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Forbes
15-04-2025
- Health
- Forbes
UNICEF Reaching Children Caught In Sudan's Perfect Storm
On March 2, 2025, children walk back home from a UNICEF-supported child-friendly space in Al Houri internally displaced people's (IDP) camp in Gedaref State, Sudan. At the camp, UNICEF and partners are delivering an integrated emergency response in water, sanitation and hygiene, health and nutrition, child protection and education, benefiting children and their families from displaced and host communities. As the brutal armed conflict in Sudan moves into its third year, the country is mired in the world's largest humanitarian and child displacement polycrisis. Life is a daily battle to survive for 30 million people in need of humanitarian assistance. Nearly 15 million people have been displaced inside Sudan and across borders; more than half of those displaced are children. Almost one in three are under the age of 5. Famine is spreading, vaccination rates are dropping. Sexual violence against children is being used as a weapon of war. About 90 percent of children are out of school. In areas where opportunities to return arise, unexploded ordnance and limited access to essential services put children's lives at heightened risk. On April 5, 2025, mothers and children gathered at Saudi Hospital in Omdurman, Khartoum State, Sudan, to access essential health services. The hospital receives lifesaving vaccines, nutrition supplies and essential medicines from UNICEF. The day the war began — April 15, 2023 — Fatuma, 13, was taking a test at her school in Khartoum. "In the middle of the exam, a teacher entered and asked us to put the papers away," Fatuma said. "She didn't tell us why. She told us to go straight home and not to look around or linger in the streets." By the time she arrived home, her family was in a state of panic. As the sound of intense fighting grew nearer, the family fled in search of safety. Since then, they have moved six times. Home for now is a camp for the internally displaced in Kassala. UNICEF has been on the ground in Sudan since the 1950s, working to improve critical services and provide support and protection for vulnerable children. In 2024, UNICEF and partners provided psychosocial counseling, education and protection services to 2.7 million children and caregivers, reached over 9.8 million children and families with safe drinking water, screened 6.7 million children for malnutrition and provided lifesaving treatment for 422,000 of them. UNICEF continues to prioritize lifesaving interventions in conflict zones and also supports displaced populations and host communities in safer areas, providing essential services and support. UNICEF Representative to Sudan, Sheldon Yett, center in UNICEF vest, enjoys a light moment with children at Ammar Ibn Yasir School for Boys on April 5, 2025. The school hosts a safe learning space for internally displaced children in Karrari, Khartoum State. Safe learning spaces are places where children can meet, play, sing, have fun together and access learning activities supported by teachers. But access by humanitarian actors to children is deteriorating due to the intensity of the conflict and to restrictions or bureaucratic impediments imposed by government authorities or other armed groups. In 2024, over 60 percent of UNICEF's aid deliveries were delayed amid a highly volatile security environment. Although no missions were cancelled or aborted, these repeated delays disrupted the timely delivery of assistance and hindered access to children in urgent need. In Central Darfur, Sudan, UNICEF partners and volunteers transport cartons of ready-to-use therapeutic food by raft in September 2024, following the collapse of the Wadi Mornei bridge due to flooding. Last week, dozens of civilians, including at least 23 children, and several aid workers were reportedly killed in attacks in Al Fasher and Abu Shouk and Zamzam IDP camps. Over the past three months, more than 140 children have been killed or maimed in Al Fasher alone, underscoring the relentless toll of the ongoing war on children in Sudan and the extreme conditions facing humanitarian workers. "Two years of violence and displacement have shattered the lives of millions of children across Sudan," said UNICEF Executive Director Catherine Russell. "Needs continue to outpace humanitarian funding. With the rainy season around the corner, children who are already reeling from malnutrition and disease will be harder to reach. I urge the international community to seize this pivotal window for action and step up for Sudan's children.' "We have the expertise and the resolve to scale up our support, but we need access and sustained funding," Russell continued. "Most of all, children in Sudan need this horrific conflict to end.' On April 5, 2025, a child shows his drawing of a tank at a UNICEF-supported child-friendly space (CFS) in the Alhatana neighborhood, Omdurman, Khartoum State, Sudan. Right now, the lives of the most vulnerable children hang in the balance as conflicts and crises jeopardize the care and protection that they deserve. Dependable, uninterrupted and effective foreign aid is critical to the well-being of millions of children. Please contact your members of Congress and urge them to support ongoing U.S. investments in foreign assistance. Help UNICEF reach more children with urgently needed support. Please donate today.

Zawya
06-02-2025
- General
- Zawya
Five years to zero: the Race to end Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) by 2030
Joint statement by UNFPA, UNICEF, UN Women, Equality Now, Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and The Eastern African Sub-Regional Support Initiative for the Advancement of Women (EASSI) on the International Day of Zero Tolerance for FGM Fatuma was only ten when she overheard whispers about her 'special day.' In her village in Oromia, Ethiopia, the ritual was celebrated as a rite of passage, a moment that would define her future. But Fatuma's mother had different plans. Gripping her daughter's hand firmly, she walked silently for miles to a safe house where girls were protected from female genital mutilation (FGM). 'I wanted her to dream beyond our traditions, to go to school, to be free,' her mother said. Today, Fatuma is a university student, an advocate, and a voice for millions of girls who still face this harmful practice. On this International Day of Zero Tolerance for FGM, UNFPA, UNICEF, UN Women, alongside EASSI, Equality Now, GIZ, and partners, are calling for an end to FGM in all its forms once and for all. This year's theme, Stepping Up the Pace: Strengthening Alliances and Building Movements to End FGM, is a reminder that we must move collectively and rapidly to eliminate this grave violation of human rights. A persistent violation of rights FGM affects over 230 million women and girls worldwide, subjecting them to severe physical and psychological harm. In Eastern and Southern Africa alone, 42 million women and girls have undergone this harmful practice. While progress has been made—Ethiopia has reduced adolescent FGM rates from 68 per cent to 47 per cent in the last decade, and Kenya from 13 per cent to 9 per cent —but the numbers remain staggering. In Somalia, prevalence remains at 99 per cent. Ending FGM requires more than just policies and laws—it demands a movement. Governments, civil society organizations, including women's rights and youth groups, faith-based institutions, and the private sector must unite in unprecedented ways. As Mercy Yego Chelangat, Regional President for East and Southern Africa of the Global Youth Consortium Against FGM, powerfully states: 'When we join hands—whether across villages or borders—our collective effort becomes a movement that dismantles harmful practices and protects generations to come.' The role of national and regional task forces in fighting FGM is critical. Already, five countries —Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda—have enacted laws, developed national action plans, and allocated budgets to tackle FGM. But we need harmonized cross-border responses, recognizing that FGM does not stop at national borders. The recent momentum behind the East African Community (EAC) Bill on FGM, supported by civil society and regional governments, is a critical step forward. The fight against FGM is being transformed by women- and youth-led organizations. Groups like the Global Youth Consortium against FGM, Equality Now, EASSI, Frontline Ending FGM, Power to You(th) and the Strategic Initiative for Women in the Horn of Africa (SIHA) are bringing new energy, innovative dialogues, and legal advocacy to communities. These organizations are reaching remote villages, challenging entrenched norms, and fostering intergenerational alliances. Faith-based leaders and traditional elders also hold immense power in shifting cultural perceptions. By engaging religious institutions and community elders, we are seeing growing acceptance that FGM is not a religious requirement but a harmful practice that denies girls their fundamental rights. The road ahead In 2025, we will intensify our efforts by working with the African Union to drive the adoption and ratification of the Convention on Ending Violence against Women and Girls. Through the Saleema Initiative, and the Spotlight Initiative Africa Regional Programmes, we will ensure that legislative frameworks and accountability mechanisms are strengthened. Addressing cross-border FGM remains a priority, with an emphasis on joint action plans, data sharing, and coordinated prevention strategies. Recognizing that legal reforms and policies alone are not enough, we need to ensure sustainable, flexible funding for grassroots organizations leading change within communities. We need schools to be safe spaces, where girls are educated about their rights. We need boys and men to be allies, standing and fighting alongside women and girls to promote traditions and cultural practices which empower women and girls and dismantle discriminatory norms. The progress we have made is undeniable, but so is the urgency. We are just five years away from 2030, the global deadline to end FGM. Every day that passes means more girls are at risk. Fatuma's story is proof that change is possible. But for every girl who escapes, millions more still face the blade. We stand firm in our commitment: this harmful practice must end in our lifetime. And it will—if we step up together, now. Distributed by APO Group on behalf of UN Women - Africa.