UNICEF

Chad’s President Renews Commitment to Fighting Polio


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Mar 25th, 2010 12:54 PM UTC
By Rena Pacheco-Theard

Chad, along with eighteen other African countries, began immunization of 85 million children against polio in a massive immunization campaign. The campaign has high level support and was launched by Heads of State and Health Ministers across the continent on March 6.

President Idris Deby Itno of Chad initiated the campaign by immunizing a child and announcing, “I am personally declaring war on polio.” He called on the entire nation to stop “this terrible disease,” emphasizing that it is “about the lives of our children.” His leadership is especially important given that Chad had been unable to stop polio outbreaks within its borders for more than two years, resulting in the spread of the disease to neighboring countries including Sudan, Cameroon, and the Central African Republic.

As UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Mia Farrow shared with you earlier, she was in Chad for her eleventh visit to the country to help with their polio vaccination campaign, highlighting the need for vaccinations to reach the most vulnerable children.

This impressive, synchronized campaign is made possible in large part by the support of $30 million in funding from Rotary International.

Photo Credit: WHO/UNICEF

Tony Lake selected to head UNICEF


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Mar 17th, 2010 4:59 PM UTC
By Chris Scott

The AP reports:

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on Tuesday selected U.S. foreign policy expert Tony Lake, who was an adviser to President Barack Obama, as his candidate to head UNICEF, the U.N. children’s agency.

UNICEF’s board must approve the selection, and is expected to do so.

Lake, 70, would replace Ann Veneman, a former U.S. secretary of agriculture who was appointed by former President George W. Bush. She announced in late December that she would not seek a second five-year term as UNICEF’s executive director. Her term ends April 30.

The head of UNICEF has always been an American, largely because the United States is the largest contributor to the agency, which is active in 190 countries.

Ban told a news conference that Lake “brings with him a wealth of experience after a long and distinguished career with the United States government.”

He thanked Veneman “for her immense dedication, energy and determination to improve the lives of children around the world” and said “she leaves behind an organization well-equipped for the enormous challenges ahead.”

Polio: A Shameful Legacy


Mar 9th, 2010 4:56 PM UTC
By Mia Farrow

Make sure to check out this post from Mia Farrow (written exclusively for the ONE blog) about her recent visit to Chad with UNICEF to raise awareness about the importance of polio vaccines.

Last week I made my eleventh visit to Chad, one of the most compelling and impoverished countries in the world. Life is harsh for the people of Chad and it is especially precarious for the children. In the capitol of Ndjamena, I met four-year-old Clako Ali, who lives with her grandmother in one of Ndjamena’s teeming, squalid alleyways. The child has a smile I won’t forget. Her grandmother described a happy, active little girl who is smart; Clako would do well in school.

But last October, polio stalked the streets and alleyways of Ndjamena and found little Clako in their one room hut. Today her legs are withered and useless—without bracing and crutches she will never stand or walk.

Her grandmother worries about the future. How can Clako attend school, and as time passes, how will she assume a woman’s tasks—fetching water, wood, cooking, farming and caring for children. And anyway, what man would ever want to marry Clako Ali?

I was with UNICEF in a vaccination campaign to fight a disease I know too well. My own son, adopted from India, is paraplegic because of polio. When I first brought him home to the United States, it was hard to find a doctor who had any experience with polio because we have had the vaccine since 1955. Polio disappeared from the developed world and our consciousness decades ago.

Today, it exists only in the poorest countries on earth, because the world does not care enough about its most vulnerable children.

Polio is the shameful legacy of destitution and global indifference.

-Mia Farrow

Sanitation in Haiti


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Feb 23rd, 2010 4:58 PM UTC
By Chris Scott

Recently on the ONE Blog we’ve been looking at some of the work going on as Haiti transitions toward long-term relief efforts to give the country a chance at a lasting recovery following last month’s catastrophic quake.

Today UNICEF has a post looking at an oft-overlooked yet important problem in Haiti– a lack of proper sanitation and needed latrines. You can read UNICEF’s report on this front here, and check out the video below:

Update on Haiti from Top UN Aid Chief


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Jan 21st, 2010 1:38 PM UTC
By Kara Arsenault

Yesterday, I joined a group of DC-based reporters at the UN Foundation to hear the latest on the situation in Haiti from Sir John Holmes, the top UN aid chief on Haiti (formally called the Under-Secretary General of the UN and Emergency Relief Coordinator). Sir John joined us via teleconference from the UN offices in New York, having returned from Haiti on Sunday.

Here are a few highlights from our lunchtime Q&A:

  • So what’s the UN’s role in Haiti? To act as a central coordinator—for all major UN agencies (including UNICEF and World Food Programme), the International Federation of Red and Red Crescent, as well as global NGOs and countries around the world. To help coordinate the humanitarian assistance, the UN agencies and other standing invitees (World Bank, InterAction) work together in clusters (distinct teams with clear responsibilities), making sure that information on the ground gets shared, needs are being met, areas aren’t getting missed and duplication isn’t an issue.
  • Sir John reminded us that the scale of the emergency is huge—which means you need a huge humanitarian response. And what a response he’s seen. He said in all the years he’s been doing this type of work, he’s not sure he’s ever witnessed such a large mobilization effort. He said everyone is of course frustrated at how long things take, but this is a classic relief situation: a massive effort that takes some time.
  • Logistically, things are turning a corner. Aid is getting out more rapidly—a half a million people have been given food, there’s greater access to water, and search and rescue is winding down. At least 5 field hospitals are up and running, and the port should be ready to go in the next few days. The banking system has collapsed, but a few cash points should be up and limping by today. Airport traffic is also flowing more smoothly. While the US is in control of logistics at the airport, the UN is helping to advise and prioritize flights in and out, with the top priority at the moment going to medical relief teams.
  • Aid workers are making the best with what’s available. There’s a massive shortage of office space, so people are finding a nook wherever they can. In many cases, they’re sleeping like sardines on the floor or the ground outside. There is some food and water available and no showers. Workers are mostly just living on what they’ve brought with them.
  • Sir John said that while the UN is focused on immediate relief at the moment, they’re hoping to start thinking more long-term, beginning with a cash-for-work program. People would get paid to help clear rubble, provide basic services and repairs, start building houses. He said this is something the UN has done before, but they’d like to do it on an even greater scale. He said they’re committed to making sure that we turn this dreadful disaster into something better, even more sustainable for Haiti.

To listen to the full news briefing, check out this post from the UN Dispatch and look for the video player at the bottom.

UNICEF in Haiti


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Jan 13th, 2010 10:23 AM UTC
By Chris Scott

UNICEF, which has been working in Haiti since 1949, reports this morning:

Despite heavy damages to its own offices in Port-au-Prince UNICEF is ready to provide immediate support to the victims of the unfolding humanitarian crisis following the earthquake that hit Haiti today.

In coordination with all other UN agencies present on the ground, UNICEF will provide supplies to allow access to adequate sanitation, safe water and basic health care.

UNICEF is also preparing materials and staff so that children, tremendously vulnerable during natural catastrophes, are protected. UNICEF materials and advisors will assist so that children are able to continue learning and studying, and be provided safe recreation areas while their caretakers turn to rebuilding their lives.

For useful background on Haiti and UNICEF’s past relief efforts in the country, read this. And be sure to follow their excellent FieldNotes blog for up-to-the-minute reports on what they’re seeing.

UNICEF reports on bed net distribution in DR Congo


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Jan 11th, 2010 10:57 AM UTC
By Chris Scott

UNICEF posted this great report on their work around distributing bed nets in the Democratic Republic of Congo to combat malaria:

You can read more on this story here.

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