First UN aid cargo plane in 3 months lands in Haitian capital
America
By
Xinhua
| Jun 02, 2024
The first UN aid cargo flight in three months landed Thursday in the Haitian capital of Port-au-Prince, UN humanitarians said Friday.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the UN Humanitarian Air Service flight from Panama carried medical supplies to support the efforts of the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) and the World Health Organization (WHO) amid gang violence paralyzing the Haitian capital.
"This will support critical, lifesaving operations as insecurity continues to restrict people's access to health care, mainly in the metropolitan area of Port-au-Prince and in the Artibonite department," OCHA said. "Haitian authorities, WHO and local NGOs (nongovernmental organizations) continue to provide a wide range of services to displaced people, including screening for malnutrition, cholera prevention and care and psychosocial support."
UNICEF voiced its concern about child recruitment and use by armed groups in Haiti.
READ MORE
Firm to put up Sh2 billion affordable housing units
Should State focus on affordable housing or slums upgrading?
Church's Sh391m real estate venture
Traditional stores hold ground in expansion spree by retailers
Developers harness the power of technology to reshape the industry
Cooking oil prices set to go up as new import duty takes effect
Auditor General flags shady dealings at KAA in latest audit
Traders: We lost Sh5b to protests, not again
Tuesday protests: How Google map saved the situation
Gig economy: Why the sector is yet to pick up despite initiatives
The agency issued a statement in which it estimates that 30-50 percent of armed group members are children, subject to coercion, abuse and exploitation.
UNICEF and the Haitian authorities recently agreed on joint ways of working to support the reintegration of children who previously were members of armed groups, said the fund.
Stephane Dujarric, chief spokesman for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, said Guterres welcomes the designation by the Transitional Presidential Council of Garry Conille as Haiti's interim prime minister and looks forward to further progress in the establishment of the transitional governance arrangements.
"He encourages all Haitian stakeholders to work together to ensure steady progress in the transition to restore democratic institutions through the holding of elections," Dujarric said. "The secretary-general also stresses the importance of ensuring an inclusive political transition in Haiti, including by appointing women to decision-making positions."
The spokesman said it remains critical that security gains accompany progress in the political transition.
"The secretary-general therefore reiterates his call for the swift deployment of the Multinational Security Support (MSS) mission to Haiti to support the Haitian National Police in addressing the dire security situation, and urgently appeals to all (UN) member states to ensure that the MSS mission promptly receives the financial and logistical support it needs to succeed," Dujarric said.
The spokesman also noted that the humanitarian response plan for Haiti is only 21 percent funded, with 142 million U.S. dollars received out of the 674 million dollars needed.
- Traders: We lost Sh5b to protests, not again
- Cooking oil prices set to go up as new import duty takes effect
- Auditor General flags shady dealings at KAA in latest audit
- Brace for higher cost of imported goods as new EAC tariffs kick in