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  • About 100 Akhdam families (700 individuals) were among the most vulnerable people affected by the floods.
  • The provision of shelters for flood-victims in Hadhramaut and al-Mahrah governorates, southeastern Yemen, began about seven months after the floods, which left 80 dead and 25,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs), mostly in Hadhramaut Governorate.
  • A few of the 25,000 IDPs were living in tents provided by UNHCR, but most were living either with their relatives or in accommodation rented by local NGOs.

    
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   CERF in Action - Rapid Response

CERF allocates $342,000 to strengthen the UN security measures for UN system in Yemen

Displaced children in Yemen

Displaced children in Yemen [Photo: IRIN]

4 November 2009: More information coming soon.  

 

 

 









[23 November 2009]


CERF Alllocates some $2.6 Million for Assitance to IDPs in Sa'ada in Yemen

A girl with water containers in Yemen

A girl with water containers in Yemen [Photo: IRIN]

14 August 2009: John Holmes, the United Nations Emergency Relief Coordinator (ERC), has allocated some US$2.6 million in emergency funding from the United Nations Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) to respond to an increase in internally displaced persons (IDPs) and a deteriorating security situation in Yemen.

The funds will help kick-start critical projects to respond to growing humanitarian needs in Sa’ada for those already displaced and those who have been uprooted by recent unrest. The largest portion of the allocation, some $945,000, will support a World Food Programme (WFP) project to address the food insecurity of vulnerable families. The project will provide food assistance to some 25,000 people for three months. Some $700,000 will enable the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) to provide protection and shelter assistance in Sa’ada governorate. Another $744,000 has been allocated to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) to provide, among other things, clean drinking water and sanitation facilities. UNICEF will also carry out emergency education programmes for some 50,000 vulnerable children. The World Health Organization (WHO) has been allocated some $229,000 to support emergency health needs in the affected communities.

So far in 2009, Yemen has received over $7.3 million. The ERC allocated some $5 million to humanitarian projects in Yemen earlier this year to address life-saving needs. Since 2006, the Fund has allocated some $18.7 million to United Nations agencies and the International Organization for Migration for humanitarian projects in Yemen, making it the 24th highest recipient of CERF funding.

[25 August 2009]


30 April 2009: The four year conflict, since 2004, has affected over 130,000 persons in Yemen.  Despite the cessation in 2007, the situation remains tense.  Although an estimated 40 percent of families who fled their homes during the fighting have returned to their areas of origin, 60 percent remains in displacement; and those who have returned to their villages have found homes and farms destroyed.

In October 2008, floods and heavy rains affected south-eastern Yemen, particularly Hadhramout valley. Flash floods and surging waters killed at least 80 persons, and displaced 20,000–25,000 people.  The largest damage has been in the agriculture sector, which threatens the livelihoods of some 50 percent of Hadhramout Governorate’s 1.3 million inhabitants (650,000 to 700,000 people).  75 percent of Hadhramout Governorates’ farmers have been affected by the floods and have lost their agricultural harvest.

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