GLOBAL: CERF launch promises immediate impact

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


NEW YORK, 10 March (IRIN) - Flanked by the Prime Minister of Grenada, senior 
United Nations and government officials, the UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan 
formally launched the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) in New York on 
Thursday. 

Annan told those attending that, of all the World Summit decisions, the CERF 
had received the most clear cut consensus and was perceived as having the 
potential to save lives.   

The Prime Minister of Grenada, Keith Mitchell, told the gathering that he had 
felt compelled to be part of the launch event, given the vulnerability of his 
Caribbean region to natural disaster.   

"I stand here today, not only as a head of government, but as a survivor of an 
unprecedented catastrophe, which having experienced, I fully comprehend the 
meaning of vulnerability," he said. 

There had been disappointment at the low international response in the wake of 
hurricane Ivan and Emily, which devastated the region in 2004 and 2005, he 
said. Pledging contributions to the CERF, on behalf of CARICOM, the member 
states of the Caribbean community, he urged those who had not contributed to do 
so. 

So far, the fund has attracted broad ownership, with over 35 developing and 
developed nations participating. Officials noted that the recent tsunami 
disaster and South-Asian earthquake had brought the need for a flexible global 
fund into sharp focus. Last year, 250 million people were affected by natural 
disasters, and 45 million were affected by war. 

"This is a fund for the world, and we need the world to contribute," said 
Hilary Benn, the United Kingdom's minister for international development. 

"It is simply not good enough that when crisis strikes, UN agencies have had to 
pass around the begging bowl to help. And it is simply not good enough that the 
UN and NGO's have had to depend on donors to respond quickly when not all of us 
have done so, and some have not responded at all," he said. 

Benn raised the inequity of global relief aid, and how some crises received far 
more funding than others. For example, last year's humanitarian aid to the 
Democratic Republic of Congo, to Darfur and to the tsunami crisis was US $10, 
$100 and $1,000 per head respectively. 

While rational on their own, the sum of donor decisions often led to an 
irrational international response to global crises, he said. 

India's minister for external affairs, Anand Sharma, said international 
cooperation in disaster and humanitarian relief was the praxis of an ancient 
Indian idea - "the world is one family". 

"That is what breathes life into international solidarity and gives meaning to 
the idea of multilateralism in the lives of ordinary people," he said. 

The UN Humanitarian Relief Coordinator, Jan Egeland, welcomed the "impressive 
vote of confidence in the fund" and said that it would provide quicker and more 
evenly spread response to emergencies. 

He told reporters that the CERF would be put to immediate use to counter the 
effects of drought in the Horn of Africa, as well as in western Cote D'Ivoire 
"where the civil population has been severely abused". 

During the launch, $40 million was pledged by new donors, notably Canada and 
the United States, bringing the total available grant to $255 million, and 
closer to the target of half a billion US dollars. 

While many representatives expressed broad support for the CERF, virtually all 
stressed the importance of monitoring and transparency in how the fund was 
managed. 

It was considered vital that CERF funds were not held up by bureaucratic 
procedures, and could be disbursed rapidly to all implementing partners, not 
just UN agencies. 

The Executive Director of Oxfam America, Raymond Offenheiser, used the launch 
to flag important concerns on behalf of NGO partners. Donor contributions 
should be made with new money, and not be a redirection of existing donor 
resources, he said. 

He urged donors to review their replenishment of the CERF on an annual basis, 
and recommended that funds not spent within the year, be reallocated to 
under-funded crises. 

Offenheiser expressed his confidence that, if run well, the CERF had the 
potential to grow up to $1 billion, echoing the sentiments of aid experts that 
the event marked one of the most significant humanitarian reforms in over a 
decade.
[ENDS]

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