Somalia, aid agencies seek $1BN to support 3.4M Somalis: statement

The Federal Government of Somalia and aid agencies operating in the country have today launched the 2019 Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) and called on donors to provide sufficient and early funding to sustain aid operations in Somalia in 2019.
The response plan seeks $1.08
billion to provide life-saving assistance and livelihood support to 3.4 million
Somalis affected by conflict, climatic shocks and displacement across the
country.
The improvements in the food
security situation due to good 2018 Gu rains, the sustained humanitarian
response throughout 2018 and a more focused definition of needs have resulted
in a 32 per cent decline in the number of people in need of humanitarian
assistance, from 6.2 million in 2018 down to 4.2 million in 2019.
However, continued conflict and
climatic shocks threaten to reverse these gains. In addition, humanitarian
needs remain above the pre-crisis level from two years ago. Over 1.5 million
people, mainly IDPs and rural populations, face acute levels of food insecurity
(IPC 3 and above) and require immediate assistance for their survival.
Malnutrition rates across the country have remained persistently high. Over 2.6
million people are internally displaced persons (IDPs) and live in difficult
circumstances, are highly vulnerable and in need of multiple basic services and
protection.
“Unless aid agencies can sustain
the aid operation or immediately scale it up in some worst drought-hit areas
early in the year, the progress made thus far is under severe threat, as Somalia
remains in the grip of one of the most complex and long-standing crises in the
world.
Climatic shocks such as the recent
poor Deyr rains coupled with the cumulative effects of years of the ongoing
conflict and the resultant displacements continue to cause suffering and
destroy people’s livelihoods,” said Peter de Clercq, the Humanitarian
Coordinator for Somalia.
“I urge the international
community to continue providing early and sufficient humanitarian funding.
Alongside life-saving support, a substantial investment in resilience-building
and development solutions will be critical to ultimately end need and allow
people to fend for themselves with dignity,” added Peter.
The Federal Government of Somalia
applauded aid agencies for prioritizing saving lives and ending need through
community resilience-building.
“This year’s response plan clearly
articulates the government’s position that humanitarian needs in Somalia cannot
be addressed by the delivery of life-saving assistance alone and it recognizes that there are opportunities for development actors to contribute to
strengthened resilience of Somalis,” said Mr. Hamza Said Hamza, the Minister of
Humanitarian Affairs and Disaster Management.
Mr Hamza has also called on donors
to also priorities programmes that tackle structural and chronic development
challenges in Somalia.
We are committed to working with
all partners to move ahead with implementing durable solutions through the
Resilience and Recovery Framework for Somalia, while the humanitarian response
plan focuses on the immediate needs of the most vulnerable – IDPs, host
communities, returnees to Somalia and refugees from neighbouring countries.”
Despite operational challenges,
insecurity and access restraints, aid agencies reached an average of three
million people every month with life-saving assistance in 2018.
The 2019 HRP targets 3.4 million
people or 81 per cent of the 4.2 million people in need of assistance, and the
HRP financial requirements were reduced from $1.5 billion in 2018 to $1.08 billion
this year, also in light of increasing engagement of resilience and development
actors. Guided by the Humanitarian Country Team’s Centrality of Protection
Strategy for 2018-2019, the humanitarian operations will focus on four core
strategic objectives: providing life-saving assistance, nutrition, protection
and resilience support to the most vulnerable.
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