27/15
Ghana – IOM Ghana, under its Ebola (EVD) preparedness project, has organized a series of training workshops at eight points of entry across the country aimed at building the capacity of frontline officers to detect and manage potential cases of Ebola at borders.

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IOM Guinea Participates in Public Health Surveillance of Village Hit by Recent Ebola Death
10/27/15
Guinea – IOM has taken part in efforts to prevent the potential spread of Ebola Virus Disease (EVD) following the death of a 35-year old woman who succumbed to the virus at Kindoyah, near Tana village in Guinea.

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IOM, SURA Combat Human Trafficking in Peru
10/27/15
Peru – To improve awareness of human trafficking among Peruvian young people and the general public, IOM in Peru and financial services company SURA Peru, have joined forces to combat the problem. Some 2,241 victims of trafficking, mostly young women, have been identified in Peru over the past five years – 782 of them in 2014.

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IOM Builds Honduran Migration Management Capacity
10/27/15
Honduras – IOM has opened two fully equipped training units to build the capacity of some 600 Honduran officials working with migrants at the National Institute of Migration (INM) and the Directorate for Children, Youth and Family (DINAF).

UN Women [to 31 October 2015]

UN Women [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.unwomen.org/news/stories
Selected Press Releases

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“Our focus should not just be on what women can do. It is also on what men can do” — Executive Director
Date: 29 October 2015
Address by UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka at the “Men on the Stand: Men’s roles in implementing UN Security Council resolution 1325” event in New York on 28 October.

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Yemeni women call for their inclusion in peace efforts
Date: 27 October 2015
When the UN Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for Yemen, Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed, briefed the UN Security Council on 23 October, he outlined the specific impact the civil conflict is having on women and mentioned UN Women’s efforts in the region. He also presented a letter prepared by Yemeni women, in which they call for an end to the violence and the inclusion of women voices in all peace efforts.

WHO & Regionals [to 31 October2015]

WHO mobilizes 510,000 doses of oral cholera vaccine in Iraq
27 October 2015 – Iraq declared an outbreak of cholera on 15 September 2015. The current number of laboratory confirmed cases is 2055. As an integrated part of the current outbreak response strategy oral cholera vaccines (OCV) have been mobilized through the international coordination group based in Geneva. Based on a public health risk assessment, it has been determined that a number of displacement camps housing Syrian refugees and internally displaced Iraqis are at high risk for further spread of the cholera outbreak.

In addition to current prevention and control measures, WHO is working with the Ministry of Health to provide OCV in an immunization campaign for vulnerable populations in 62 refugee camps for internally displaced persons and collective centres throughout the country, targeting approximately 249,319 people. This is the first time Iraq will introduce the OCV Shanchol vaccine.

2 doses of vaccine are required for an individual to be protected. The campaign begins with an initial round of vaccinations followed by – after a required, minimum 14 days interval – a second round of doses, which will complete the vaccination. For such a campaign to be effective, it is vital that a second dose is administered. The first round is scheduled to take place on 31 October.

Targeted social mobilization, campaign logistics and health education are key components to ensure the successful implementation of OCV. In order to achieve herd immunity all members of a family above 1 year of age must be vaccinated.

Additional staff from WHO and health cluster partners have been deployed to Iraq in order to support the cholera response measures, facilitate the logistics and preparation of the campaign in select locations to ensure as many people as possible are protected.

The provision of safe water, sanitation and personal hygiene will continue to be the critical cholera prevention and control measures. Cholera vaccination is a safe and effective additional tool that can be used under the right conditions to supplement existing priority cholera control measures, not to replace them, and prevention and control measures must be accelerated before, during and after the 2 successive rounds.

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WHO call for stronger parliamentary engagement on health
29 OCTOBER 2015
IPU – Inter-Parliamentary Union
World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Dr Margaret Chan has urged MPs around the world to step up their efforts to improve the health of their citizens, stressing the importance of political solutions in a new generation of complex challenges. In her first address to an IPU assembly, Dr Chan stressed the vital role of MPs in a wide range of strategies including delivering universal health coverage, taxing tobacco, improving food labelling and fighting tax, trade and insurance policies which impacted on the poor. She warned of new threats including drug-resistant pathogens, the globalized marketing of unhealthy products, and the growing rates of chronic non-communicable diseases such as heart disease, cancer and diabetes – which have overtaken infectious diseases as the world’s biggest killers. Dr Chan also offered to strengthen WHO’s collaboration with IPU through structured technical support to IPU’s advisory bodies and confirmed a new role for parliamentarians in jointly organized side events at WHO assemblies, the organization’s supreme decision-making body. Her address builds on the existing cooperation between WHO and IPU in fields including women’s and children’s health, family planning, violence against women and girls and harmful traditional practices.

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World Antibiotic Awareness Week
30 October 2015 — The first World Antibiotic Awareness Week 16 to 22 November 2015 encourages best practices among the general public, health workers, policy-makers and the agriculture sector to avoid further emergence and spread of antibiotic resistance. The campaign urges people to “handle antibiotics with care”, because when antibiotics are misused or over prescribed bacteria become resistant to their effects, making some infectious diseases difficult – sometimes impossible – to treat

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Typhoon-affected communities in the Philippines vulnerable to disease outbreaks
October 2015 — WHO and partners are assisting the Government of the Philippines by providing targeted support using in-country resources. WHO has assisted with logistics, information management, provision of emergency kits, disease surveillance and is set to deploy more national experts and medical supplies.

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Earthquake response in Afghanistan and Pakistan
October 2015 — An earthquake with magnitude 7.7 occurred in north-eastern Afghanistan on 26 October, 2015 affecting both Afghanistan and Pakistan. WHO is assessing the public health impact of the earthquake and responding to the region’s health needs.

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Globally, an estimated two-thirds of the population under 50 are infected with herpes simplex virus type 1
28 October 2015

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:: WHO Regional Offices
WHO African Region AFRO
No new digest content identified.

WHO Region of the Americas PAHO
:: Wider access to ultrasound would save maternal and neonatal lives in Latin America and the Caribbean (10/29/2015)

WHO South-East Asia Region SEARO
:: Reconstruction of health systems should remain top priority in Nepal
Media statement from Dr Poonam Khetrapal Singh, Regional Director, WHO South-East Asia Region on six month anniversary of the Nepal earthquake
[undated]

WHO European Region EURO
:: Statement – The challenges of migration require migrant-sensitive health systems for today and for the future 29-10-2015
:: “No” to influenza vaccination costs thousands of lives 28-10-2015
:: WHO/Europe and the Ministry of Health of Hungary conduct a joint assessment of refugee and migrant health in Hungary 27-10-2015
:: Good prison health involves empowering prisoners 26-10-2015

WHO Eastern Mediterranean Region EMRO
:: WHO pre-positions emergency supplies in Somalia in preparation for El Niño
30 October 2015, Mogadishu – WHO is working closely with the Federal Ministry of Health of Somalia in order to prepare for any possible health emergencies resulting from the El Niño climate phenomenon expected to hit some countries of the Region in 2015, including Somalia. WHO and partner United Nations agencies have developed contingency plans and are scaling up preparedness activities, including pre-positioning of aid supplies in areas most likely to be affected by flooding

WHO Western Pacific Region
No new digest content identified.

UNDP United Nations Development Programme [to 31 October 2015]

UNDP United Nations Development Programme [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.undp.org/content/undp/en/home/presscenter.html
Selected Press Releases

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Eco-friendly toilets in India improve the health and dignity of the poor
Oct 30, 2015
Banka BioLoo, an Indian company that provides innovative solutions for human waste treatment, has joined the Business Call to Action (BCtA) in distributing environmentally-friendly toilets to low-income families across India. Banka BioLoo’s plans to install 300,000 innovative sanitation systems, or bioloos, across the country by 2020. Bioloos will also be installed in 3,000 schools, reaching an additional 120,000 girls. The company estimates that 94,000 temporary jobs will be created as a result of this expansion.

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Engagement with civil society and partnerships critical for the post-2015 development framework
Oct 28, 2015
The 12th annual meeting of the UNDP Civil Society Advisory Committee concluded yesterday after two days of discussions on how to strengthen UNDP’s engagement with civil society, including in relation to the implementation of the SDGs.

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Helen Clark: Speech at the Open Government Partnership (OGP) Summit 2015 Event “Openness for All: The Role for OGP in the 2030 Development Agenda”
Oct 28, 2015 Palacio de Bellas Artes – Mexico City, Mexico

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UNDP announces winners of climate change storytelling contest for aspiring journalists
Oct 27, 2015 Five young journalists have been selected to join the upcoming climate change conference (COP21) in Paris in December.

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Helen Clark: Speech presenting Sir Richard Branson with the International Crisis Group Chairman’s Award “In Pursuit of Peace” Awards Dinner
Oct 26, 2015Pier Sixty, Chelsea Piers – New York, USA

UNEP United Nations Environment Programme [to 31 October 2015]

UNEP United Nations Environment Programme [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.unep.org/newscentre/?doctypeID=1
Selected Press Releases

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Global Response to Climate Change Keeps Door Open to 2 Degree C Temperature Limit
New UN Report Synthesizes National Climate Plans from 146 Countries in Advance of Paris.
30/10/2015

New UN-Supported Rice Management Standard Sets Benchmark for Environmentally Sustainable and Socially Responsible Rice Cultivation
The Standard for Sustainable Rice Cultivation uses environmental and socio-economic benchmarks to maintain yields for rice smallholders, reduce the environmental footprint of rice cultivation and meet consumer needs for food safety and quality.
27/10/2015

UN DESA United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs [to 31 October 2015]

UN DESA United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs [to 31 October 2015]
http://www.un.org/en/development/desa/news.html
Selected Press Releases

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Disaster risk reduction ‘core development priority’ of Asia and the Pacific
30 October 2015, New York
Building resilience in the face of natural disasters is “not a choice, but rather a collective imperative,” the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) declared today, as it called on all government agencies to take on disaster risk reduction as a priority and make it an integral part of sustainable development in the region.

UNESCO [to 31 October 2015]

UNESCO [to 31 October 2015]
http://en.unesco.org/news
Selected Press Releases

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World Trends in Freedom of Expression report launched to mark International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists
27 October 2015
UNESCO will release a report on World Trends in Freedom of Expression and Media Development, with a special focus on digital communication and safety at events in Paris, London and New York on the occasion of International Day to End Impunity for Crimes against Journalists, celebrated on 2 November since 2014.

The report* takes stock of the voluntary response rate of Member States to the request by the Director-General of UNESCO for information about actions taken to prevent the impunity of those responsible for the killing of journalists and media workers…