Communiqué de presse

L' UNFPA lance un appel au soutien urgent en matière de santé et de protection pour les femmes et les filles affectées par la crise au Soudan

calendar_today19 Juin 2023

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Actualités

Yémen : après huit ans de conflit et malgré une trêve fragile, les accouchements restent une question de vie ou de mort

calendar_today31 Mars 2023

Aydah Mohamed s’occupe de nouveau-nés dans l’unité néonatale de l’hôpital Al Shaab d’Aden (soutenu par l’UNFPA), au Yémen. ©UNFPA/Ala’a Aldoly
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Diaporama

Une course contre la montre pour secourir et aider les survivant·e·s en Türkiye et en Syrie

calendar_today09 Février 2023

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Rescuers scramble to find survivors in the village of Besnia in Syria, following the catastrophic earthquakes that struck both Türkiye and Syria on 6 February, killing thousands and injuring many more. “UNFPA is committed to support the people of Türkiye and Syria affected by the earthquakes, including the pregnant women who are expected to give birth in the coming weeks under these difficult conditions,” said Dr. Natalia Kanem, Executive Director of UNFPA. “Their ability to access quality care before, during and after delivery must not be an afterthought.” 

© AFP via Getty Images

A child receives urgent care in the town of Sarmada in Syria in the wake of the devastating earthquakes. The initial quake struck in the early hours of the morning on 6 February while people slept, with the second hitting later in the day amid a series of aftershocks, compounding the devastation. The governments of both Türkiye and Syria have declared national emergencies and called for international support.

© OCHA/Ali Haj Suleiman

Women embrace amid a sea of debris in Hatay, Türkiye. Thousands of buildings, including maternity facilities and safe spaces for women and girls, have been severely damaged or destroyed. UNFPA’s urgent priority is to restore services that are crucial to the health and well-being of women and girls.

© Getty Images/Burak Kara

Rescuers comb through piles of rubble in Lattakia, Syria, hoping to find survivors in a race against time amid the overwhelming devastation. 

© UNFPA Syria/Mosaic

Rescuers work into the night, continuing to find people trapped under the rubble alive, including this young girl rescued in Hatay, Türkiye.

© SGDD-ASAM Turan Berker Akdevelioğlu

A newborn baby—who was found still tied by her umbilical cord to her mother—was pulled from the rubble of a home in northern Syria. Now receiving medical care at a clinic in Afrin, Syria, the infant is the sole survivor of her immediate family. Among the millions of people in Türkiye and Syria who have been affected by the quakes are tens of thousands of pregnant women who need access to maternal health services.

© AFP via Getty Images

Women working with the UNFPA-supported Women and Girls Safe Space visit the Şanlıurfa Training and Research Hospital in Türkiye, providing postnatal counseling and delivering maternal kits—containing clothes and supplies for both mother and baby—to pregnant women and new mothers.

© Harran University, WGSS

Staff members of the UNFPA-supported Women and Girls Safe Space deliver much-needed maternal kits to women at the Şanlıurfa Training and Research Hospital in Türkiye. The kits include baby clothes, hand soap, baby blankets, underwear, postpartum pads, baby shampoo, baby rash cream, diapers, and baby-safe wipes, among other items. 

© Harran University, WGSS

UNFPA Syria and partners arrived rapidly in affected areas, such as this devastated neighborhood in Aleppo, to assess needs and provide immediate assistance.

© UNFPA Syria

Staff members of UNFPA Syria carry out an assessment of needs in Aleppo and across the country, providing support via mobile clinics and safe spaces and handing out dignity kits and winter kits containing crucial supplies. 

© UNFPA Syria

A fresh snowfall adds to the challenge of rescue efforts in Elbistan, Türkiye. Amid freezing temperatures, survivors have been building fires from pieces of wood in the debris in an attempt to stay warm. Another crisis looms if people cannot soon access shelter, food, and other essentials.  

© Getty Images/Mehmet Kacmaz

A child finds a place to sleep on a pile of bedding supplies provided by humanitarians in the town of Jandairisin in Syria.

© UNOCHA/Mohanad Zayat

Urgently constructed camps in Diyarbakır, Türkiye, provide temporary shelter amid vast needs across both Türkiye and Syria.

© KAMER - WGSS

In Lattakia, Syria, a UNFPA-supported Safe Space sets up shelter for survivors left homeless by the catastrophic quakes.

© UNFPA Syria/Mosaic

A woman waits for news of her loved ones, believed to be trapped under a collapsed building in Hatay, Türkiye. “The lives of so many people have been torn apart,” said Dr. Kanem. “Amidst the devastation and uncertainty that natural disasters bring, UNFPA will continue to do what is needed and what it does best: respond to women’s and girls’ emergency healthcare and protection needs.”

© Getty Images/Burak Kara

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« Sanad est leur bouée de sauvetage » : au cœur d’un espace d’accueil sécurisé de l’UNFPA en Égypte pour les femmes ayant fui le conflit au Soudan

calendar_today19 Juin 2023

Mme Yassin est prise en charge dans un espace d’accueil sécurisé de l’UNFPA après avoir fui le Soudan. © UNFPA Égypte/Remon Magdy
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Au Yémen, des inondations bouleversent l’existence de dizaines de milliers de personnes fuyant déjà un conflit meurtrier

calendar_today06 Septembre 2022

Des distributions de kits contenant des produits de santé et d’hygiène de base ainsi que des vêtements et des repas tout prêts sont mises en place à Al Jawf (Yémen), dans le cadre des opérations de secours suite aux inondations. © UNFPA Yémen
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République arabe syrienne

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Comment l’UNFPA aide les personnes âgées migrantes et réfugiées à envisager leur avenir au Brésil

calendar_today09 Juin 2023

Alegria Campos participe à une activité en compagnie d’autres femmes, à l’espace sûr de l’UNFPA de Boa Vista (Brésil). © UNFPA Brésil / Isabela Martel
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Diaporama

Accoucher pendant un cyclone tropical

calendar_today01 Mai 2023

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When Tropical Cyclone Freddy slammed into Madagascar, Mozambique and Malawi, 32,000 pregnant women were due to give birth within the coming weeks.

The destruction of homes, health facilities and travel routes during the cyclone – which continued for weeks in February and March – made childbirth much more perilous.

Around 5,000 of the women could expect to experience complications in their final months of pregnancy or during childbirth, which, without access to skilled care, could prove fatal.

A climate crisis is an obstetric emergency.

[Pictured above] A young woman and child walk past damaged houses in the Chilobwe township of Blantyre, Malawi, after Tropical Cyclone Freddy hit. © UNFPA Malawi/Eldson Chagara

Eliza, 30, was nine months pregnant when the cyclone battered the city of Nsanje in Malawi, the country hardest hit by the storm.

“At first, it started as mere drizzle, but suddenly the intensity grew and it started pouring down in sheets,” she recalls. “I heard a huge thud from outside and immediately knew that part of the wall had collapsed.”

Eliza and her family left home and sought shelter at a makeshift camp, which had no running water. There, she went into labour.

Fortunately, despite disruptions to travel and services, an ambulance managed to make its way to her. “I arrived at the hospital around 10 p.m. At around 2 a.m., I gave birth to a baby girl,” says Eliza, now a mother of four.

[Pictured above] Eliza's newborn receives a checkup from Fainess Yobe, a UNFPA technical officer and a trained midwife and nurse. © UNFPA Malawi/Eldson Chagara

After a two-hour ambulance journey, Mercy, 37, gave birth to healthy twin boys, also in the city of Nsanje.

Mercy had been planning to deliver at her nearest health centre in Ndamera, but the electricity supply had been cut off by the storm.

“It was exciting and a bit scary at the same time,” she says, describing how it felt to learn she was having twins. “I am so grateful that I had a safe delivery. I don’t know what could have happened if the ambulance didn’t come in time.”

[Pictured above] Mercy at the maternity ward with her twin boys. © UNFPA Malawi/Eldson Chagara

Thanks to recent repairs of four ambulances, both Eliza and Mercy were able to make it to the hospital to deliver.

The repairs were supported by UNFPA in order to meet an increase in demand in the wake of the storm.

A staggering 87 health facilities were damaged in Malawi during the cyclone. The closure of local clinics means more emergency journeys.

[Pictured above] UNFPA supported the repair of four ambulances in southern Malawi. © UNFPA Malawi/Eldson Chagara

In the Zambezia province of Mozambique, where many local facilities have been damaged or destroyed, UNFPA installed temporary health facilities in six tents, including maternity wards.

Here, staff members are dealing with a triple crisis for thousands of pregnant women – cyclone, flood, and a cholera outbreak, which increases the risk of stillbirth.

“Managing cholera cases in pregnancy is very difficult because you need to prevent and treat both cholera and obstetric complications,” says Dr. Marilena Urso, a UNFPA maternal health specialist. “Time is of the essence, as healthcare providers must immediately intervene while monitoring fetal well-being and preventing the spread of cholera itself.”

[Pictured above] UNFPA tents being erected in Zambezia following storm damage. © UNFPA Mozambique/Helder Xavier

The first patients to be treated inside the new tents were Diana, 23, and her newborn baby.

Diana had given birth at home, but the following day the UNFPA tents opened, allowing her and her newborn son to receive postnatal care from skilled workers.

“Fortunately, mother and baby are in good health,” says nurse Lica Estevão, who provided assistance.

[Pictured above] Diana and her baby received postnatal care at a medical centre temporarily operating out of a tent. © UNFPA Mozambique/Helder Xavier

Rosana Henriques, a nurse in the city of Quelimane in Zambezia, describes the new tents as a “breath of fresh air.”

She explains that previously, there was a lack of privacy, as the storm damage had forced her team to work out of a single room in their facility. In the tent where she now works, there is a separate room for the maternity ward, giving people some space.\

[Pictured above] Rosana stands in a newly erected tent where women can give birth with the support of skilled staff. © UNFPA Mozambique/Helder Xavier

When Cyclone Freddy arrived in Madagascar, the country was busy recovering from another devastating storm – Cyclone Cheneso – which had hit a month earlier, in January.

Sadify, 18, was eight months pregnant when the first cyclone hit. 

“The rain fell for more than a week,” recalls Sadify, who received UNFPA support at a temporary site after being forced to leave home amid the crisis.

[Pictured above] Sadify received UNFPA support following Cyclone Cheneso. © UNFPA Madagascar/ Hanta Andremanisa

Part of UNFPA’s initial emergency response involves providing dignity and childbirth kits that include health and hygiene supplies to meet the most immediate of needs.

Sadify was unable to pack many belongings when she left her home after Cyclone Cheneso. “This kit that I just received will help us bounce back and better prepare for the arrival of our baby,” she says.

Dignity kits contain hygiene and washing items, a flashlight, a towel and a basin, while childbirth kits contain a plastic bag for the placenta, an umbilical cord tie, gauze tissue, a pair of disposable examination gloves and a razor blade and supplies for midwives.

[Pictured above] Dignity kits help meet the immediate needs of women and girls following a crisis. © UNFPA Madagascar/ Hanta Andremanisa

November to April is considered the cyclone season for East and Southern Africa – but cyclones are just one element of the region’s significant climate challenges.

The drought in Madagascar’s Grand Sud region, considered the worst in 40 years, has been going on since 2018. More than 70 per cent of the country’s land is used for agriculture, and cyclones, floods and drought have all caused food shortages.

Whether there’s too much water or not enough, there is an impact on women and girls’ sexual and reproductive health and rights – and their safety. During a crisis, incidences of gender-based violence increase, while at the same time, access to essential services is impeded. UNFPA works to close this gap and to provide support and safe spaces for women and girls.

[Pictured above] The drought in Madagascar’s Grand Sud region has been going on since 2018. © UNFPA Madagascar/Melvis Kimbi

Amid a crisis, it’s also crucial that family planning services remain accessible so that women are in control of their reproductive decisions.

For Pela Judith, 25, being able to choose not to have more children is one way to cope with the climate crisis in Madagascar.

“The droughts have changed many things. Now everything has become expensive,” she says. “I am not even able to feed my four children, so giving birth to another child is not in my plans anymore.”

[Pictured above] Pela Judith explains how the Grand Sud drought has changed her family planning decisions. © UNFPA Madagascar/ Hanta Andremanisa

After being uprooted by Cyclone Ana in 2022 in Malawi, Monica, who was six months pregnant with daughter Rehana at the time, is also using family planning services amid the crisis.

“We made the hard decision to abandon our land, which was owned by the family for generations,” she says. “The Cyclone Ana experience was a close shave with death, and we knew that next time, we wouldn’t be that lucky if we didn’t move.”

Monica accessed pre- and post-natal and sexual and reproductive health services supported by UNFPA. She opted for a contraception method that helps her plan her life around the crisis: “I got a five-year family planning method. This will allow us to raise our three children well and also to rebuild our lives.”

[Pictured above] Monica with daughter Rehana in the village of Jambo in Bangula, Malawi. © UNFPA Malawi/Eldson Chagara

UNFPA and its partners aim to provide sustained support for women and girls throughout a crisis.

We are also working toward long-term change, so that women and young people – those most affected by the climate crisis – can design solutions, and essential health services can continue to provide life-saving care.

[Pictured above] A young girl walks on waterlogged ground at a temporary camp following Cyclone Freddy in Blantyre, Malawi. © UNFPA Malawi/Eldson Chagara

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Au Soudan, la pénurie de carburant dans les hôpitaux met en danger la vie des femmes enceintes et des nouveau-nés

calendar_today02 Juin 2023

Sages-femmes d’un hôpital soutenu par l’UNFPA au Soudan, avant que la crise ne provoque la destruction d’au moins deux hôpitaux sur trois et que plus de 260 000 femmes enceintes et des millions d’autres se retrouvent presque sans accès aux soins de santé dans une insécurité extrême. © UNFPA Soudan
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Diaporama

Premiers anniversaires en Ukraine : Mettre des bébés au monde en toute sécurité, au milieu des bombes

calendar_today14 Mai 2023

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Since the beginning of the full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine, 1 in 3 babies have been delivered in a UNFPA-supported hospital.

Despite the dangers – there have been more than 850 verified attacks on health care facilities – obstetrician Olena Mokhonko has helped women deliver as many as 70 babies a month at Chernihiv Maternity Hospital.

She joined four of those women to celebrate their children’s first birthdays and to hear the mothers share their experiences of giving birth in a city under fire. Here, they tell their stories.

[Pictured above] At a poignant birthday party, mothers join the obstetrician who delivered their babies amid war. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Nina and Yulia

In the last few weeks of her pregnancy, Nina’s birthing plan changed drastically as the conflict grew. Knowing that she might not be able to get to the hospital, she created a Plan B.

“I was preparing to give birth in the basement,” she says, recalling how her community rallied around her. “People from our neighbourhood had different stocks of food; some had cereals, some canned food...everyone had some food or hygiene supplies, so we had the basics. I found a perinatal psychologist on the Internet – there was still a connection at this time – and asked her what to do in my situation. She explained everything to me in detail: how to cut the umbilical cord, how to check the placenta.”

[Pictured above] Nina with Yulia in the bomb shelter where she sought safety before and after giving birth. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

When the time came, Nina called an ambulance but was told the staff could respond only to gunshot wounds. A volunteer took her to the maternity hospital, so she didn’t need to go through with the basement birth, but extreme challenges remained.

Nina recalls the system in place at the hospital: “If there were no missile attacks, we were taken to the first floor and gave birth in the corridor – far from the windows. But when the security situation was critical, we were lowered into the bomb shelter. It was pure horror: Babies were crying; women were giving birth. I gave birth in the corridor. Other women were lying next to me or giving birth.”

Despite the chaos, she says, “The medical staff worked very harmoniously. The director of the maternity hospital personally walked around the first floor, checked how we were feeling, and worried about everyone.”

[Pictured above] Neighbours pooled their resources and tidied up Nina’s basement, adding carpets for warmth, for her return from the hospital. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Nina received quick and efficient postpartum care and was discharged with baby Yulia. Heavy bombardment continued as she arrived home. “We were in the basement all the time. When it quietened down a bit, we only went upstairs to use the toilet or to quickly prepare food.”

“At night, the hum of the planes made it impossible to sleep and the baby would wake up, asking to be fed.”

[Pictured above] Nina and children at the entrance to their basement. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

On 18 March, when Yulia was 11 days old, Nina took her children and left on an evacuation bus. “The city was in smoke, without lighting,” Nina recalls. “Data was taken from each of the passengers, and it was recorded who was sitting where, so that in the case of a shooting, the bodies could be identified.”

[Pictured above] Extreme baby pictures: Yulia in her pram outside a damaged building in the neighbourhood. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Nina spent two months in Poland before returning home. “It is important for me that my children walk on their native streets, hear their native language. I am glad to wake up in my own house, and that my children are alive and healthy.”

[Pictured above] Obstetrician Olena shares in the birthday festivities as Nina blows out a candle. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Iryna and Amelia

Iryna is a single parent. Her husband died two days before her daughter’s birth. “From the first days of the war, he went to defend our city,” she says. “I asked him not to go because I had to give birth, but he said, ‘Who but me?’ On 3 March, he came under fire and was wounded, and two days later he passed away.”

Iryna was in a bomb shelter when she heard the tragic news.

She gave birth in a cramped room – which she describes as a “small cupboard” – at the hospital on 7 March. Electricity and communications had been wiped out in the city, and the tiny room had been converted into an operating theatre, with a generator and other essential equipment. There, she gave birth by Cesarean section to Amelia.

“For the first week of her life, Amelia did not breathe,” she says, describing how her baby was transferred to the intensive care unit. “I was ready to give everything for her to survive. I understood that her father would not be brought back, but I hoped that everything would be okay with my daughter.”

[Pictured above] Iryna, a single parent, lost her husband, Serhiy, when he died fighting to protect their home city of Chernihiv. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

A week after she was born, Amelia began to breathe on her own. Iryna’s relief was immense. “When we were discharged, we immediately left the city,” she recalls. “Volunteers took us to the Khmelnytskyi region.” Iryna stayed there with her newborn for a month, but she was keen to get back. “The morgue workers had agreed not to bury Amelia’s dad until we returned, but we didn't have much time,” she says. As soon as Russian troops were pushed back from the city, she returned.

“Amelia was my salvation. If it weren't for her, I don't know how I would have survived everything. Only she gave me the strength to live on.”

[Pictured above] A playground near Iryna’s home in Chernihiv, where she returned after leaving for a month to seek safety. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Kateryna and Sophia

Kateryna’s contractions started while she was sheltering in a cellar. With her city under attack, she managed to find a route to the hospital, arriving by 5 p.m. She gave birth to Sofia in the hospital’s dark, busy corridor, before midnight on 7 March.

“When Sofia arrived, we were taken to the hospital bunker for safety,” Kateryna recalls. “We spent the first hours of her life underground.”

When Kateryna was discharged the next morning, she went to her sister’s home in Chernihiv, where the shelling continued. “We hid in the basement and stayed there for three days. It was cold; there was no light, no water,” she says. “I had to find food for the baby somewhere because I had no milk.”

[Pictured above] Kateryna receives flowers on Sofia’s first birthday. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Her husband and 4-year-old son, Mykhailo, were staying with grandparents in their occupied village of Ivanivka, a 20-minute drive away. Being away from her son made her anxious and distressed, but she couldn’t reach him amid the conflict.

“My sister and I went to Lviv. During the month we stayed there, I cried every day. When our village was liberated, my son, Mykhailo, was brought to us,” she says. “My children and loved ones are the only joy that gave me strength to survive this year.”

[Pictured above] Kateryna, with her husband and two children, found it difficult to be separated from her family while giving birth. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Maryna and Diana

Maryna gave birth in the hospital’s corridor on the same night as Nina and Kateryna.

She describes how, in the weeks leading up to Diana’s birth, she was preparing for the baby’s arrival while also “waking up to the realization that war had begun.”

[Pictured above] Maryna reflects on the past year as the family celebrates Diana’s first birthday. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

She arrived at the maternity hospital during the day on 7 March, keen to avoid travelling at night amid city curfews. “My greatest fear was the possibility of a bomb dropping on us,” she says. “Thankfully, the experience went smoothly.” 

Despite the stress of giving birth amid the bombing, Maryna is grateful that all went well.

[Pictured above] Precious things: Maryna’s scan, taken at Chernihiv Maternity Hospital, and an ankle tag she wore during the birth. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

For the next two weeks, the family stayed in the basement with their newborn. “Although there was light from power generators, it was cold,” Maryna says. “We were among the lucky ones with some semblance of comfort.”

“We decided to leave Chernihiv because it was too dangerous to stay with a newborn. We went to Borzna in the Chernihiv region, where my husband's father lived,” she says. “One particular incident that stands out was when the footbridge we used to leave the city was blown up a day after we crossed it. If we had delayed our departure by just one day, we wouldn't have been able to leave.”

[Pictured above] Obstetrician Olena holds Diana on her first birthday. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Her family is thrilled and relieved to welcome baby Diana. “Our first child, my son, had been eagerly waiting for his little sister. He helps us a lot and is excited to have a sibling. Our baby is the first girl in our big family, and we are grateful to be alive and healthy.”

[Pictured above] Arthur, 11, is excited to be a big brother to baby Diana. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

Obstetrician Olena Mokhonko

Olena Mokhonko has lived and worked in Chernihiv throughout the war. “I had to go to work because I am a doctor who took an oath to help others. In my work, what I love the most is seeing a father cry and witnessing the joy of parents as they welcome their child into the world,” she says. "When our city was occupied, my work changed dramatically. I had to perform deliveries and surgeries under extreme conditions. We moved all the necessary equipment to the bomb shelter and the first floor of our building.”

She describes how the relentless bombing affected life at home with her husband as well. “There was a time when we were so tired of the constant shelling that we no longer went to a bomb shelter. I still remember the sound of planes at night – my husband and I would hold hands, hear an explosion a few seconds later, and be grateful that the missile hadn't hit our house.”

[Pictured above] Olena has delivered babies throughout the war in her home city of Chernihiv. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

“As an obstetrician, I'm inspired by the strength and resilience of the Ukrainian women giving birth amidst the devastation caused by war. They are true heroines,” Olena says. “With the help of the international community and the determination of the Ukrainian people, I believe we can overcome these challenges and create a better future for our children.”

[Pictured above] Maryna’s photo gallery, bursting with baby pictures. © UNFPA Ukraine/Serhii Korovayny

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