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UNHCR Fundraising Reports - Gabon
UNHCR Global Report 1999 - Emergency Assistance in Gabon | 1 June 2000 | |
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Home > Where We Work > Africa > Central Africa and the Great Lakes > Gabon
UNHCR Global Report 1999 - Emergency Assistance in Gabon | 1 June 2000 | |
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Summaries of UNHCR's programme goals, objectives and priorities for each of its country operations.
UNHCR has developed a network of suppliers, specialists and partners to protect civilians.
Compilation of the Asia and the Pacific country fact sheets Sept 2014
Selected Lessons Learned.
A practical guide for those working with UNHCR in protecting and assisting refugees.
UNHCR Policy paper, November 2010
Covering Congolese and South Sudanese Emergency
UNHCR recognises three main phases of assistance to refugees - "emergency", "care and maintenance" and "durable solutions" - each of which requires specific attention. Environmental pressures too will differ between these stages, as well as from one situation to another.
Innovative Microlending in Kenya - Kiva Zip and RefugePoint
Reporting on UNHCR's operations worldwide.
Information on regional operations, global programmes, Headquarters, transfers from reserves and donors' contributions to UNHCR's programmes.
The archives hold material from decades of operations, including electronic documents.
Appeals for UNHCR emergency operations, supplementary budgets and special situations.
UNHCR relies almost completely on donations to fund its operations. Contribute now.
UNHCR regularly sends out video crews to document our operations around the world.
A Practical Guide for the Use of Microfinance in UNHCR operations
How UNHCR and partners seek to minimize the environmental impact of refugee operations.
FRAME - Framework for Assessing, Monitoring and Evaluating the Environment in Refugee-related Operations.
The Global Appeal is an invaluable guide for general readers to UNHCR's worldwide operations.
A joint collaboration between UNHCR and WHO, the manual provides information to vector control personnel focusing on operations in East Africa.
Through its Key Initiatives, UNHCR's Division of Programme Support and Management (DPSM) shares regular updates on interesting projects that produce key tools, practical guidance and new approaches aimed at moving UNHCR's operations forward.
UNHCR Goodwill Envoy Khaled Hosseini visited Afghanistan in early September and saw first-hand one of the UN refugee agency's largest and most complex operations. During a 10-day trip, the best-selling author visited UNHCR projects and met returnees in the northern provinces of Kunduz, Baghlan, Balkh, Parwan and Kabul. Hosseini, a former Afghan refugee now settled in the United States, noted that it would take time and effort for Afghanistan to provide returnees with adequate infrastructure and services. He urged the international community to remain committed to Afghanistan and to give the country time. Hosseini could not visit the south and parts of the east, where insecurity is impacting on the ability of UNHCR to assess needs and provide assistance to those who need it the most. Since 2003, UNHCR has helped more than 4 million refugees return to Afghanistan. This year, some 300,000 Afghan refugees have returned from Pakistan. More than 900,000 remain in Iran and 2 million in Pakistan.
For over a quarter of a century, Afghanistan has been devastated by conflict and civil strife, with some 8 million people uprooted internally and in neighbouring countries. The overthrow of the Taliban in 2001 resulted in one of the largest and most successful return operations in history.
Seven years on, more than 5 million Afghan refugees have returned - increasing Afghanistan's population by an estimated 20 percent.The large majority have gone back to their areas of origin. However, some recent returnees are facing more difficulties as the country's absorption capacity reaches its limits in some areas. Last year, some Afghans returned before they were ready or able to successfully reintegrate due to the closure of refugee villages as well as the deteriorating conditions in Pakistan. In consequence, 30,000 Afghan refugees returned to further displacement in their homeland, unable to return to their villages due to conflict, lack of land, shelter materials, basic services and job opportunities. These challenges have been compounded elsewhere across the country by food insecurity and severe drought.
UNHCR and the Afghan Foreign Ministry highlighted the requirements for sustainable refugee return and reintegration at an international conference in Kabul in November 2008. The donor community welcomed the inclusion of refugee reintegration within the government's five-year national development strategy and the emphasis on land, shelter, water, sanitation, education, health care and livelihoods. It is anticipated that repatriation and reintegration will become more challenging in future.
As the number of Syrian refugees in Lebanon continues to grow, ensuring access to quality health care is becoming an increasing challenge for humanitarian aid groups and the international community. So, Kuwait's unprecedented donation in April of US$110 million for UNHCR's Syria crisis operations this year came at a most opportune time. Slightly more than 40 per cent of the amount has been used to fund programmes in Lebanon, including the provision of vital - and often life-saving - medical care. In the following photo gallery, photographer Shawn Baldwin looks at the essential work being done in just one Kuwaiti-supported clinic in northern Lebanon. The small Al Nahda Primary Health Care Clinic in the town of Beddawi has a staff of seven doctors and one nurse. Between 600 and 700 people seek medical attention there every month and the clinic meets the needs of some of the most vulnerable refugees.