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From: "IRIN" <[email protected]>
Date: 21 Dec 2016 09:03
Subject: The biggest donors of 2016 ...
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Today's humanitarian news and analysis

*Online version
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The biggest donors of 2016
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The most generous emergency aid donor in 2016 was Norway. Norwegian
taxpayers provided $899 million in humanitarian spending, about 0.18% of
their national income.  Luxembourg and the United Arab Emirates took second
and third place by the same yardstick. Last year, the top ranking went to
Kuwait
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.



The European Union and its members spent almost $10 billion on emergency
relief this year, but some of that was spent for the first time inside the
union, in Greece, raising questions
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of how to properly define and measure humanitarian aid.



Figures collated by the UN in its Financial Tracking Service
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offer the most complete view of official international relief spending.

Overall, some $22 billion of humanitarian spending was tracked in 2016, up
from $20.9 billion in 2015, but not as high as the $23.5 billion reported
in 2014. Emergency aid in 2015 formed about 16 percent of $131.6 billion in
total international aid spending, according to the OECD
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=85721db7de&e=399c7ee738>,
which tracks the largest donors.
The big givers

Where does it go?



Top donor countries

Norwegians may be the most generous relative to their national wealth.
However, the largest single donor is the US, offering more than $6 billion
in emergency aid. Given the size of its economy, it falls only in 16th
place, behind minnows such as Finland, in terms of relative generosity.

In absolute cash terms, the European Commission comes in second place,
spending about half the US amount ($3.1 billion).



Who spends it?

And which aid organisations picked up the most funding in the year? UN
agencies took 60% of the reported funding, while the Red Cross Movement
picked up 10 percent, about $2.2 billion. The FTS data depends on voluntary
reporting and does not capture some financial flows. The database reports
$4.3 billion in funding for NGOs, but as NGOs rarely report their income
from the public, this is likely to be a low estimate. The annual funding
survey, Global Humanitarian Assistance, tracks five to six billion more
dollars of charitable and corporate giving towards humanitarian causes,
mainly spent through non-UN channels.
<#m_4480885144172845923_>


The European Union

Size matters to Europe. Its own website declares that “collectively, the EU
and its constituent countries are the world's leading donor of humanitarian
aid
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=7bf0f3d190&e=399c7ee738>.”
We checked the claim.



If we add the funding from EU member states directly, as well as the funds
routed through the EU institutions, as well as contributions to the Central
Emergency Response Fund
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the contribution from “political Europe” comes to more than $9.9 billion –
indeed nearly half (47 percent) of the world’s total. We also allocated
$324 million of funding for the UN’s pooled fund, the CERF, to its original
European donors.

These figures exclude Norway, Switzerland, and other non-members of the EU.
Only EU member state Croatia reported nil humanitarian funding to the UN in
2016. However, the other members contributed $6.8 billion.


But... Greece?

But here’s the thing: Europe is now “aiding” itself: with a tally of $422
million, Greece has received more “humanitarian aid” than Central African
Republic. The EU expanded its definition of humanitarian aid to include
situations within its borders, and decided to spend $328 million on Greece.
And so ends another strange year in humanitarian economics
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.



<#m_4480885144172845923_>
Highlights from $20 billion of 2016 humanitarian funding data Shredded
dollar bills at the Museum of American Finance, New York
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Ben
Parker <http:///authors/ben-parker> Maps and Graphics
<http:///maps-and-graphics> Aid and Policy <http:///aid-and-policy> Politics
and Economics <http:///politics-and-economics> LONDON
<http:///publication-location/london> IRIN <http:///byline/irin> Africa
<http:///africa> Americas <http:///americas> Asia <http:///asia> Europe
<http:///europe> Global <http:///global> Middle East and North Africa
<http:///middle-east-and-north-africa>

*Read on
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------------------------------
>From war to want: South Sudanese find less violence but grim conditions in
Uganda
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For leverage, Helen grips the rungs on the side of the rusting hospital bed
with her toes. “Sindika!” encourages Aisha Ayikoriu. “Sindika! Sindika!” In
Luganda, the Bantu language widely spoken in Uganda, Sindika means “push”.

Built in the early 1990s to serve 10,000 local Ugandans, Ocea Centre Two is
now the biggest of four clinics serving Rhino, a settlement of some 85,000
South Sudanese refugees.

As the UN makes repeated statements
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=aa05e23c21&e=399c7ee738>
about ethnic cleansing
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and budding genocide
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in
South Sudan, Uganda can barely open camps fast enough to accommodate the
influx of refugees. An average of 2,500 have been arriving every day since
July, with that figure as high as 7,000 earlier this month. A massive
settlement for 100,000 has just opened in Moyo district in the tip of the
north. With dry season offensives expected to begin any day now, it could
be overflowing before mid-January.

In its most recent update, on 19 December, the UN’s refugee agency, UNHCR,
says 584,573 South Sudanese refugees have arrived in Uganda since the civil
war broke out in December 2013. Almost 400,000 of them have come since
July, fleeing an upsurge in fighting and indiscriminate bloodletting in the
southern Equatoria region.

Related stories:

South Sudan refugee influx overwhelms Ugandan reception centres
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=133cef3cfc&e=399c7ee738>

South Sudan: "This fighting will continue to our children"
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=014067fc13&e=399c7ee738>

The genocidal logic of South Sudan's "gun class"
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=e4b9d1e5d7&e=399c7ee738>

The lack of resources for the refugees is evident. There isn’t enough
water, let alone sanitary pads for women, and schools for children. It may
be safer in Uganda, but the conditions here are inhumane.

At Ocea Centre Two, there are two beds for women in labour. On the other
side of the green fabric that serves as a curtain are five mothers with
newborns. They share cots and use cloths to cushion themselves and their
little ones on the concrete floor. Mothers fuss over the babies. Though the
situation is grim, the scene isn’t sad.

The “inpatient” unit is 14 beds in a tent. It is the only clinic at
Rhino equipped to do minor surgical procedures. The beds in the tent are
always full and often overrun, with patients sharing beds or staying on the
floor.

For any major operations, patients must be sent to the nearest hospital, 72
nauseatingly bumpy kilometres to the west, in Arua, the closest main town.
There is only one ambulance available. Vincent Debo, a clinical officer,
looks embarrassed when he shares these statistics.
Frontline Equatoria

The fight that has ruined the world’s newest nation turned three on 15
December. South Sudan itself is just five, having celebrated its
independence in July 2011.

The conflict is an ethnically tinged power wrangle between the SPLA
(government forces made up mostly of President Salva Kiir’s Dinka tribe)
and the SPLA-IO (opposition forces – initially mostly Nuer people loyal to
former vice president Riek Machar, but now increasingly mixed
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with members of South Sudan’s 63 other tribes).

Equatoria had remained a bastion of relative calm while war over resources
and power infected the rest of the country, but the seat of the conflict
has shifted. A failed, internationally-brokered August 2015 peace agreement
positioned IO troops alongside the SPLA in these states, priming the place
for a bloodbath. In July, fighting broke out in the capital Juba, located
in the south, in the middle of the Equatoria region. A chase down country
for the ousted Machar was followed by massacres that have yet to stop.

South Sudan refugee flows to Uganda since July 2016

Refugees from Equatoria say they left because staying at home was
untenable. If it weren’t for the gunshots every night, the bodies in the
streets, the families burned alive in their homes, and the women gang raped
by the side of the road, they would have stayed.

“Fear made me come here,” Peter Dada, originally from Laniya in central
Equatoria, tells IRIN at Rhino settlement. “There is killing, continuously.
No compromise.”

Dada says if the government soldiers see you, they kill you. If IO soldiers
see you, expect the same. He blames the SPLA alone though for the massive
levels of rape, saying: “That one is being done by the government
soldiers.”

Most refugees say both sides are complicit in the sexual assault that has
reached “epic”
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levels in South Sudan.

It is less violent across the border, but the living conditions are
dreadful.
Shortages

The largest encampment in Uganda opened on 3 August, at Bidi Bidi. A small
village a few months ago, it is now the world’s second largest refugee
settlement, with a population of more than 260,000. Like Rhino, it is
spread out across unforgiving terrain.

The majority of the refugees at Bidi Bidi and Rhino are from a mixture of
South Sudan’s smaller, marginalised tribes, like the Kakwa and the Acholi.
In the northeast of Uganda, the settlement at Adjumani hosts another 60,000
South Sudanese, but they are mostly of Kiir’s Dinka tribe.

Of the 100,000 school-age children in Bidi Bidi, only 10,000 attend
classes. There is just one primary school.

Robert Baryamwesiga, Bidi Bidi’s camp commandant, says the biggest
challenge is water. There are 70 boreholes on the sprawling
250-square-kilometre property. Sixty-five percent of the water is trucked
in from the Nile. Each refugee has about eight litres a day for drinking,
washing, cooking, and bathing. The World Health Organization recommends
that 15 litres a day is needed for survival: drinking and cooking.

"Every day, more refugees were arriving than new boreholes could be drilled
to supply them water,” said Harmen van den Berg, a hydrogeologist with
UNHCR.

Jean-Luc Anglade, the country representative for Médecins Sans Frontières
in Uganda, explained that a substantial amount of money is being spent
exploring the groundwater in Bidi Bidi. Normally, a hydrogeology survey is
completed before a plot of land is selected for a refugee settlement. In
this case, it’s ongoing, after the camp is already full. “The water supply
is too low in terms of quality/quantity delivered despite lots of efforts
from partners,” Anglade told IRIN by email.

The water situation at Rhino isn’t any better.

Grace Ropani says it takes two or three people to “farm” the water. Pumping
from the boreholes is exhausting, and can take two hours.

Ropani’s grandmother was macheted to death on 5 August. She didn’t see it
happen; her neighbours gave her the news. “Here, we don’t hear the sound of
guns,” she says of life in Rhino camp. Unlike others, Ropani isn’t
concerned about the food supply, but she does need soap and salt, and she
says the women need sanitary pads and underwear.

Yasmin Abdayy was elected by the Rhino refugee community to be an unpaid
watchman for Oxfam’s water tank 171. As a truck pumps 20,000 litres into
the tank, Abdayy keeps an eye on the line forming at the spouts. Everything
is orderly, except the boys who dangle the truck’s dribbling hose into
their containers to get every drop.

According to Abdayy’s calculations, each family gets two jerry cans’ full,
about 40 litres, each day. Going by the WHO standards of 15 litres per
person as the basic emergency level, a family of five would needs 75 litres
to survive. Abdayy says there is just half the water needed. What he really
wants is simply a notebook and a pen to keep track of the situation, so he
can do his job correctly.

Food is also an increasingly acute concern.

In August, the World Food Programme cut rations
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by 50 percent for all refugees who had been in Uganda before July 2015.
Now, the organisation faces a funding shortfall of $62 million for all
refugee operations in the country for the next six months. If this is not
met, WFP will be forced to cut the quota for new arrivals as well. Even
though they are allegedly getting the requisite amount of food, the
majority of newly arrived refugees, including Abdayy and Dada in Rhino
settlement, speak of hunger and say they don’t have enough to eat.

It is 1pm, and neither Abdayy nor his five children have eaten. “The food
is finished,” he says, adding that his family won’t eat that day unless he
can find a way to do some small paid labor, or perhaps make a trade. Other
refugees spoke of exchanging supplies like pots for food.

Some aid organisations attribute the lack of schools, health services,
food, and water to the scale of the influx. But Shoshon Tama-Sweet, Africa
and Middle East programme manager with Medical Teams International (MTI),
finds that rationale lacking.

“They [UN and NGOs] prepared for 700,000 refugees before the Mosul offensive
<http://irinnews.us12.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31c0c755a8105c17c23d89842&id=81eeb89f09&e=399c7ee738>
[in Iraq],” he told IRIN. “South Sudan has been at war since 2013. The
refugees started flooding Uganda in July. They used surprise as an
explanation for lack of preparation. Now, it's December. They still can't
be surprised. We're running to stand still.”

Speaking again to the relativism other aid staffers apply to explain
conditions, Tama-Sweet said: “You can't say: 'Well, they wouldn't have
water in South Sudan either.' In South Sudan, they had community coping
mechanisms, they knew the land. This isn't the same thing."
Birth

Back at Ocea Centre Two in Rhino settlement, Ayikoriu, the midwife, is
giving instructions.

Helen is 25. This is her first child. She purses her lips and screws up her
eyes in painful effort, but she doesn’t make much noise.

She hasn’t taken any pain medication. Lili Aya, the birth attendant, and
Ayikoriu shift Helen into the most comfortable position; first draping her
arm over her back and moving her onto her side, then holding her neck and
massaging her breasts and belly. Helen’s only cover is a limp plaid
blanket. It’s a physical process; the women are comfortable with each
other.

Beads of sweat form on Helen’s lips. The room smells vaguely of hay.
Ayikoriu advises her patient to push like she’s trying to go to the
bathroom. “She’s putting her effort here,” Ayikoriu says, indicating her
neck. “I’m telling her to push down.”

Ayikoriu ties a rubber glove around Helen’s arm. She’s found they make
perfect tourniquets. She gives Helen an intravenous drip of glucose for
energy, and some oxytocin to speed up her slowing contractions.

Now, Helen is not contracting at all. A clinical officer calls the
ambulance. It’s time to take Helen to the hospital. Ayikoriu is not worried
about Helen’s health, but she is concerned the baby will suffocate. The
ambulance is already on its way to the hospital with someone else. It will
be hours before it can come back for Helen.

*(TOP PHOTO: Mother and newborn asleep on the floor of Ocea Center Two,
Rhino settlement, Uganda. CREDIT: Amanda Sperber/IRIN)*

as/ag
RhinoCamp.jpg
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News <http:///news> Migration <http:///migration> Conflict
<http:///conflict> Food <http:///food> Health <http:///health> Human Rights
<http:///human-rights> South Sudan: From war to want Amanda Sperber
<http:///authors/amanda-sperber> IRIN <http:///byline/irin> Rhino settlement
<http:///publication-location/rhino-settlement> UGANDA
<http:///publication-location/uganda> Africa <http:///africa> East Africa
<http:///africa/east-africa> South Sudan
<http:///africa/east-africa/south-sudan> Uganda
<http:///afrique/afrique-de-lest/uganda>

*Read on
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------------------------------
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