UN requests $5.7B in relief funds for Ukraine in 2023

That’s according to UN’s top emergency relief official, Martin Griffiths, reports, referring to UN News.

The size of the appeal – 25 per cent higher than this year’s – reflects the fact that the total number in need is 65 million more than in 2022, the UN and partner organizations noted.

Needs are “shockingly high”, Martin Griffiths said, warning that it was very likely that this year’s emergencies would continue into 2023.

“The needs are going up because we’ve been by smitten by the war in Ukraine, by COVID, by climate,” he said. “I fear that 2023 is going to be an acceleration of all those trends, and that’s why we say … that we hope 2023 will be a year of solidarity, just as 2022 has been a year of suffering.”

Speaking in Geneva at the launch of the Global Humanitarian Overview report 2023, Griffiths described the appeal as a “lifeline” for people on the brink.

He explained that numerous countries had been hit by lethal droughts and floods, from Pakistan to the Horn of Africa. In addition, the war in Ukraine had “turned a part of Europe into a battlefield.

More than 100 million people are now displaced worldwide. And all of this on top of the devastation left by the pandemic among the world’s poorest.”

If the humanitarian outlook for 2023 is so grim, it is in large part because relief demands are already so high.

At least “222 million people … will face acute food insecurity in 53 countries by the end of this year”, Mr. Griffiths explained.

Turning to the threat of famine, he said that five countries “are already experiencing what we call famine-like conditions, where we can confidently and unhappily say that people are dying as a result – and it tends to be children – of displacement, food insecurity, lack of food, starvation.”

As reported, on July 22 at the suggestion of the United Nations, Ukraine, Turkey, and UN Secretary General António Guterres signed a 120-day initiative on the safe transportation of grain and food products from the ports of Odesa, Chernomorsk, and Pivdennyi.

The first ship carrying Ukrainian food left the port of Odesa on August 1.

On November 17, Ukraine, the UN, and Turkey agreed to extend the “grain initiative” for another 120 days.

Photo: Facebook

Мандрик Павло

Recent Posts

Welcome, Mr. Donald. You are President once again

Orest Biloskursky, the head of the Kyiv24 Applied Research Think Tank, offers an exclusive analysis…

6 months ago

Ukrainian Forces Down Russian Su-25 Attack Aircraft in Donetsk Region

Ukrainian National Guard fighters have destroyed a Russian Su-25 attack aircraft, which was on a…

11 months ago

EU Opens Membership Talks with Ukraine

On Tuesday, June 25, a conference in Luxembourg marked the beginning of negotiations on Ukraine's…

11 months ago

International Court Issues Arrest Warrants for Chief of General Staff and Former Russian Defense Minister

The Pre-Trial Chamber II of the International Criminal Court (ICC) has issued arrest warrants for…

11 months ago

Missile Strike Causes Warehouse Fire in Odesa

A warehouse is burning in Odesa following a missile strike. There are injured individuals, but…

11 months ago

Ukrainian Armed Forces Strike Refineries, Depots, and Radar Stations in Russia

In recent days, the Ukrainian Defense Forces have successfully carried out a series of strikes…

11 months ago