The UN’s Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), is “one of the most effective investments you can make in humanitarian action”, UN Secretary-General António Guterres told a high-level pledging event at UN Headquarters in New York on Monday.
“It is the only global emergency fund that is fast, predictable and
flexible enough to reach tens of millions of people each year”, according to
the UN chief, who maintained
that the fund supports a “well-coordinated global humanitarian response
system with an enormous network of partners to help the most
vulnerable”.
Since its creation 13 years ago, the fund has allocated over $6 billion to support life-saving assistance in 104 countries, protecting millions of people, sometimes within hours of the onset of an emergency.
Noting that the climate crisis is causing more frequent and deadly
hurricanes, cyclones and droughts around the world, the UN chief spelled out:
“CERF is on the frontline of our response”. He said “CERF provides
funding without the bureaucracy that can slow down our work, so the money is
available within days, sometimes hours, of disaster striking”, flagged the UN
chief, citing lifeline support to food insecurity-plagued Mali and Sudan, as
well as helping children to stay in school in Cameroon, Chad, the occupied
Palestinian Territories, Ukraine and elsewhere.
With the contributions of 52 Member States “CERF truly a fund for all, by
all”, upheld the UN chief, while noting that today it is “contending with a far
greater scale of suffering” than when it was created in 2005.
Chairing the event, UN Emergency Relief Coordinator Mark Lowcock said
that this year’s “unprecedented demand” for emergency funding enabled responses
to “time-critical, life-threatening needs” for millions of crises-affected
people across 46 countries. Lowcock
admitted that “significant challenges” lie ahead, saying “I fear the outlook
for the year ahead is bleak: One person
in 45 around the world are expected to need our help. The highest number ever”,
he said, which would require nearly $29 billion in funding.
[UN News]