The neonatal mortality and its determinants in rural communities of Eastern Uganda

Reproductive Health
http://www.reproductive-health-journal.com/content
[Accessed 20 February 2016]

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Research
The neonatal mortality and its determinants in rural communities of Eastern Uganda
Rornald M. Kananura, Moses Tetui, Aloysius Mutebi, John N. Bua, Peter Waiswa, Suzanne N. Kiwanuka, Elizabeth Ekirapa-Kiracho and Fredrick Makumbi
Published on: 16 February 2016
Abstract
Background
In Uganda, neonatal mortality rate (NMR) remains high at 27 deaths per 1000 live births. There is paucity of data on factors associated with NMR in rural communities in Uganda. The objective of this study was to determine NMR as well as factors associated with neonatal mortality in the rural communities of three districts from eastern Uganda.
Methods
Data from a baseline survey of a maternal and newborn intervention in the districts of Pallisa, Kibuku and Kamuli, Eastern Uganda was analyzed. A total of 2237 women who had delivered in the last 12 months irrespective of birth outcome were interviewed in the survey. The primary outcome for this paper was neonatal mortality. The risk ratio (RR) was used to determine the factors associated with neonatal mortality using log – binomial model.
Results
The neonatal mortality was found to be 34 per 1000 live births (95 % CI = 27.1–42.8); Kamuli 31.9, Pallisa 36.5 and Kibuku 30.8. Factors associated with increased neonatal deaths were parity of 5+ (adj. RR =2.53, 95 % CI =1.14–5.65) relative to parity of 4 and below, newborn low birth weight (adj. RR = 3.10, 95 % CI = 1.47–6.56) and presence of newborn danger signs (adj. RR = 2.42, 95 % CI = 1.04–5.62). Factors associated with lower risk of neonatal death were, home visits by community health workers’ (CHW) (adj. RR =0.13, 95 % CI = 0.02–0.91), and attendance of at least 4 antenatal visits (adj. RR = 0.65, 95 % CI = 0.43–0.98).
Conclusions
Neonatal mortality in rural communities is higher than the national average. The use of CHW’s to mobilize and sensitize households on appropriate maternal and newborn care practices could play a key role in reducing neonatal mortality.

Beyond Ebola – Lessons

Science
19 February 2016 Vol 351, Issue 6275
http://www.sciencemag.org/current.dtl

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Perspectives
Beyond Ebola
By Janet Currie, Bryan Grenfell, Jeremy Farrar
Science19 Feb 2016 : 815-816
[Free full text]
Summary
On 14 January 2016, Liberia was declared Ebola-free. A new case was identified shortly after the announcement, but it is nevertheless clear that the West African epidemic has moved on to a more hopeful phase. What lessons can be drawn from the Ebola crisis to help the international community to prepare for and respond to the next global epidemic? This question is particularly pertinent given the recent declaration of the Zika virus as a public health emergency.

The Sentinel

Human Rights Action :: Humanitarian Response :: Health ::
Holistic Development :: Sustainable Resilience
__________________________________________________
Week ending 13 February 2016

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 13 February 2016

blog edition: comprised of the 35+ entries  for this edition posted below

Hilton Foundation Mourns Loss of Hilton Prize Director Judy M. Miller

News Release
Hilton Foundation Mourns Loss of Hilton Prize Director Judy M. Miller
Renowned nonprofit executive passes away in Los Angeles at the age of 77
LOS ANGELES, Feb. 11, 2016 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — Philanthropist and activist Judy M. Miller, passed away on February 8, 2016 at her home in Los Angeles of natural causes. She was 77. Judy was known throughout the nonprofit community as a tireless advocate for vulnerable and disadvantaged people around the world. She served as Vice President and Director of the Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize for 18 years, after a remarkable four-decade career in communications and marketing.

“Judy was a beloved member of our Foundation family and will be greatly missed,” said Peter Laugharn, President and CEO at the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation. “We are very proud of her many accomplishments and will miss her dedication to discovering and advocating for nonprofit organizations that have made extraordinary advances in relieving human suffering.”…

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Chronicle pf Philanthropy
February 12, 2016
Appreciation: Judy Miller’s Leadership Made Hilton Prize Rigorous and Rewarding
By Tom Watson
Last fall at the Waldorf Astoria in New York, I watched as Judy Miller worked the room. The venerable Park Avenue pile was packed with philanthropic luminaries and social-sector leaders celebrating the 20th anniversary of the Hilton Humanitarian Prize, the world’s largest philanthropic award, of which she was the longtime director. Former laureates told stories of challenge and redemption and impact as the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation justly marked one of the great philanthropic success stories in glamorous fashion.

Indefatigable, personally generous, insatiably curious, and possessed of the unmistakable glow that comes from organizing people and resources for the betterment of society, Judy was a true force in the world of American philanthropy. She didn’t have her name on the front door, she rarely stepped into the spotlight, and she worked the inside game. But she made a path that made a difference.

Her death Monday at age 77 shocked and saddened the huge network of nonprofit leaders and change-makers long accustomed to her stoic presence and quiet leadership. This was a person who logged millions of miles visiting nonprofit programs around the world in the service of making the Hilton Prize the most rigorous (and rewarding) of program achievements. Judy delighted in stories of exotic and occasionally dangerous travel, and she took pride in just how hard it was to win a Hilton Prize.

Her record of service to philanthropy lives on in the Hilton laureates, a group that includes nonprofits that have been more innovative and had more impact than most others on the planet…

One Humanity: Shared Responsibility – Report of the Secretary-General for the World Humanitarian Summit

World Humanitarian Summit
https://www.worldhumanitariansummit.org/
23-24 May 2016 :: Istanbul, Turkey

General Assembly: Briefing by the Secretary-General of the United Nations on the occasion of the launch of his report for the World Humanitarian Summit (Informal meeting of the plenary)
9 Feb 2016 – [Video: 1:58:51]

Stephen O’Brien (OCHA) on the launch of the Secretary-General’s report for the World Humanitarian Summit (WHS) – Press Conference
9 Feb 2016 – [Video: 41:52]
Mr. Stephen O’Brien, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, briefed reporters on the launch of the Secretary-General’s report for the World Humanitarian Summit (WHS).

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One Humanity: Shared Responsibility
Report of the Secretary-General for the World Humanitarian Summit
Advance unedited copy :: 64 pages
General Assembly
Seventieth session
Item 73 (a)
Strengthening of the coordination of humanitarian and disaster relief assistance of the United Nations, including special economic assistance: strengthening of the coordination of emergency humanitarian assistance of the United Nations
Pdf: http://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/Secretary-General%27s%20Report%20for%20WHS%202016%20%28Advance%20Unedited%20Draft%29.pdf

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AGENDA FOR HUMANITY – Annex to the Report of the Secretary-General for the World Humanitarian Summit
The World Humanitarian Summit must be a turning point in the way we address the challenges facing our common humanity. The community of “we the peoples”—Governments, local communities, private sector, international organizations and aid providers, and the thousands of committed and compassionate indi¬viduals assisting in crises and disasters every day—will only succeed if we work with a unified sense of purpose to end crises and suffering. The Summit must lead to genuine change in the way we deliver as-sistance and reduce risk and vulnerability; in our commitment to respecting, promoting and implementing international law; in the progress we make in reaching those furthest left behind; in the way we commit to collective outcomes and based on comparative advantage; in the way we resolve to reduce the fragmenta¬tion of international assistance into unmanageable numbers of projects and activities; and in the greater investments we make to prevent and resolve conflicts and human suffering.

We must build on the commitments made in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development by seizing the opportunity of this Summit to prevent and end suffering more decisively, and with more capacity, resolve and resources. We need to commit to working together collectively and coherently across political, cultural, religious and institutional divides. We need to inspire faith in national, regional and international solidarity and our willingness and capacity to prioritize humanity in our decision-making. Most importantly, we need to recognize people’s rights to live in safety, dignity and with the prospects to thrive as agents of their own destinies. Acting upon our individual and collective responsibilities must be our global commitment.

To this end, I urge you to commit to taking forward this Agenda for Humanity and use it as a framework for action, change and mutual accountability. I urge all stakeholders at the Summit to commit to implementing concrete initiatives aimed at making the Agenda a reality. Given the urgency of protecting and improving people’s lives, and ending suffering experienced by millions today, we must commit to making immediate progress in implementing the Agenda over the next three years, measuring further progress thereafter. My report to the 71st session of the General Assembly on the outcomes of the Summit will reflect further on this and make recommendations on how to best implement and monitor the necessary strategic shifts and actions to make a decisive difference for people today and tomorrow.

Change will require a steady and determined effort to do better and overcome the structures and arrange¬ments that we have been used to for decades. It will require a new and creative spirit of collaboration at all levels and openness to new and diverse partnerships. And it will require recognition that we must do far better in accepting our responsibilities for humanity, by ensuring an international order based on sol¬idarity and collaboration – with people at its centre.

Today the values of the United Nations and the vision of humanity that we have agreed upon in its Char¬ter and key instruments such as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the humanitarian principles agreed upon by the Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement and reaffirmed by General Assembly resolu¬tion 46/182, the Millennium Declaration and most recently the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, is needed more than ever. Humanity is not just a moral imperative but also a strategic necessity. We must therefore act upon our individual and shared responsibilities. And we must start by making the strategic, operational and policy shifts identified in this Agenda for Humanity a reality, with a heightened sense of urgency and resolve.

Pdf [14 pages]: http://reliefweb.int/sites/reliefweb.int/files/resources/Agenda%20for%20Humanity.pdf

UNODC Chief describes risk of 10,000 missing migrant children as “unacceptable”

UNODC Chief describes risk of 10,000 missing migrant children as “unacceptable”
09/02/2016 –
Executive Director of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) says in speech on human trafficking that we have the tools to fight this crime, but greater cooperation needed among those countries facing human trafficking

New York/Vienna, 9 February 2016 – Reacting to a Europol warning that up to 10,000 unaccompanied migrant children travelling to Europe were missing, UNODC Executive Director, Yury Fedotov, said today that this situation was “clearly unacceptable, and international action is urgently needed”.

Mr. Fedotov was speaking at an event in New York on human trafficking and the eradication of modern-day slavery through Sustainable Development, organized by the Belarus government, the Group of Friends United against Human Trafficking and UNODC. Other speakers included the President of the UN General Assembly, Mogens Lykketoft, and UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon.

The UNODC chief said solutions lay in fostering greater action and cooperation among every country affected by human trafficking. He underscored the importance of the UN Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and its protocol against human trafficking and stressed that it provided the necessary tools for action.

But the problem, said Mr. Fedotov, is that many countries are not using these laws. He quoted UNODC research that four in 10 countries reported having less than 10 yearly convictions, with nearly 15 per cent having no convictions at all.

He also indicated that the share of children being trafficked was rising with the number of detected child victims now representing nearly one-third of all detected trafficking victims in the world.

Discussing a strategy to counter the traffickers, Mr. Fedotov said the Global Plan of Action to Combat Trafficking in Persons offered a suitable plan, but funding was also needed.

He said the UN Voluntary Trust Fund for Victims of Trafficking in Persons needed the strong support of countries. The Trust Fund has already supported 30 NGO projects, in 26 countries around the world, with grants worth US$ 1.75 million.

Read the Executive Director’s full speech at the event.

International Day against the Use of Child Soldiers: Child Soldiers are Boys and Girls We Failed to Protect

International Day against the Use of Child Soldiers: Child Soldiers are Boys and Girls We Failed to Protect
SRSG/CAAC :: Office of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict
12 Feb 2016
New York – As we mark the International Day against the Use of Child Soldiers, tens of thousands of boys and girls are associated with armed forces and groups in conflicts in over 20 countries around the world.

“Again this year, the multiplication of conflicts and the brutality of tactics of war have made children extremely vulnerable to recruitment and use,” said Leila Zerrougui, the Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict.

In the most recent Annual report of the Secretary-General on children and armed conflict, 56 of the 57 parties to conflict identified for grave violations against children are named because they are recruiting and using child soldiers.

Children are sent to the frontlines as combatants, but many are also used in functions that put their lives in danger such as cooks, porters, spies and informants. During their association with armed groups or forces, children are exposed to high levels of violence. They are witnesses, victims or forced to commit acts of brutality. In addition, a majority of girls, but also boys, are victims of rape and sexual violence. When they are captured or arrested for alleged association with armed groups, too often, children are not treated primarily as victims and denied the protection guaranteed by international norms and standards of juvenile justice.

“Children who are released or escape often have a hard time finding their place in society, or can even be rejected by their communities. We must make it our common responsibility to ensure sufficient resources are available for reintegration to provide psychosocial support as well as education and vocational training. This is crucial to their future and to build peaceful societies,” said Leila Zerrougui.

…The Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict, now ratified by 162 state parties, has played a crucial role to bring about this consensus. Leila Zerrougui invites all Member States who have not yet ratified the Optional protocol to do so as soon as possible.

“I invite everyone to start thinking about child soldiers as boys and girls we collectively failed to protect,” said Leila Zerrougui. “We have an opportunity to end the recruitment and use of children in conflict. It is now our common responsibility to ask for urgent action to end grave violations against children and to dedicate the necessary attention and resources to reach our objective.”

Additional information on the recruitment and use of children:
In Afghanistan, there is progress to end the recruitment and use of children in national security forces, but children continue to be recruited by armed groups such as the Taliban.

In the Central African Republic, children continue to be subjected to grave violations by all parties to the conflict. The UN has documented several thousand children recruited and used by armed groups since the beginning of the conflict. Children have been used in many ways. They have been sent to the frontlines as combatants, as informants or porters. Girls have been used for sexual purposes.

In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, there is steady progress in the implementation of the Action Plan signed with the United Nations to end the recruitment and use of children by the national security forces. Despite this positive development, children continued to be recruited and used by armed groups, most notably in eastern DR Congo. It is estimated that the ranks of some armed groups are composed of about 30% of children.

In Iraq and Syria, with the proliferation of armed groups and advances by ISIL, children remain vulnerable to recruitment. Reports have been received of armed groups targeting children as young as seven years of age, and forcibly recruiting children through coercion of family members and abductions.

In South Sudan, children continue to suffer the consequences of a brutal conflict and most of the progress previously achieved to protect them has been erased. We now see high levels of recruitment and use and call on all parties to take tangible action to honour their commitment to protect children.

In Yemen, the recruitment and use of children by all parties to the conflict has become widespread since the escalation of conflict in March 2015.

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11 Feb 2016
Colombia: UN Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict Welcomes FARC-EP’s Decision to End Child Recruitment
New York – The Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Children and Armed Conflict, Leila Zerrougui, welcomes yesterday’s confirmation by the Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia-Ejército del Pueblo (FARC-EP) that they will stop the recruitment and use of children under 18…

Statement on Data Sharing in Public Health Emergencies

Statement on Data Sharing in Public Health Emergencies
The arguments for sharing data, and the consequences of not doing so, have been thrown into stark relief by the Ebola and Zika outbreaks.

In the context of a public health emergency of international concern, there is an imperative on all parties to make any information available that might have value in combatting the crisis.

We are committed to working in partnership to ensure that the global response to public health emergencies is informed by the best available research evidence and data, as such:
:: Journal signatories will make all content concerning the Zika virus free to access. Any data or preprint deposited for unrestricted dissemination ahead of submission of any paper will not pre-empt its publication in these journals.
:: Funder signatories will require researchers undertaking work relevant to public health emergencies to set in place mechanisms to share quality-assured interim and final data as rapidly and widely as possible, including with public health and research communities and the World Health Organisation.

We urge other organisations to make the same commitments. This commitment is in line with the consensus statement agreed at a WHO expert consultation on data sharing last year whereby researchers are expected to share data at the earliest opportunity, once they are adequately controlled for release and subject to any safeguards required to protect research participants and patients.

Signatories to the Statement
Academy of Medical Sciences, UK
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council (BBSRC)
The British Medical Journal (BMJ)
Bulletin of the World Health Organization
Canadian Institutes of Health Research
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Chinese Academy of Sciences
Chinese Centre for Disease Control and Prevention
The Department of Biotechnology, Government of India
The Department for International Development (DFID)
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG)
eLife
The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
F1000
Fondation Mérieux
Fundação Oswaldo Cruz (Fiocruz)
The Institut Pasteur
Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development (AMED)
The JAMA Network
The Lancet
Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF)
National Academy of Medicine
National Institutes of Health, USA
National Science Foundation, USA
The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM)
PLOS
Science Journals
South African Medical Research Council
Springer Nature
UK Medical Research Council
Wellcome Trust
ZonMw – The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development

BRAC [to 13 February 2016]

BRAC [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.brac.net/#news
Graduation: What’s next for ultra-poor programmes?
Results are in: Research shows that BRAC’s one-shot, ‘big-push’ intervention targeting the ultra-poor with assets and skills can lift extreme households onto a more sustainable path out of poverty. In this blog we presented updated findings on the long-term impact and sustainability of the approach from studies showcased at the recent IGC-BRAC conference: Tackling extreme poverty: Evidence from the field.

CARE International [to 13 February 2016]

CARE International [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.care-international.org/news/press-releases

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12th Feb 2016 Syria
“Cessation of hostilities” welcome, but at what price?
CARE response to “cessation of hostilities” in Syrian conflict

CARE mobilizing aid as civilians flee advancing military and airstrikes in north and south
10th Feb 2016 Syria
The international aid agency, CARE, is mobilizing additional supplies to assist civilians trapped in the on-going conflict in Syria, which has escalated in recent weeks with military advances on major centers held by opposition forces.

Aid agencies: Impacted by war, 88 percent of Syrians in the south living in extreme poverty
8th Feb 2016 Jordan
Aid agencies CARE, NRC and RFSAN (FAO, iMMAP) release “The Forgotten South: Food Security and Livelihoods in southern Syria”.

Danish Refugee Council [to 13 February 2016]

Danish Refugee Council [to 13 February 2016]
https://www.drc.dk/news

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13.02.16
Better conditions meet refugees in Greece
Since mid-December the Danish Refugee Council has been working to support the Greek Authorities in improving the reception conditions at Moria site on Lesvos Island.

12.02.16
DRC opens representation in Brussels
The Danish Refugee Council is opening its first office in Brussels. Together with the DRC Representation in Geneva, the initiative is an important step in DRC’s strategic advocacy work on behalf of conflict-affected refugees and internally displaced people.

08.02.16
DRC on emergency standby in Turkey
More than 25,000 Syrians have been fleeing Aleppo the last days. Some of them are stranded at the Turkey border. While some aid is provided in the other side of the border, the Danish Refugee Council is standby and ready to support and assist new comers in Turkey.

IRC International Rescue Committee [to 13 February 2016]

IRC International Rescue Committee [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.rescue.org/press-release-index

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Latest Press Releases
12 Feb 2016
Clooneys Speak to Syrian Refugees in Meeting with International Rescue Committee

11 Feb 2016
Increase in airstrikes and ongoing sieges “making a mockery” of international efforts to help Syrians, says aid agency

10 Feb 2016
Katherine Farley, Tracy R. Wolstencroft elected Co-Chairs of International Rescue Committee

08 Feb 2016
“This loss of life is avoidable.” IRC reacts to 33 more lives lost in Aegean Sea

08 Feb 2016
The International Rescue Committee supports Federal Court’s denial of request to prevent Syrian refugees from resettling in Texas

ICRC [to 13 February 2016]

ICRC [to 13 February 2016]
https://www.icrc.org/en/whats-new

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13-02-2016 | News release
Philippines: Red Cross extends assistance to people affected by Typhoon Melor
The Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement has scaled up its humanitarian assistance to tens of thousands of families who have lost their homes and livelihoods after the onslaught of Typhoon Melor (local name: Nona).

Yemen: Desperately needed medical supplies reach Taiz
Sana’a/Geneva – A team from the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has managed to enter the city of Taiz, one of the worst-affected places in Yemen’s fighting, and deliver life-saving medical supplies.
13-02-2016 | News release

Yemen: Staggering crisis, insufficient response
Dominik Stillhart, director of operations at the ICRC has just concluded a three-day visit to war-torn Yemen. “I am appalled by what Yemenis are having to endure,” said Mr Stillhart.
11-02-2016 | News release

Our humanitarian action in Colombia
While the peace talks between the Colombian government and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia – People’s Army (FARC-EP) are making headway, there is no respite from the everyday armed violence in Colombia.
11-02-2016 | Article

Syria: Aid stepped up amidst heavy fighting in Aleppo province
As the humanitarian situation deteriorates in northern Syria, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has said it is increasing the amount of aid for people caught up in the latest round of violence.
10-02-2016 | News release

Georgia/South Ossetia: Ninth meeting held in Ergneti to seek answers on fate of missing persons from conflicts of 1990s and 2008
ICRC – The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) has chaired the ninth meeting of the coordination mechanism for clarifying the fate and whereabouts of people who have been missing since the conflicts of the 1990s and August 2008 and their
10-02-2016 | News release

Liberia: Armed Forces of Liberia receive international humanitarian law manual
The ICRC has donated 480 copies of a new training manual on the law of armed conflict to the Armed Forces of Liberia.
09-02-2016 | News release

IRCT [to 13 February 2016]

IRCT [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.irct.org/

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News
Two decades of fostering social and mental wellbeing in Sri Lanka
11 February 2016

News
IRCT submits forensic evidence to the ECOWAS Court of Justice
09 February 2016

Statements & declarations
Turkey must respect the right to health and life of civilians in the Southeast – Open letter to Prime Minister Davutoğlu and the Turkish government
09 February 2016

News
20 years of EMPATHY in Georgia
09 February 2016

Islamic Relief [to 13 February 2016]

Islamic Relief [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.islamic-relief.org/category/news/
February 12, 2016
Empowerment through sports and education
Sports and education have played a part in empowering people who feel stigmatized by disability.
In Chechnya, Islamic Relief has been working with the Chechen Union of Visually Handicapped to set up a learning centre for people who are blind or have severe problems with their eyesight…

[Undated]
Increasing aid to displaced Syrians after need escalates
More than 70,000 people are living in desperate conditions on the Turkish border with Syria after military action newly displaced tens of thousands of people.
Around 40,000 of these have come from Aleppo city, in north-west Syria, following the escalating government assault earlier this year.
Islamic Relief is providing emergency aid to those who are now living on the Turkish border with no shelter and little food…

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 13 February 2016]

MSF/Médecins Sans Frontières [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.doctorswithoutborders.org/news-stories/press/press-releases

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Press Release
NATO’s Response to Migration is Dangerously Myopic
February 11, 2016
Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) issued the following statement today from Aurelie Ponthieu, MSF humanitarian affairs advisor on displacement, after NATO announced its response to migration in the Aegean Sea:

Press release
Pharma Company Attempt to Secure Patents for Key HIV Drugs Opposed in India
February 10, 2016
Delhi/New York—A patient living with HIV in India has filed an application to try to block ViiV Healthcare from being granted patents on two new critical HIV drugs, the medical humanitarian organization Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) announced today.

Press release
Syria: Escalation of Conflict in Azaz District Could Have Dire Consequences
February 10, 2016
Medical services disrupted in many areas and basic aid lacking for 30,000 newly displaced people.

Field News
Syria: Thousands Newly Displaced Amid Violence
February 09, 2016
In Aleppo governorate, Syria, thousands of people have fled north toward Azaz town and the border with Turkey in recent days. Approximately 23,000 new arrivals are in urgent need of emergency shelter and support near the Bab el Salamah border crossing, in addition to tens of thousands of displaced people already in areas near the border.

Field news
MSF-Supported Hospital Hit by Airstrikes in Southern Syria
February 09, 2016
Airstrikes hit a Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF)-supported hospital in Dara’a Governorate in southern Syria, killing three people and wounding at least six, including a nurse, says MSF.

Mercy Corps [to 13 February 2016]

Mercy Corps [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.mercycorps.org/press-room/releases

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Press releases
Syria: Mercy Corps on Syria Cease-fire: Why Wait One Week?
February 11, 2016 Portland, Oregon – We are encouraged by the apparent breakthrough in negotiations on Syria and hopeful that it will pave the way to a permanent cease-fire and, eventually, a lasting peace. A cessation of hostilities by all parties to the conflict will allow for humanitarian access to the millions of innocent Syrian civilians trying to survive a seemingly endless war.

Mercy Corps Urges Passage of Legislation to Advance Global Food Security
February 8, 2016 Washington, DC — The global organization Mercy Corps urges U.S. lawmakers to pass the Global Food Security Act (GFSA) (HR 1567/S 1252), which will create a comprehensive strategy to address hunger and promote lasting food security around the world. With 795 million people going to bed hungry every night, it is vital that Congress support efforts to help vulnerable families grow and obtain nutritious food that will help them become stronger and more resilient.

OXFAM [to 13 February 2016]

OXFAM [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.oxfam.org/en/pressroom/pressreleases

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11 February 2016
Central African Republic’s new president must prioritize the issue of civilian protection – with the support of the international community
Voters in Central African Republic will this Sunday vote in a new president whose first task must be to end the violence which continues to devastate the country, and to provide better protection for its exhausted population.

Norwegian Refugee Council [to 13 February 2016]

Norwegian Refugee Council [to 13 February 2016]
http://www.nrc.no/

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Iraq
Thousands of civilians flee Anbar
(12.02.2016)
As operations to retake opposition-held areas in Ramadi and Fallujah continue, thousands of civilians are forced to flee their homes. “Aid agencies are struggling to provide assistance due to the sudden increase in newly displaced families from towns inside Anbar governorate,” NRC’s Area Manager in Baghdad, Anja Riiser says…

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South Sudan
The struggle for peace
(12.02.2016)
If the security situation does not improve soon, we will miss our opportunity to move supplies and effectively prepare for the overwhelming humanitarian needs before rainy season arrives, writes Melody Knight, NRC’s Conflict and Policy Analyst in South Sudan.

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Turkey
Syrians freeze at the Turkish border
(11.02.2016)
NRC is concerned for the thousands of civilians at the border of Turkey, as the humanitarian situation worsens. We are currently working around the clock to provide internally displaced Syrian families with tents and emergency aid.