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Over 11-million refugees may lose aid access due to cuts, says UN agency

Over 11-million refugees may lose aid access due to cuts, says UN agency

TimesLIVE21-07-2025
Up to 11.6-million refugees are in danger of losing access to humanitarian assistance due to cuts in foreign aid by donor nations, the UN refugee agency said on Friday.
This is about one-third of refugees normally supported by the UN agency, it said.
'Our funding situation is dramatic. We fear that up to 11.6-million refugees and people forced to flee are losing access to humanitarian assistance provided by UNHCR,' said Dominique Hyde, UNHCR's director of external relations.
Just 23% of the UNHCR's funding requirement of $10.6bn (R187.77bn) has been fulfilled so far for this year, it said.
The funding crisis stems from large foreign aid cuts by donor countries such as Sweden, France and Japan, compounded by major US aid cuts.
Forced displacement is increasing globally, while humanitarian aid is sharply decreasing, creating a 'deadly cocktail' that places displaced populations at grave risk, according to a new report published on Friday by the UNHCR.
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A small UNFCCC budget fight signals a big climate justice crisis
A small UNFCCC budget fight signals a big climate justice crisis

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A small UNFCCC budget fight signals a big climate justice crisis

Last month, I sat in a small room in Bonn as negotiators at the UN's midyear climate talks (SB62) haggled for days over something that rarely makes headlines: the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change's (UNFCCC's) core budget. At the 11th hour, while the closing plenary had already begun and mild panic had set in, negotiators eked out an agreement to a meagre 10% increase for 2026-2027 — well below what the Secretariat says is needed to deliver the promises of the Paris Agreement. The UNFCCC had proposed a budget increase of 24.4%, which would have allowed it to cover 84% of essential activities. But instead, it will only have enough for 74% of its core work. To many, this sounds like technical bureaucracy. And judging by chats I've had with friends and colleagues, most people don't think about where the budget for the UNFCCC comes from at all. 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The credibility of the institution — and the fairness it offers the most climate vulnerable — will be written between those lines. And the rooms discussing them shouldn't be so sparse. DM

UN says DRC rebels killed scores of farmers, M23 suggests 'smear'
UN says DRC rebels killed scores of farmers, M23 suggests 'smear'

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The struggle for Palestinian rights: Insights from Pieter Kriel's visit to Palestine
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The struggle for Palestinian rights: Insights from Pieter Kriel's visit to Palestine

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