map
youtube twitter facebook Google Paly App Stores

Victims until today

4048

UN Palestine Refugee Agency Still in Need of US$ 60 Million for Its 2021 Budget

Published : 18-11-2021

UN Palestine Refugee Agency Still in Need of US$ 60 Million for Its 2021 Budget

Additional end-of-year contributions amounting to US$38 million leave UNRWA still in need of US$ 60 million for 2021, said the UN Agency for Palestine Refugees.

UNRWA said that it operates critical health services for Palestinian refugees in its five fields of operations at an annual budget of around US$ 800 million. 

At the annual pledging conference, eight Member States announced a cumulative/total of over US$ 614 million in new or renewed multi-year agreements with durations from two to five years. The combination of these and existing multi-year pledges, if all fully realized at expected levels, would equate to 40 per cent of the Agency’s core budget needs for 2022.

The gathering was co-chaired by Jordanian Foreign Minister H.E Ayman Safadi and Swedish Foreign Minister Anne Linde who shared in a joint statement, “UNRWA continues to face repeated, catastrophic funding shortfalls that leave its staff and the millions of people it serves highly vulnerable to losing their basic necessities. We call on the international community to reform the structural funding model that has so often failed this vital UN Agency by committing to multi-year financing, expanding the donor base, and developing innovative financing mechanisms.”

UN Secretary-General António Guterres also spoke at this year’s conference. “We need to collectively find a path towards more predictable, sufficient and sustainable funding for the Agency, including through multi-year commitments. We need urgent and decisive support to maintain UNRWA’s ability to operate this year.  I also urge Member States to step up longer-term commitments and solidarity and match the generosity of the countries that host Palestine refugees”

During the conference, UNRWA leadership discussed their plans for modernizing the Agency, as well as measures that will be adopted to maintain the commitment of UNRWA to UN humanitarian principles, with a focus on neutrality. But repeated funding cuts from donor nations and slow delivery on financial promises over the past few years have left the Agency on the brink of collapse, risking the health and educational services offered to Palestine refugees across all five of its geographic fields of operation.

 

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/12470

Additional end-of-year contributions amounting to US$38 million leave UNRWA still in need of US$ 60 million for 2021, said the UN Agency for Palestine Refugees.

UNRWA said that it operates critical health services for Palestinian refugees in its five fields of operations at an annual budget of around US$ 800 million. 

At the annual pledging conference, eight Member States announced a cumulative/total of over US$ 614 million in new or renewed multi-year agreements with durations from two to five years. The combination of these and existing multi-year pledges, if all fully realized at expected levels, would equate to 40 per cent of the Agency’s core budget needs for 2022.

The gathering was co-chaired by Jordanian Foreign Minister H.E Ayman Safadi and Swedish Foreign Minister Anne Linde who shared in a joint statement, “UNRWA continues to face repeated, catastrophic funding shortfalls that leave its staff and the millions of people it serves highly vulnerable to losing their basic necessities. We call on the international community to reform the structural funding model that has so often failed this vital UN Agency by committing to multi-year financing, expanding the donor base, and developing innovative financing mechanisms.”

UN Secretary-General António Guterres also spoke at this year’s conference. “We need to collectively find a path towards more predictable, sufficient and sustainable funding for the Agency, including through multi-year commitments. We need urgent and decisive support to maintain UNRWA’s ability to operate this year.  I also urge Member States to step up longer-term commitments and solidarity and match the generosity of the countries that host Palestine refugees”

During the conference, UNRWA leadership discussed their plans for modernizing the Agency, as well as measures that will be adopted to maintain the commitment of UNRWA to UN humanitarian principles, with a focus on neutrality. But repeated funding cuts from donor nations and slow delivery on financial promises over the past few years have left the Agency on the brink of collapse, risking the health and educational services offered to Palestine refugees across all five of its geographic fields of operation.

 

Short URL : https://actionpal.org.uk/en/post/12470