About Us
Thursday, May 24, 2012   
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OCHA has been present in Ethiopia since 2001 with the aim of coordinating effective and principled humanitarian action. OCHA works on four core functions: alleviate human suffering in Ethiopia caused by drought; promotion of preparedness and prevention efforts to reduce future vulnerability to natural disasters; advocating for the rights of people in need; and facilitating sustainable solutions to address root causes.

Principle

Structure

Collaboration

Objectives

For more information about OCHA, visit OCHA On-line.


  
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eileen.stewart@acdi-cida.gc.ca      9/11/2008 10:15:49 AM
Link not working on your web site
This report is still not accessible on your site: Drought and Food Crisis, 08 September 2008 Full Report

eileen.stewart@acdi-cida.gc.ca      9/9/2008 1:22:40 PM
broken link on your website
Broken link to: Drought/Food Crisis in Ethiopia, 08 September 2008 Situation Report

paul.hornung@gmx.de      8/31/2008 11:37:53 AM
Humanitarian Bulletin
Ladies and gentlemen, please send me your weekly report to the above e-amil address. Thank you and kind regards Dr. Paul Hornung

paul.hornung@gmx.de      8/12/2008 6:31:53 AM
Judge
I like to get your Reports abaut Ethiopia and Somalia. I am resident in Addis Abeba

davec82@btinternet.com      6/26/2008 11:54:25 AM
Funding
Dear Sir/Madam Im a British man who has been living in Ethiopia fo rthe last two years. Im returning to the UK to do my masters in Development/Aid. Do you offer any funding or scholarships for such studies? My aim is to return to Ethiopia to work in this field of work- upon completing my masters. Thank you for your time David Cunningham

revans@accuratebackground.com      6/23/2008 4:37:10 PM
Employment Verification
Hello, My company has been attempting to reach United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs in order to verify employment (in Addis Ababa). Could you please provide a phone number, email or fax number that I can try for employment verifications? (If verifications can be done by fax, please specify if a release is needed and if so, if an e-signature is acceptable) Thank you! Referenc# 7493197

mbergdale@mac.com      6/23/2008 7:01:15 AM
Help
I am an American visiting Addis Ababa for the week. I would be interested in doing any volunteer work that might be available during this or at least learning a bit more about the the humanitarian situation here in Ethiopia.

eth_ewondie@gdlnmail.org      6/23/2008 4:05:26 AM
Request for Information
Dear Sir/Madam, I need information how to apply for a job in your estimeed institution (OCHA-UN). Can I send my application dirctly to your address? Thanks

anna_w_a@hotmail.com      6/16/2008 4:52:30 AM
internship
I am a student in international law and human rights very interested to be an intern at UNOCHA Ethiopia. Could not find any information about this on the webb, is it possible and where do I send my application and merits? Best regards, Anna Andersson

melunza@yahoo.fr      6/9/2008 6:58:53 AM
jobs request
i wanted exactly searched if you have a sitation to the service intervention in case situation of complexe emergency


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The presently called United Nations Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs - Ethiopia (UN OCHA-Ethiopia) began life in November 1984 when the United Nations established the Office for Emergency Operations in Ethiopia (OEOE) to help coordinate the delivery of international famine relief to the drought affected highlands of the country. In October 1986, with the effects of the famine largely mitigated, the Secretary General decided to dismantle the OEOE and incorporate its key functions into the mandate of UNDP, thereby placing support for national disaster preparedness and prevention on a firmer footing. This led to the formation of the UN Emergency Prevention and Preparedness Group (UN-EPPG) in January 1987 as a project implemented by UNDP and reporting directly to the UN Secretary Generals’ Special Representative.

In the months following the change of Government in mid-1991 the EPPG played a crucial role in formulating a programme to assist the post-war recovery process and accelerate the reintegration of more than 350,000 ex-soldiers and fighters. It also helped prepare consolidated UN appeals for Ethiopia in addition to working with the then called UN Department of Humanitarian Affairs (DHA; now OCHA) in compiling a regular situation report on humanitarian needs in Ethiopia and the Horn of Africa on behalf of the donor community.
 
 To bring its title into line with those of similar UN offices in other disaster prone countries, on 1 January 1994 the EPPG was renamed the UNDP Emergencies Unit for Ethiopia (UNDP-EUE). Although the project’s formal terms of reference were unchanged, its modus operandi had altered considerably since the change of government with a greater emphasis on supporting the humanitarian and inter-agency coordination responsibilities of the UN Humanitarian Coordinator and less on management support for relief operations in the field. The change of name signified this change of emphasis and also heralded the beginning of a new, more constructive, relationship with the Government’s relief and rehabilitation commission (RRC; now DPPC = Disaster Prevention and Preparedness Commission).
 
 Once again in 1999 the institutional role of the Emergencies Unit faced a change in orientation towards a UN Country Team Support Unit. Although the suggested name-change of the unit to 'Country Team Emergency Support Unit' has not taken place, the unit is seen as 'UN' entity, rather than a UNDP organism because its over-riding 'mandate' is to provide substantial institutional support to the UN Country Team in Ethiopia.

The UN Country Team approach in Ethiopia permits joint humanitarian action that is coordinated and managed through the UN Strategic Disaster Management Team (UN-SDMT), a committee comprising the heads of operational agencies and chaired by the UN Humanitarian Coordinator. UN OCHA-Ethiopia functions as the secretariat for the UN-SDMT, undertaking specific operational tasks which do not fall under the clear mandate of the specialised agencies, ensuring an adequate follow-up to any decisions or recommendations resulting from discussions and providing a linkage between the UN-SDMT and government, donor and NGO counterparts. 
 
 With the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) since the beginning of 2001 now jointly sharing the financial support of the unit with UNDP, the Unit’s name was once again changed into UN OCHA-Ethiopia. OCHA now, as of 2003, provides the majority of financial support to the office. 
 
 There is always much demand for reliable background information, contextual reporting and data on the humanitarian situation in Ethiopia. Efficient information sharing and authoritative analysis are fundamental to its support to the UN Resident Co-ordinator. UN OCHA-Ethiopia produces a range of documents to meet these needs through a combination of regular situation reports, special studies, maps and other graphical materials, resource tracking reports and operational databases made available to the relief community primarily through a combination of hard copy and electronic mailing lists. 
 
 UN OCHA-Ethiopia is responsible for monitoring relief needs and providing humanitarian support services to the UN Country Team (UNCT) reporting directly to the Humanitarian Coordinator and through the Resident Coordinator to the Heads of UN-Agencies. It has existed under various names and guises for more than fifteen years, funded through contributions from a combination of UN and bilateral donors among which Switzerland through Swiss Development Cooperation (SDC) and Swiss Humanitarian Aid (SHA) has remained a major contributor for many years.

UN OCHA-Ethiopia works in support of the UN Humanitarian Coordinator to facilitate a coordinated, well-resourced and effective international relief response and the bridging of the transition from relief to recovery.  Functionally, the work of the UN OCHA-Ethiopia breaks into four main areas: (1) coordination and operational support; (2) field monitoring and analysis; (3) information management and humanitarian reporting; and (4) research and evaluation.


  
This website was developed with the assistance of Thematic Funding from the Humanitarian Aid Department of the European Commission in 2004 and 2005