Humanitarian Chief warns of UN funding crisis & rising attacks on aid workers | United Nations

Source: United Nations (video statements)

Press conference by Tom Fletcher, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, on humanitarian affairs.

The United Nations top humanitarian official, Tom Fletcher, today (15 Sep) said, “there are many who would like to see the UN being weakened" and called for the Organization to “push back against this crisis of finance” and “these challenges to our legitimacy and to our confidence.”

Talking to reporters in New York ahead of High-Level week, Fletcher said the financial situation “got worse since I was last here,” noting that “we’ve only been funded 19 percent of what we need.”

He said, “those funding cuts have already meant that we have hyper, hyper prioritised our planning in order to target saving 114 million lives, which would cost 29 billion dollars.”

Fletcher stressed that humanitarian workers are “under attack,” adding that last year, 380 plus aid workers were killed, the “highest ever.”

He said, “it’s a record that I fear will break again. And that violence against us – and I’ll come on to Yemen, for example, and of course OPT, Gaza- is somehow being normalized.”

On Gaza, Fletcher said, “we need the crossings open. We need functional access. We need unimpeded safe passage inside Gaza. We need the looting to stop. We need the hostages to be released. We need a ceasefire now.”

And all of this, he added, “is against the backdrop where the rules of war are being corroded day by day.

On Sudan, he said, “particular focus on trying to get this siege of El Asher lifted,” where “900,000 people there are in desperate, desperate need of our lifesaving work.”

On Syria, he said he expected the visit of President Ahmed al-Sharaa and his team “to ensure we’ve got the right balance in the conversation between the humanitarian imperative and that longer term development and resilience and reconstruction effort that will allow the people of Syria, as they wish to, to reduce that dependence on humanitarian aid.”

On Haiti, which he visited last week, Fletcher said, “the violence has to end.”

He noted that the capital Port au Prince is “pushed to the brink” and told reporters he had met “young people trapped by violence, but who are finding ways to rebuild their lives,” as well as “IDP families living in the most unthinkable conditions” and survivors of gender based violence, “who have faced just unspeakable and repeated attacks.”

Responding to a journalist’s question on aid delivery in Gaza, Fletcher said, “can I guarantee that every grain of rice that gets looted from our lorries doesn’t end up on the market in some way or doesn’t get stolen by Hamas fighters? No, it’s impossible in those chaotic conditions to guarantee that. But we feel very confident that we have a system that ensures the majority does get to civilians. If we’re allowed to operate. You know, if we could flood Gaza with hundreds of trucks a day, the looting would go away. The prices in the markets would come down. So, we know we can do that. And we can do that even in these incredibly difficult conditions that exist.”

More info: https://www.unocha.org/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BGzF6bMK_tQ