ECOWAS plans solidarity fund for North East

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Singhatey who spoke Tuesday in Abuja during the celebration of the 2017 World Refugee Day with the theme “We stand together #with refugees and IDPs’’, said the Solidarity Fund was in compliance with the decision of the Mediation and Security Council to support the Federal Government’s Plan for the reconstruction and rehabilitation of North-East Nigeria.

He said that the humanitarian crises in the the North-East was enormous, adding that it was constantly being assessed by the ECOWAS Commission for interventions from the international community

He recalled that the ECOWAS Commission, working with partners had donated one million dollars’ worth of food items to support the Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and $300,000 for Nigerian refugees in Niger, Chad and Cameroon.

The ECOWAS Commission vice president said that it also donated 400,000 dollars for the support of affected communities in the North-East.

According to him, a recent statistics by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) estimates over 65 million out of the eight billion worldwide population are refugees, asylum seekers and IDPs.

Singhatey said that the African region represents about 30 per cent of the total number of refugees worldwide with a record of 180 million refugees as at 2016.

He said that in West Africa, displacement and sufferings were caused by conflicts and other natural and human made causes.

Singhatey said that failing to address the situation of refugees and other persons of concern amount to inviting adverse consequences for the environment.

He said that the Commission’s Department of Social Affairs and Gender leads the humanitarian works with the goal of a borderless, prosperous and cohesive region with the capacity to effectively prevent and mitigate conflicts.

He said the goal was also to limit the impact of conflicts and disasters on citizens and residents with a view to achieving human centered development.

Singhatey said that the commission would continue to support the efforts of the Nigerian Government in assisting refugees, IDPs and other persons of concern.

Also speaking, Mr Jose-Antonio Canhandula, UNHCR Representative to Nigeria and ECOWAS tasked Nigeria to join the new approach, which he said was the Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework.

He said that the framework was already being piloted by other African countries, including development actors and private sector in Chad, Tanzania, Ethiopia and Uganda.

Canhandula, however, said that UNHCR was working with various partners to foster the protection of refugees and IDPs, to collectively seek ways to increase support to the government in assisting people.

 

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