Actualités

« 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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Diaporama

Motos, hôpitaux mobiles et jeunes mamans : répondre aux besoins immenses des femmes et des filles de la Corne de l’Afrique

calendar_today22 Mai 2023

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The extent of the Horn of Africa crisis is difficult to conceive. The region is experiencing its worst drought in more than 40 years.

The number of people affected is startling, the needs are immense, and the response is woefully inadequate. Failed crops and water shortages, compounded by conflict in the region and beyond, have led to food scarcity and rocketing prices. Millions of people from Somalia, Ethiopia and Kenya are struggling to survive, with many people leaving their homes each day, forced to seek safety and resources.

Recent heavy rain and flash flooding have caused further displacement and destruction. While the rains are important for human and livestock survival, recovery from six consecutive seasons of poor rainfall will take time.

[Pictured above] A woman guides donkeys carrying jerry cans on the outskirts of the Gabi'as informal settlement in Ethiopia. © UNFPA/Paula Seijo

“It breaks my heart to see my kids hungry and thirsty,” says Fatuma, 30, a mother of four.

“Drought has come with a lot of problems for us. Water is scarce, and we can only have one meal per day.”

[Pictured above] Fatuma and her children, in the hut where they live in the village of Garsen in Garissa County, Kenya, do not have enough to eat or drink. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

For the women and girls who are living amid this climate crisis, there are increased risks.

Cases of child and forced marriage, female genital mutilation, rape and other forms of violence have all risen sharply. There is a large unmet need for contraception, and across the region, hundreds of thousands of pregnant women have been left struggling to access maternal health services.

[Pictured above] Women with UNFPA dignity kits containing hygiene supplies at a camp for internally displaced people in Kismayo, Somalia. © UNFPA Somalia

Catherine, 30, is pregnant with her fourth child. She is concerned about what will happen when she goes into labour.

With her nearest health centre a 10-kilometre walk away, and water in short supply, she is not always able to trek to the clinic for antenatal check-ups.

“Usually, when it is time to deliver, my husband will take me to the centre on a motorbike,” she says. “But with him often gone in search of pasture, I have to be ready to fend for myself if need be.”

[Pictured above] Catherine outside her home in the village of Lochorepetet in Turkana, Kenya. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

UNFPA-trained midwives are giving more women the chance to have a safe birth. The  maternal mortality rate in Somalia is among the highest globally. Access to professional obstetric services can be the difference between life and death for mothers and newborns.

To get to Banadir Hospital in Mogadishu, Isnina travelled from a drought-affected area in Somalia’s Kahda district. Midwife Muno, who assisted with the birth, is also from an area that has been impacted, in the Lower Shabelle.

An estimated 8.25 million people – or nearly half of Somalia's population – are in need of life-saving humanitarian and protection assistance.

[Pictured above] Isnina (right) received support from midwives including Muno, who holds her newborn baby at Banadir Hospital in Mogadishu. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

The intensive care unit for newborns at Banadir Hospital is fully funded and supported by UNFPA.

It’s vital that when women and babies need emergency medical care, they can reach it. One pregnant woman or newborn dies every seven seconds globally. Women living in crisis are among those at a higher risk. UNFPA is striving to end preventable deaths.

[Pictured above] A baby receives vital care at Banadir Hospital in Mogadishu. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

For women like Catherine who may be unable to get to a maternity facility, UNFPA supports a range of mobile services and initiatives to reach people, such as this motorcycle ambulance, driven by Mark, who transports women to deliver safely.

A community health volunteer, Mark says, “The hardship brought on by the drought has left many women weak and malnourished. I cannot imagine them giving birth without the support of a skilled health professional. In the past, women have given birth on the roadside while trekking to hospital because they live too far from a health facility. With the motorcycle ambulance, even if a woman delivers on the way, she is able to do so in a dignified manner, on a comfortable stretcher and with the help of a healthcare worker and myself.”

[Pictured above] A motorcycle ambulance provided by UNFPA supports the work of Katilu Sub-County Hospital in Turkana County, Kenya. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

Launched in March 2023, five mobile maternity clinics in Somalia will provide safe deliveries and other essential services.

The truck-mounted emergency obstetric and newborn care units are expected to reach between 250,000 and 375,000 people in five districts. Additionally, the units provide contraception and family planning services to reduce the unmet need, as well as specialist medical care for women who have been raped.

Niyi Ojuolape, UNFPA’s country representative, describes the clinics as a “game-changer,” noting that they “improve access to the hardest to reach and the marginalized populations, promoting equity in the humanitarian response.”

[Pictured above] Five mobile maternity clinics were procured by UNFPA via the Somalia Multi Partner Trust Fund. © UNFPA Somalia/Mohamud Abdisamad

Kashindi and Queen live and work in the Kalobeyei settlement for refugees in Turkana, Kenya. Like Mark, they are volunteers and “safe motherhood promoters.”

With UNFPA support, they carry out house visits and support displaced people with essential pre- and postnatal services.

[Pictured above] Health volunteers Kashindi (left) and Queen at the maternity wing of the Natukobenyo Health Centre. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

With women and girls facing increased threats to their personal safety, protection services are a key element of UNFPA’s response.

The reported figures are alarming. For example:

  • In the Somali region of Ethiopia, child marriage increased by 131 per cent in the first half of 2022 compared with the same period the previous year. 
  • Drought-affected areas of Somalia saw a 60 per cent increase in gender-based violence last year.
  • Around two-thirds of women and girls in four northern counties of Kenya said their biggest safety concerns were domestic violence and forced marriage.

Services and support are overstretched or non-existent. We need to do more.

[Pictured above] A counselor discusses gender-based violence with a woman in a remote, drought-affected area near Katilu,Turkana South, Kenya. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

Across Ethiopia, including drought-affected areas, women and girls can call 7711 to speak to a legal expert and receive advice and quick access to legal-aid services.

The UNFPA-supported hotline was established in 2019 and is free to call. Run by the Ethiopian Woman Lawyers Association, it receives up to 15 calls daily in three languages: Amharic, Oromiffa and Tigrigna.

“Most calls are from women who seek advice about violence in marriage, divorce and child support. Gender-based violence cases are also common,” says Feven Gaddisa, a lawyer at the call centre. “Sometimes we receive calls from women in imminent physical danger, which is the hard part of our job. We quickly connect them with EWLA focal persons in their area. It helps that we have offices and focal points in most [districts]. There is usually someone to support them quickly.”

If callers are in danger, she and her colleagues refer women and girls to safe houses for shelter and psychosocial support.

[Pictured above] Lawyer Feven Gaddisa supports women via hotline, giving advice on legal aid. © UNFPA Ethiopia

A refugee from Somalia has recently arrived in Hagadera camp in Garissa, Kenya.

UNFPA estimates that around 28,000 women of reproductive age are at risk of sexual violence in drought-affected areas of Kenya alone, if interventions are not put in place to mitigate.

“In Hagadera camp, we have had a nearly 20 per cent increase in the population since May 2022, which causes a huge strain on available resources,” says Jane Ambale, a senior women protection and empowerment officer with the International Rescue Committee. UNFPA is supporting the IRC to conduct screening for gender-based violence among new arrivals. “Our goal is to identify women and girls who are survivors or at risk of gender-based violence, and to provide them the critical information and services they need,” she says.

[Pictured above] Jane Ambale provides support to a woman who has recently arrived in Hagadera, including a UNFPA dignity kit, containing a whistle and essential hygiene items. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

With risks to women and girls spiralling, life-saving services need to be ramped up. However, the demand significantly outweighs the investment into the crisis response.

With increased support from the international community, UNFPA can do more for women – who are already struggling to survive – in order to protect them from violence and provide access to safe births.

[Pictured above] A tap outside the Kabassa Health Centre in Doolow, Somalia. Water scarcity is just one of the overlapping crises facing women and girls living amid the climate crisis in the Horn of Africa. © UNFPA/Luis Tato

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Sécheresse historique dans la Corne de l’Afrique : une crise en cache une autre pour les femmes et les filles

calendar_today24 Mars 2023

Avec ses neuf enfants, Rukia Yaroow Ali, 38 ans, fait partie des personnes déplacées qui ont fui la pire sécheresse enregistrée depuis quarante ans en Somalie et dans toute la Corne de l’Afrique. Elle porte ici son plus jeune enfant dans les bras, devant la tente qui les abrite au camp de réfugiés de Hagadera, à Dadaab, dans le comté de Garissa, au Kenya. © UNFPA/Luis Tato
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Alors que la sécheresse s’accentue encore au Kenya, une moto-ambulance aide les femmes à bénéficier de soins de santé essentiels

calendar_today12 Janvier 2023

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Kenya, comté de Turkana : une grave sécheresse accentue la malnutrition des femmes enceintes et réduit le nombre d’accouchements à l’hôpital

calendar_today27 Décembre 2022

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Déclaration du Dr Natalia Kanem, Directrice exécutive du Fonds des Nations Unies pour la population (UNFPA), sur la crise en Somalie

calendar_today11 Novembre 2022

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Au milieu de la sécheresse et de la famine, réclamer justice et espoir pour les survivantes de violence sexuelle en Somalie

calendar_today08 Novembre 2022

Une infirmière parcourt un camp pour personnes déplacées à Garowe, dans le Puntland, et s’entretient avec une femme dans le cadre d’une initiative visant à convaincre les femmes de cesser de pratiquer des mutilations génitales sur leurs filles. © UNFPA Somalie/Tobin Jones
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Actualités

Pire sécheresse en 40 ans : au Kenya, femmes et filles font face à des risques de santé et de violence en forte hausse

calendar_today17 Octobre 2022

Des femmes assistent à une session de sensibilisation communautaire intégrée, soutenue par l’UNFPA, sur la prévention et la prise en charge de la violence basée sur le genre. Village de Lokapararai, comté de Turkana, Kenya. © UNFPA Kenya
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Actualités

En Éthiopie, la pire sécheresse en 40 ans menace les progrès réalisés dans la santé maternelle et néonatale

calendar_today19 Mai 2022

Un camp de fortune dans le village de Gabi'as abrite quelque 800 ménages déplacés par une sécheresse incessante. La terre desséchée est parsemée de cadavres d'animaux, après que trois saisons des pluies ratées consécutives ont tué près de 1,5 million de têtes de bétail dans la région. © UNFPA Éthiopie/Paula Seijo
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La pire sécheresse qu'ait connue l'Éthiopie en 40 ans menace d'anéantir les progrès réalisés en matière de santé maternelle et néonatale
19 Mai 2022

« De toutes les sécheresses que j’ai connues, celle-ci est la pire. Où qu’on aille, il n’y a ni eau ni pâturages. Je ne sais pas comment nous allons survivre ». Mme Barkhado, 60 ans, fait partie des millions de personnes en Éthiopie qui ont été déplacées par la pire sécheresse que la région ait connue en quatre décennies. Les trois dernières saisons des pluies ont toutes failli à leurs promesses, détruisant la vie et les moyens de subsistance de près de 8 millions de personnes et amenant l’est et le sud du pays au bord de la famine. Plus de 286 000 personnes ont dû abandonner leur maison pour chercher de quoi survivre, car les cultures, le bétail et l’espoir d’avoir de quoi manger s’amenuisent de jour en jour.

© UNFPA Éthiopie/Paula Seijo
Deux femmes marchent dans le désert
Deka Soane, 13, had to drop out of school to support her family. Every day she walks hours from home to fetch a few gallons of salty water. When boreholes run dry, it is usually women and children who are tasked with seeking water for the household, putting them at greater risk of gender-based violence as they trek for miles, often exhausted and unaccompanied. With more than 1,115 schools in the region either fully or partially closed, girls are increasingly forced into child labour and early marriage as their parents search for ways to make ends meet.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
The main source of food and income for affected communities, nearly 1.5 million livestock have perished as wells dry up and crops fail. A makeshift camp is sheltering 800 displaced families in the village of Gabi’as, one of the worst-hit areas of the Somali region: Women and girls on the move are at heightened risk of sexual and physical violence and coercion, and child and forced marriage spike during humanitarian crises as households lose their means of earning a living and protection mechanisms dwindle.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
In the Somali region alone, some 930,000 people need emergency and reproductive health support and more than 565,000 people have reduced access to protection services, including women, children and survivors of gender-based violence. Prior to the outbreak of conflict, Ethiopia was making good progress on maternal and newborn health, but this is in danger of being derailed.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
Climate shocks and extreme weather are fuelling mass displacement and driving up humanitarian needs across the Horn of Africa, with struggling health systems buckling under the pressure. Dr. Mahamed Sheh, Medical Director of Ethiopia’s Gode General Hospital, explained, “We noticed an increase in maternal and newborn deaths in the last months. Almost all our cases are women who have travelled up to 200 kilometres to reach the facility, many with labour complications and no transport.”
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
Akib Dahir, 27, arrived at the Gabi’as displacement camp with her eight children, after losing 180 goats and 15 camels to the drought. Her husband spends hours in the baking heat on an increasingly desperate hunt for pasture and water to keep their few remaining animals alive. “We are trying to save all we have,” she said. “The animals are almost worthless in the market. We can’t even feed our children.”
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
Farhan Abdulahi has been blind since she was 10 years old. Now 20, she lives with her sister at the Gabi’as camp, with scarce access to medication or health care. “I have not received any assistance and rely on my sister to move around or get food,” Ms. Abdulahi said. Highly vulnerable to isolation and prejudice, children with disabilities globally are up to three times more likely to suffer physical, sexual and emotional violence.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
Saveye Aden, 29, is helped by other women in the community to build a buul – a traditional Somali tent made with bush materials and fabric – to spend the night with her eight children. The family fled across the mountains from Gode to Baraka and have settled close to the road in the hope of flagging down passing assistance: “We have never seen anything like this... If no help arrives, I don’t think we will survive this drought.”
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
Sahan Mohammed, 70, fled from the village of Sodonkaal with her son to the nearest camp. “He brought me here because I am vulnerable and I need care,” she told UNFPA. She waits alone for him in their tent until sunset every night. “I only pray for the rain to come. I want to go back to our home and our pastoral lives.” With fewer protection mechanisms or support services available, the elderly and people with disabilities are often more exposed to sexual and physical abuse in displacement and crisis settings.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
“Services for women and children are very limited: We mainly provide iron supplements, immunization and referrals to the nearest health centre,” explained Abdulahi Kaad, who works at the displacement camp’s health post. New and expecting mothers frequently travel long distances over hazardous roads before finding any maternal or reproductive care: More than 60 per cent of those living in the Somali region are at least an hour’s walk from the nearest health facility – which may or may not be functioning if they do manage to reach it.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
Ayan Abadi, 24, had a life-saving caesarean operation while living in a settlement near Gode. She said, “When I saw my baby’s hand coming out, I ran for our lives. We travelled nearly 90 kilometres to the nearest health facility… We are both lucky to be alive.” With the support of Irish Aid, UNFPA is scaling up its response in the region with a package of essential services. Mobile health units will also be deployed to some of the hardest-to-reach areas, and eight facilities in the drought-riven Shabelle and Erer zones will receive emergency supplies.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
Staff at the Hadawe health centre in the Shebele zone, where UNFPA is supporting those affected by the crisis by providing ambulances, reproductive health medicine, and dignity kits containing sanitary and hygiene items. Across the Somali region, five UNFPA-supported safe spaces and one-stop centres will also ensure comprehensive medical and psychosocial support for survivors of gender-based violence.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo
More than 154,000 women are currently pregnant in the Somali region, and over the next month an estimated 2,560 women and 3,430 newborns will experience complications – with potentially deadly consequences if skilled care and services aren’t available. The UNFPA 2022 Humanitarian Response Appeal for Ethiopia is calling for $30 million to strengthen the health system and build back the capacities of maternal and reproductive services in eight crisis-affected regions. To date, just over half of the appeal has been funded.
© UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo