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UN appeals for $3.9 billion for humanitarian crises
30 Nov 2006 22:20:34 GMT
Source: Reuters

(Adds Egeland comments, paragraphs 7-9)

By Irwin Arieff

UNITED NATIONS, Nov 30 (Reuters) - The United Nations asked wealthy nations on Thursday to donate $3.9 billion next year to address humanitarian crises touching 27 million people in 29 countries, with most of the money destined for Africa.

"These 27 million individuals seek not a handout but a hand-up, and I hope that once again we will respond -- not with pity but with practical assistance," outgoing Secretary-General Kofi Annan said, addressing his 10th and final annual appeal.

The single largest sum -- $1.2 billion -- would again go to Sudan, a vast northeast African nation where multiple civil wars have left millions homeless and hungry, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said.

The next biggest recipients of the 2007 appeal were the Democratic Republic of Congo, earmarked for $687 million, and the Palestinian territories, where $454 million has been requested, the office said.

For each success story, where the yearly appeals have made a difference, "there is a contrasting story where help could not be offered for lack of funds," said Annan, whose second five-year term as U.N. leader ends on Dec. 31.

"What shall we say when our children and grandchildren ask us, 'Why? Why did we let so many women and children die unnecessarily when we had the money, we had the knowledge and we had the tools to save them?'" Annan said.

Jan Egeland, the U.N. emergency relief coordinator, said the $3.9 billion amounted to one-third of what Europeans spent each year on ice cream.

Three years of conflict in Sudan's western Darfur region weighed heavily on the U.N. effort, "in many ways draining both resources and attention from elsewhere in Africa," he said.

"That is why it is so important to get out of this absolutely vicious downward spiral that we have in Darfur," Egeland said. "If Darfur hadn't been there, I think there would have been more money for Burundi or the Central African Republic and so on."

Last year's U.N. appeal sought $4.7 billion in donations but succeeded in raising just two-thirds of the goal as of the end of October, through donations from 65 governments, the U.N. office said.

The biggest donors for 2006 were the United States, the European Commission, Britain, the Netherlands and Japan.

The money is channeled to recipients through U.N. agencies, private aid groups and international and local organizations.

As in previous years, most of the 2007 aid targets Africa, specifically Burundi, the Central African Republic, Chad, Congo Republic, Ivory Coast, Somalia, Uganda, Zimbabwe, the south-central Great Lakes region and the West Africa region as well as Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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REFILE-CORRECTING TITLE TO CHAIRMAN Alpha Oumar Konare (C), Chairman of the African Commission, arrives for the 8th African Union Summit of Heads of States at the United Nations office in Addis Ababa January 29, 2007. An African Union summit opened on Monday with the stage set for a battle over Sudan's determination to assume the chair, as promised a year ago, despite fierce criticism of continuing bloodshed in its Darfur region.