Ready to Save Lives: A Preparedness Toolkit for Sexual and Reproductive Health Care in Emergencies
Format
Foreword
Family Planning 2020 is deeply honored to have facilitated the development of Ready to Save Lives: A Preparedness Toolkit for Sexual and Reproductive Health Care in Emergencies as part of FP2020’s commitment to fostering collaboration among humanitarian and development actors. At the 2017 London Family Planning Summit, members of the Inter-Agency Working Group on Reproductive Health (IAWG) in Crises insisted that a dialogue on scaling up access to quality family planning services must include consideration of women in humanitarian settings. IAWG called for partnerships between humanitarian and development organizations to ensure the fundamental right to family planning is not lost to people who are displaced by conflict, natural disasters, environmental degradation, and epidemics.
What is Joe Biden doing to cope with a rise in unaccompanied child migrants?
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What is Joe Biden doing to cope with a rise in unaccompanied child migrants?
msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Migrant children at border are still being separated from relatives for weeks under Biden administration Rick Jervis, USA TODAY © PAUL RATJE, AFP/Getty Images Migrant children from different Latin American countries wait to make travel arrangements at the Casa del Refugiado, or The House of Refugee, a new center opened by the Annunciation House to help the large flow of migrants being released by the United States Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement in El Paso, Texas, on April 24, 2019.
The Biden administration is still sheltering children separated from close family members in federal facilities for weeks on end – something immigrant advocates and attorneys had hoped the new administration would resolve by now.
The most dangerous place in Africa for humanitarian work
By Songezo Ndlendle
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Since violence escalated before and after the December 27 general elections in the Central African Republic (CAR) last year, brutal attacks by armed groups continue to drive hundreds of thousands of residents from their homes to other parts of the war ravaged country or across borders to neighbouring countries.
Most refugees are fleeing to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), while others seek refuge in Cameroon and Chad, crossing rivers in canoes.
The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) said it was working to relocate thousands of Central African refugees in remote border areas of the DRC to safer sites in the interior of the country.