Appeals for $ 116.1m: IOM scales up plans for COVID-19

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UNB, Dhaka :
The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is scaling up its plans to address the mobility aspects of the global response to the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) pandemic with a new funding requirement of $ 116.1 million.
The World Health Organization (WHO) reports the outbreak has affected at least 166 countries with about 236,926 confirmed cases and close to 9,834 people have lost their lives.
Governments around the world are working together to prevent the spread of the disease, boosting surveillance, detection, and treatment efforts, re-allocating resources, restricting travel, imposing quarantines and more.
The COVID-19 outbreak – which is first and foremost a health crisis – is fast becoming the largest mobility crisis ever seen, said a media release issued from Geneva on Thursday.
It is changing patterns of and acceptance toward migration, services offered by airlines, attitudes towards foreigners, as well as border and migration management regimes, it said.
An unprecedented number of people are becoming stranded on their journeys.
As a result, some United Nations interventions, including refugee resettlement operations, have been scaled back or suspended temporarily.
The geographic prioritisation of the appeal is based on existing national and IOM capacities: over $43.4 million are to cover interventions in Eastern, Western, and Central Africa; more than USD 24.5 million are to be dedicated to the Asia-Pacific region; more than $17 million are for the Middle East and Northern Africa; over $13.6 million are for the Americas and, the remainder will support activities in Europe and Central Asia, as well as global interventions.
The new appeal complements and is aligned with the WHO’s COVID-19 Global Preparedness and Response Plan, issued on 3 February, as well as the upcoming Inter-Agency Standing Committee Humanitarian Response Plan, led by the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
Building on a first plan launched on 20 February, the revised IOM COVID-19 Global Strategic Preparedness and Response Plan (SRP) covers all regions of the world,
and comprises a wide range of on-going and planned activities.
These are emergence of humanitarian needs in new settings; cross-border coordination; capacity-building for government staff on disease surveillance; setting up or enhancing hand-washing facilities at entry points; support with case management; monitoring and mapping of people’s movements within and across borders; improvement of displacement sites to ensure site safety and hygiene and that livelihoods are sustained; and the dissemination of information on how to stay healthy, specifically targeting migrants, refugees and displaced persons.
IOM is the global lead of the Camp Coordination and Camp Management (CCCM) humanitarian cluster and, with more than 430 offices and 14,000 staff members across the world – including thousands working specifically on health and community engagement – is uniquely placed to provide support in international public health emergencies, said the media release.
Since January, the Organization has assisted Governments with COVID-19 preparedness and response, for example with donations of protective suits, gloves and masks for Wuhan, China, the monitoring of flows of people in Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia, and the secondment of IOM staff for disease surveillance in Afghanistan.
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