South Sudan Stabilization Centre (SC) Safety Audit Tool

Background

This tool is designed to support Nutrition partners in South Sudan to identify potential GBV-related safety risks at and around the Stabilization Centers.
Stabilization Center safety audits are participatory and practical tools that can be used to rapidly assess a facility’s usability from the perspective of users, whose requirements are often ignored in standard design.

It generally focuses on:

  1. The Stabilization Center structural design
  2. The Latrine for users (hygiene)
  3. Handwashing and bathing area
  4. General protection environment for women and children

Focusing on these broad four components, the safety audit helps to:

  • Identify barriers that make it difficult for some people to use the facility independently
  • Identify which features make the facility easy to use and which make it difficult to use for people with special needs (e.g. persons with physical impairments)
  • Identify any safety concerns around using the facility, especially for women and children
  • Identify any changes needed to the facility and/or the surrounding area
  • Make practical suggestions for changes/improvement.

General tips on using this tool

  • The tool is divided into three parts: 1) Observation; 2) Community Consultation (through focus group discussions); and 3) Staff Consultation. Ideally, all components should be used together, but depending on time, staff capacity, etc. individual components of the tool can also be used independently.
  • For Part 2 (community consultations), it is recommended to have a female enumerator. If it is not possible to translate this tool into the local language ahead of time and/or train someone who speaks the local language to collect the data directly, it is recommended to have a female translator.
  • When forming the focus groups for Part 2 of the tool, consider the power dynamics that might affect some participants’ ability to speak freely. For example, in some communities, older women may tend to dominate the conversation and younger women/adolescent girls may not have an opportunity to express their views unless there is a separate group just for them. Similarly, in some communities, unmarried women may feel less free to speak than married women may.

Suggested preparation steps prior to beginning data collection

  • The purpose of this tool is NOT to actively identify specific GBV cases or survivors. However, when discussing topics such as safety, some participants may choose to disclose their personal experience or the experience of someone they know. Before beginning the data collection process, it is important to ensure that enumerators are prepared for such disclosures, including training on psychological first aid (PFA) and the available GBV response services in the location (if there are any). If GBV response services are not available in the location where data collection is taking place, enumerators should receive training on the Pocket Guide1 and/or have the GBV Pocket Guide app.

 

 

Source: UN Children’s Fund

US Envoy Heads to Horn of Africa

NEW YORK – U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken is sending his special envoy for the Horn of Africa to the region Tuesday in a bid to de-escalate tensions.

In a statement, Blinken said Ambassador Jeffrey Feltman will visit Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Sudan through May 13.

The special envoy will meet with officials from those governments, as well as the United Nations and the African Union, in addition to political stakeholders and humanitarian groups.

“The special envoy’s travel underscores the administration’s commitment to lead a sustained diplomatic effort to address the interlinked political, security and humanitarian crises in the Horn of Africa, and he will coordinate U.S. policy across the region to advance that goal,” Blinken said.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Ethiopia David Shinn told VOA Monday that Feltman’s travel to Eritrea is significant because “it’s the first time in a number of years that a senior American official has been allowed to meet with senior Eritrean officials.”

“That in itself is a good thing,” Shinn said.

The United States has been pressing Ethiopia to end the conflict in its Tigray region, which has been raging for six months. U.S. officials are also calling for allied Eritrean troops to withdraw from the region.

“If they don’t return to Eritrea, I think there will be an increasing tendency by the United States to look upon Eritrea as something of a pariah nation in the Horn of Africa,” said Shinn, who is now teaching at the Elliott School of International Affairs at George Washington University.

Ethiopia’s northern Tigray region has been the epicenter of hostilities since November, when fighters from the Tigray People’s Liberation Front (TPLF) attacked army bases in the region, according to the federal government. The attack, Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed said, prompted his government to launch a military offensive to push the group out.

The fighting has left at least 4.5 million people in need of humanitarian assistance in Tigray, according to the interim administration. The United Nations has appealed for $1.5 billion to assist 16 million people in Tigray and across Ethiopia this year.

Separately, tensions have also been rising among Sudan, Egypt and Ethiopia over the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD), which Ethiopia is building on the Blue Nile, close to the border with Sudan.

Egypt and Sudan want a legal agreement in place with Ethiopia before Addis Ababa begins filling the reservoir behind the mega dam. But Ethiopia began filling it last year, a move the other two countries see as directly threatening their water and electricity supplies.

The African Union has been in the lead trying to resolve the simmering dispute among the three neighbors.

 

Source: Voice of America

“سقيا الإمارات” تمدد فترة استلام طلبات المشاركة في الدورة الثالثة من جائزة محمد بن راشد آل مكتوم العالمية للمياه حتى نهاية مايو

دبي، الإمارات العربية المتحدة،3 مايو / أيار 2021/PRNewswire/ — أعلنت مؤسسة “سقيا الإمارات” عن تمديد فترة التسجيل في الدورة الثالثة من جائزة محمد بن راشد آل مكتوم العالمية للمياه، التي تبلغ قيمتها مليون دولار أمريكي، حتى نهاية شهر مايو 2021، لإتاحة المجالأمام عدد كبير من المتقدمين لاستكمال طلباتهم، إضافة إلى استقطاب عدد أكبر من الشركات ومراكز البحوث والمعاهد البحثية والمبتكرين والشباب من مختلف أرجاء العالم من أصحاب التقنيات المبتكرة للمشاركة والمساهمة في إيجاد حلول مستدامة ومبتكرة للتصدّي لمشكلة شُح المياه.

وقال معالي سعيد محمد الطاير، رئيس مجلس الأمناء في مؤسسة “سقيا الإمارات”: “نظراً للتحديات التي واجهها العالم بأسره على ضوء تداعيات جائحة (كوفيد- 19)، قررنا تمديد فترة استلام طلبات المشاركة، كي يحظى جميع الراغبين بالمشاركة بفرصة استكمال طلبات التسجيل، والمساهمة في تقديم تقنيات مبتكرة ومستدامة، تساعد في توفير المياه الصالحة للشرب للمحتاجين والمنكوبين والمحرومين أينما كانوا.”

تم توسيع نطاق الجائزة في دورتها الثالثة لتشمل تقنيات جديدة لإنتاج وتوزيع وتخزين ومراقبة وتحلية وتنقية المياه باستخدام الطاقة المتجددة، إلى جانب إضافة “جائزة الحلول المبتكرة للأزمات” إلى فئات الجائزة الثلاث السابقة: “جائزة المشاريع المبتكرة”، و”جائزة الابتكار في البحث والتطوير”، و”جائزة الابتكارات الفردية”.

يمكن للشركات ومراكز البحوث والمعاهد البحثية والمبتكرين والشباب من مختلف أرجاء العالم من أصحاب التقنيات المبتكرة التي تقدم حلولاً لتحديات شح المياه، التسجيل في الجائزة حتى 31 مايو 2021، عبر الموقع الإلكتروني  https://www.suqia.ae/ar/awards

 

International Jazz Day 2021 Concludes with Spectacular All-Star Global Concert Featuring Performances from Cities Across the Globe

Hosted by Michael Douglas at United Nations Headquarters in New York, Concert Caps Extraordinary 10th Anniversary Celebration Spanning More than 190 Countries

WASHINGTON, May 3, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — With more than 190 countries participating, the International Jazz Day 10th Anniversary celebration concluded with a thrilling All-Star Global Concert reaching millions worldwide. Hosted by Michael Douglas and led by artistic director Herbie Hancock and musical director John Beasley, the concert brought together renowned artists from over 20 countries, and was made possible by Lead Partner Toyota, with United Airlines serving as Airline Partner.

"Legendary jazz pianist Herbie Hancock and acclaimed vocalist Andra Day perform as part of the International Jazz Day 2021 All-Star Global Concert." (Steve Mundinger for Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz)

The 2021 Global Concert featured memorable moments illustrating the unifying power of jazz. From New York, vocalist Veronica Swift and trumpeter Ingrid Jensen opened the program with “Sing,” an uplifting tribute to the positive change that music can bring to the world. Other standout performances included pianist and composer Jacob Collier in London, Beninese songstress Angélique Kidjo in Paris, Japanese pianist Junko Onishi in Tokyo, Ivan Lins in Rio De Janeiro and vocalist/trumpeter Mandisi Dyantyis in Cape Town. Capping the remarkable presentation from Los Angeles was a sensational interpretation of “God Bless The Child” by vocalist Andra Day.

Anchored by Academy Award winner Michael Douglas from UN Headquarters in New York, the 2021 concert showcased jazz as a truly global art form. As United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres noted, “Ten years ago, we launched the very first International Jazz Day in the United Nations General Assembly Hall at the initiative of UNESCO and the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz. With every passing year, this has been a joyous celebration – not only of music, but also of freedom, diversity and human dignity. These are the values the United Nations works to protect and promote around the world.”

UNESCO and the Herbie Hancock Institute of Jazz presented free educational and outreach programming throughout the day. In one of the most anticipated events, UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay and UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador Herbie Hancock engaged in a moving dialogue on the history and legacy of International Jazz Day.

Celebrated with thousands of concerts and jazz-related programming around the globe each year on April 30, International Jazz Day brings together countries and communities on all seven continents to honor the international art form of jazz, highlighting its important role in encouraging dialogue, combating discrimination and promoting human dignity.

Photo – https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1501502/Herbie_Hancock_and_Andra_Day.jpg