By Laura MacInnis
Humanitarian chief John Holmes said new sources of funding were needed to raise enough money for the U.N. to confront the disasters and emergencies that can leave millions of people without shelter, food, or clean water.
"The overall amount of funding is not enough to meet the needs," he told a news briefing announcing an appeal for $3.8 billion to address crises next year in 24 countries including Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Somalia.
The
Holmes said donations were needed from new countries and from the private sector to broaden the pool of funds available.
"There are some very desperate people out there suffering and in need," he told a news briefing in
While efforts to reach new donors are at an early stage, Holmes said "companies with a global reach" and those working in the areas where humanitarian funds are spent may be the most promising partners.
All but one of the 10 crisis-affected areas the U.N. requested funds for in its appeal were in
The continent has also seen increasingly big investments from
ACUTE DISASTERS
Aid workers have had their cars and phones stolen, while those uprooted by the more than four-year-old conflict are now vulnerable to malnutrition and other woes, he said. Holmes called for continued assistance until government and rebel forces broker an end to their fighting.
Other areas covered in the U.N. request for funds include
In addition to the overall humanitarian appeal, compiled with 188 aid agencies worldwide, the U.N. typically issues "flash" appeals throughout the year for emergency funds to cope with acute disasters such as earthquakes and floods.
In 2007, governments committed $3.3 billion to the combined regular and flash funding sought by the U.N. for humanitarian work, some 66 percent of the total amount requested.
Holmes called that "a good result by historical standards" -- compared to 63 percent in 2006, 55 percent in 2005 and 54 percent in 2004 -- but added: "I wouldn't call it a good result by any other standard."