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Horn of Africa Drought Situation and Response

Horn of Africa Drought Situation and Response. Marko Lesukat, Plan International. Regional Drought Overview . South Sudan. Overview of Presentation. Overall situation – Late responses Drought Calendar and implications + Secondary factors to the drought Plans and other INGOs/UN Responses

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Horn of Africa Drought Situation and Response

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  1. Horn of Africa Drought Situation and Response Marko Lesukat, Plan International

  2. Regional Drought Overview South Sudan

  3. Overview of Presentation • Overall situation – Late responses • Drought Calendar and implications + Secondary factors to the drought • Plans and other INGOs/UN Responses • Impact of drought on children and Drought responses • Challenges • Way Forward: Children Charter in Disasters

  4. Overall Situation • About 13 million people affected (??% are children). • Somalia, Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda and Djibouti • Of the $2.4 billion for humanitarian requirement only 74% is funded (OCHA report 18 Nov 2011)

  5. Late Responses by All ActorsDrought calendar predictions 2010 and response 2011 Drought response starts EHRP appeal starts Drought declared disaster Long rains failed short rains below normal Long rains below normal Early warning systems and alerts

  6. Impact of drought on Children Children dropped out of school: • Food • Water • Shelter • Migration • Abuse

  7. Children need to remain in school: it’s their basic right Impact of drought on Children….continues ‘‘most of my friends have migrated away and have dropped out of school’’ Child from Samburu – Northern Kenya

  8. Impact of drought on children…….continue Children get abused especially girls • kitegauchumi’.....bread winners

  9. Children need food and water to remain in school Impact of drought on Children….continues ‘‘when our livestock migrate we only eat one meal per day. I share my school ration with my siblings back home’’ Child from Laikipia - Kenya

  10. Plans (and other INGOs) Responses - Supplementary feeding in schools and hospitals. - Therapeutic feeding in government hospitals. - Water tracking and hygiene education. - Child Protection (after child protection assessments) Though urgent and important this are relief needs, Children need more………..

  11. Challenges • Limited working groups on child protection in emergencies (Global and national levels) • Timing - delayed and slow initial response (we should have proactively considered children: children participation) • Root causes not addressed - difficulty getting the right responses to address chronic vulnerability issues (how will next drought response be different??). • Governments tried/provided support - coordination challenge (it’s not clear who engages with governments on behalf of children during emergencies) • Child protection assessments started late (focus was relief: (child protection needs were the latest to be identified by most actors)

  12. Way Forward: Role of CSOs in disaster responses Children identification and protection Participation in assessments, design and funding decisions (children) Lobby for the enactment of Disaster Policy/Legal frameworks for implementation Support the Children Charter on DRR

  13. The Children Charter on DRR An action plan for disaster risk reduction for children by children Consultations with 600 children from Africa, Asia and Latin America Q&A based on impacts of disasters on children’s lives and their priorities going forward • Schools must be safe and education must not be interrupted • Child protection must be a priority before, during and after a disasters • Children have the right to participate and to access the information they need • Community infrastructure must be safe, and relief and reconstruction must help reduce future risks • Disaster Risk Reduction must reach the most vulnerable children (people)

  14. Thank You

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