09 September 2020

West and Central Africa Region situation reports

Situation reports are the main reporting tool to monitor UNICEF’s humanitarian response. They provide an update on the situation and needs of children in a country or region, as well as information on UNICEF’s response and funding requirements., 2023, SAHEL Child Rights and Humanitarian Dashboard (January - December 2023) SAHEL Child Rights and Humanitarian Dashboard (January - December 2023) WEST AND CENTRAL AFRICA REGION Child Rights and Humanitarian Dashboard (January-December 2023) WCAR Child Rights and Humanitarian Dashboard (January - December 2023) CENTRAL SAHEL: Burkina Faso, Mali and…, 2022, Child Rights and Humanitarian Dashboard, December 2022 Sahel Child Rights and Humanitarian Dashboard, 31 December 2022 Central Sahel Child Rights and Humanitarian Dashboard, 31 December 2022 Corrigendum West and Central Africa Regional Office Humanitarian Situation Report - End of Year - 1 Jan - 31 Dec 2022 End-of-Year 2022 January - June 2022, 2021, End of Year 2021 Mid-Year 2021 Response Snapshot, March 2021  COVID-19 Situation Report, March 2021, 2020, WCARO COVID-19 Situation Report, 2 October 2020 COVID-19 Situation Report, 2 October 2020 COVID-19 Situation Report, 31 August 2020 COVID-19 Situation Report, 29 July 2020 COVID-19 Situation Report, 15 June 2020 COVID-19 Situation Report, 3 June 2020 COVID-19 Situation Report, 15 April 2020  , 2018, Sahel Nutrition Crisis Fact Sheet, August 2018 Read more about Humanitarian Action for Children  here . View the West and Central Africa Region Appeal here .
06 August 2019

Education under threat in West and Central Africa

Conflict is taking a devastating toll on education. This must not become a forgotten crisis, Thirty years after governments around the world adopted the Convention on the Rights of the Child , the right to an education is being violated in communities hit by conflict in West and Central Africa. Right now, nearly two million children are being robbed of an education in the region due to violence and insecurity in and around their schools.…, West and Central Africa crisis at a glance, en child alert.png This map is stylized and not to scale. It does not reflect a position by UNICEF on the legal status of any country or area or the delimitation of any frontiers. The final boundary between the Sudan and South Sudan has not yet been determined. What’s happening? Many areas in West and Central Africa are witnessing increased…, Learning in peril, When education is under attack, safe schooling in the traditional sense becomes impossible to provide. The threat of attacks creates a sense of fear in local communities, forcing schools to close, teachers to flee and school children to remain at home, unable to learn in classrooms with their peers. Cameroon. A child stands in a classroom in…, Voices from the region, UNICEF UNICEF Display caption Show Original Caption Display caption Show Original Caption South Sudan. A girl completes school work in a classroom in Yambio, South Sudan. UNICEF/UN0272634/Holt Mary, who was once abducted by an armed group, completes school work in a classroom in Yambio, South Sudan. Nigeria. A girl pushes her hand against a screen…, How is UNICEF helping?, While a classroom is preferable, it is not the only place to provide learning activities. For example, UNICEF and the Children’s Radio Foundation have been collaborating since 2016 on designing and piloting the first-of-its-kind Radio Education in Emergencies programme. UNICEF has also been creating temporary learning centres, which provide a…, Call to action, UNICEF and partners call on governments, armed forces, other parties to conflict and the international community to take concerted action to stop attacks and threats against schools, students, teachers and other school personnel in West and Central Africa – and to support quality learning for every child in the region. To reach these goals: States…
28 November 2018

Child Alert: Central African Republic

In a neglected emergency, children need aid, protection – and a future, Two in three children in the Central African Republic (CAR) are in urgent need of aid amid an escalating crisis that has left thousands of children trapped within armed groups, and thousands more subjected to sexual violence. The children of CAR need security. The places they go for protection and support – including schools, hospitals and places…, Crisis at a glance, What’s happening in the Central African Republic?, In December 2013, Bangui, the capital of the Central African Republic (CAR), descended into violence. The situation fleetingly made international headlines, leading to warnings of a failed state and possible genocide. Now the few early signs of recovery and rebuilding in CAR have given way to a dramatic resurgence in fighting., Who is affected by the fighting?, More often than not, the armed groups target civilians rather than each other. They attack health and education facilities and personnel, mosques and churches, as well as sites where displaced people have taken shelter., How many children are affected?, Today, 1.5 million Central African children require humanitarian assistance. Meanwhile, there are almost 643,000 internally displaced Central Africans.  , A deepening health crisis, In 2018, severe acute malnutrition rates among young children in the Central African Republic have risen above the emergency threshold across more than half the country. And the situation is set to worsen. The number of children who are expected to suffer from severe acute malnutrition is projected to reach more than 43,000 in 2019., Learning under fire, At the national level in the Central African Republic, seven out of 10 children and adolescents drop out of school. Fewer than three in five finish primary school, and just 6 per cent complete the equivalent of high school. Children who are not in school are at high risk of exploitation, recruitment into armed groups or involvement in criminal…, Children under attack, The number of people displaced by the violence is near levels seen at the peak of the violence in 2014. Many families lack reliable access to food and depend on host communities. Around three in five are living with host families, most of whom are extremely poor. Many children were separated from their parents during the violence, ending up alone…, Voices from the Central African Republic, UNICEF UNICEF Display caption Show Original Caption Display caption Show Original Caption © UNICEF/UN0248767/Le Du UNICEF/UN0239520/Gilbertson VII Photo, The crisis in numbers, How is UNICEF helping?, UNICEF has helped set up hundreds of temporary learning spaces and trained thousands of community teachers in CAR. It has also established catch-up programmes for children who have missed out on classes since 2014. Between January and September 2018, a Rapid Response Mechanism led by UNICEF – and intended to provide crucial non-food items and…, Find out more
11 May 2018

Conflict in the Kasai, Democratic Republic of the Congo

Conflict in the Kasai region at a glance, What is the Kasai crisis?, Violence initially flared in the Kasai region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo in August 2016, sparked by tensions between customary chiefs in Kasai-Central Province and the government. The violence spread rapidly in early 2017. Existing intercommunity tensions became part of a wider conflict involving militias, armed groups and security…, How many people have been affected?, When violence broke out in 2016, hundreds of thousands of people ran for their lives. Women and children displaced by violence have escaped to isolated locations to find safety – losing access to essential goods and services such as health care, safe water and sanitation, and education. The militias have used children to fight and kill, or to act…, How is UNICEF helping?, UNICEF is on the ground helping to deliver life-saving supplies and services. Since January 2017, UNICEF and partners have treated 71,500 children suffering from severe acute malnutrition; and, since August 2017, vaccinated 2 million children for measles; provided access to water, sanitation and hygiene services for more than 326,400 children; and…, Call to action: For the children of Kasai, UNICEF and its partners have achieved some critical results for children in the Kasai region. However, if humanitarian action is not stepped up in 2018: 400,000 children will be at risk of dying because of severe acute malnutrition. Thousands of children formerly associated with the militias will lack the support they need to reintegrate into…, Fast facts, Children and militias, Perhaps the most horrifying aspect of the crisis in Kasai is the use of children by militias. At least 60 per cent of the region’s militia forces are composed of children, according to the interagency Global Education Cluster and Global Protection Cluster. The militias use children to fight and kill, or to act as human shields. All of them have to…, Nutrition crisis , While the security situation has stabilized in parts of the Kasai region and displaced populations have begun to return to their communities, humanitarian conditions remain critical. More than 770,000 young children are malnourished, including 400,000 children – a staggering 10 per cent of the under-5 population – who urgently need treatment to…, Health crisis, Beyond the threat of malnutrition, the children of the Kasai region face a continuing health crisis. Many young children missed out on scheduled vaccinations because violence and displacement destroyed health centres and disrupted immunization campaigns – making them even more susceptible to deadly childhood diseases. Even for people who were not…, Education disrupted, The disruption of education by the conflict is robbing the children in the Kasai region of a viable future. Almost half a million children in the region were unable to complete the school year in 2017 and school attendance is likely to be disrupted by violence in 2018 as well. Since the beginning of the conflict, 416 primary and secondary schools…, Displaced by violence, The violence in the Kasai has generated massive displacement. The impact this experience will have on lives and futures is difficult to imagine. People hiding in the bush are the most vulnerable and difficult to reach with assistance. They have no real shelter and lack drinking water, sanitation, food and health care. Others live with their…, Voices from the Kasai, A youth at a UNICEF-supported reintegration centre for children associated with armed groups, in Kananga, Kasai region, Democratic Republic of the Congo, DRC. Children on the frontline Thousands of children in Kasai have been associated with militias and experienced atrocities > More A mother holds her sleeping baby at a health centre in Kasai…, UNICEF's response, UNICEF is on the ground working with partners to reach children with lifesaving assistance: Preventing and treating severe acute malnutrition among the region’s children by distributing therapeutic food and training health workers, mothers and community members in infant and young child feeding practices. Improving children’s access to health care…, Beyond Kasai: The situation in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Learn more, UNICEF Child Alert | Kasai: A children’s crisis Humanitarian Situation Reports: Democratic Republic of the Congo UNICEF 2018 appeal: Democratic Republic of the Congo