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Other posts. Almost 30 days after OdettePH , the strongest storm to make landfall in , swept through 10 regions in Visayas and Mindanao , WFP continues its support to the Philippine Government relief efforts. See more of World Food Programme on Facebook. Log In. Create new account. When an emergency strikes, we use the information at hand to organize our response and launch our operation, rapidly deploying skilled emergency personnel and working with hundreds of partners, including sister UN agencies and local NGOs.
We work with government agencies, local authorities, emergency partners and, above all, the affected communities themselves to identify places and people in most need, using innovative methods including geospatial technology. We provide food, ideally buying it locally, or opt for cash assistance where local markets are functioning.
An emergency may last a few months or several years. We also review our response together with impartial assessors to inform and improve our future work. WFP distributes food in areas where it is scarce. In places where food is available but unaffordable, we give vulnerable people cash or vouchers to buy nutritious ingredients. These cash transfers give people more choice, protect them from financial exploitation, and support the local economy.
WFP helps the most vulnerable people strengthen their capacities to absorb, adapt and transform in the face of shocks and long-term stressors. Chronic malnutrition has profound, long-term effects on health and life prospects.
WFP works with governments and partners to help vulnerable groups, such as women, children and people receiving treatment for HIV and tuberculosis, access nutritious diets. Our programmes include distributing specialized nutritious foods, fortifying staples, designing and implementing school feeding, and enabling dietary diversification. WFP works with partners to deliver school-based health and nutrition services. The work of the UN would have not been possible without the unwavering support from our bilateral and multilateral development partners, who are represented in this important forum: Australia, Germany, Japan, Spain, Norway, Canada, New Zealand, Korea, and EU.
Without your financial contributions we would have not been able to deliver the much-needed services to those that need them the most and would have not been able to share the above figures of how much we have achieved, even modestly. We also appreciate the close partnership we have built with the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank in recognition that we are multiple.
His role is not only to strengthen coordination among various UN entities operating in the BARMM but also provide coordination support to other development partners supporting the transition. We also supported the strengthening of the cold chain management capacity and COVID vaccination preparedness through the provision of key medical equipment and supplies, a series of training for frontline health workers, and strengthened disaster risk reduction management planning at the municipal and barangay level.
Allow me to end my message with my recent visit to Cotabato, where I met with key stakeholders, including those affected by natural disasters and those displaced by cycles of armed conflicts that have torn the region in the most recent past and robbed the many development opportunities and potential it presents. From my meetings, a few things that need to be noted emerged: Expectations for a successful transition are very high among the population and the civil society.
It is important that we use the opportunity offered by the extension of the transition period to to make gains in meeting at least basic aspirations of Bangsamoro people. There is a need for greater coordination among various actors intervening in the transition process and ensuring that our interventions become catalytic to sustainable peace and stability by through the reflection the priorities of the BARMM and the Bangsamoro people.
In this regard, I would like to inform you that the UN System in the Philippines are working towards higher convergence and complementarity though joint programming.
This office will offer a great opportunity enhanced dialogue among development partners, civil society, private sector and with BARMM authorities.
I do hope this forum will lead to enhanced commitment among development partners and I assure you that the United Nations System will accompany you in this journey through the transition and beyond. Thank you for your attention! UN Philippines chief lauds Australia and Norway for supporting joint programme on human rights. This is not always an easy task, but these challenges cannot be resolved by trainings and expertise alone.
Resolving them requires leadership and courage. Read the full message of Mr. Gonzalez here. View all. The steering committee meeting today was participated in by Department of Justice Secretary Menardo I.
Guevarra said, "The Joint Programme seeks to affirm the commitment of the Philippines to the primacy of human rights, the importance of a free democratic space for civil society, and the principle of international cooperation—key values that the Philippines holds dear as a founding charter member of the UN. Concrete actions, milestones and tools have been discussed and adopted. Everyone has a role in the joint programme and is accountable for the expected results.
Civil Society Organizations CSOs as well as the academe will also be core partners in the implementation of the programme. Through the joint programme, the UN in the Philippines will engage in capacity-building and technical cooperation in six areas, namely, strengthening domestic investigation and accountability mechanisms; data gathering on alleged police violations; civic space and engagement with civil society and the Commission on Human Rights CHR ; national mechanism for reporting and follow-up; counter-terrorism legislation; and human rights-based approaches to drug control.
Science and trust in science are the hero and lesson of the pandemic; the world needs both to win against the virus. Scientists delivered safe and effective vaccines in record time. Access to reliable and verifiable information is making the difference between life and death.
Action based on evidence is crucial for our responses to drugs, too. The world drug problem remains an urgent challenge that threatens to exacerbate pandemic impacts and hinder a healthy and inclusive recovery. The forthcoming World Drug Report from the United Office on Drugs and Crime shows that deaths attributed to disorders related to drug use have nearly doubled over the past decade.
New HIV infections among adults worldwide have declined in recent years, but not among people who inject drugs, who accounted for 10 per cent of new infections in International cooperation has helped to limit the proliferation of new psychoactive substances, but the problem is shifting to poorer regions where control systems are weaker.
Dark web drug sales continue to rise, and non-medical use of pharmaceuticals, including opioids, is expanding. Drug trafficking and organized crime fuel and perpetuate cycles of violence and conflict. Armed groups and terrorists profit from the illicit drug trade, and the economic fallout of the COVID pandemic has left millions of people even more vulnerable to drug crime and illicit crop cultivation.
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