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More than 140 humanitarian aid workers killed in 2021 -UN

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Agency Report
UN agencies continue to deliver aid in Niger
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The UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, OCHA, in Geneva on Friday, said more than 140 aid workers were killed over the course of 2021.

The figure for aid workers killed in conflict or as a result of attacks was the highest since 2013, the organisation, which coordinated the global emergency response in humanitarian crises, said.

Most of those killed died as a result of being shot, with the second most common cause being airstrikes or shelling, most of them in Syria.

During the same period, 203 aid workers were injured and 117 abducted.

So far this year, 168 aid workers had been attacked while attempting to provide humanitarian aid, leading to 44 fatalities.

“Humanitarian needs are at an all-time high, and aid workers are working in ever more dangerous environments,’’ UN Emergency Relief Coordinator and Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs, Martin Griffiths, said.

According to the OCHA, the most dangerous countries for aid workers are South Sudan, Afghanistan and Syria.

More people around the world more than ever before,  were in need of humanitarian assistance, with 300 million people living in crisis regions, OCHA spokesman Jens Laerke, said.

“Never before have humanitarians been called to respond to this level of need and they are doing so in ever more dangerous environments,’’ he said.

While donors had pledged more aid than before, needs were raising even more sharply, Laerke said.

Meanwhile, UN appealed for funding for 2022 for Syria, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ukraine and many other countries currently ran to almost $50 billion, Laerke said.

This included funding for the UN’s children’s fund UNICEF, the World Food Programme, WFP, the World Health Organisation, WHO, and the UN refugee agency UNHCR.

However, just $15 billion of this amount had been received, he said.

Source: dpa/NAN

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