Press Release

Joint Human Security Programme Launched by IOM and UNODC.

14 June 2022

The project will focus on building community capacity for the prevention of communicable diseases, including COVID-19

A Joint Human Security Programme Launched by IOM and UNODC to Enhance Resiliency and Living Conditions Addressing Health and Food Security Challenges in Sierra Leone  

Freetown, 10th June 2022- The International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) launched a project, “Enhanced Resiliency and Living Conditions for Vulnerable Communities Addressing Economic, Health, and Food Security Challenges due to Impacts of COVID-19 in Sierra Leone” with support from the Government of Japan through United Nations Trust Fund for Human Security.

The project comes at a critical time when food insecurity and access to livelihood deteriorated due to rising food prices and fuel shortages as a result of global events such as the COVID-19 pandemic and the Russia-Ukraine conflict. As the country relies on imported goods and commodities, including staple foods and fuel, increases in prices have critically impacted every household in the country, especially the most vulnerable, putting many of them into a spiral of further poverty.

In response to these challenges, the project aims to support the strengthening of the capacity of the government and communities to prevent and mitigate public health challenges and provide resources to improve livelihoods, and address obstacles to improved food security for enhanced community resilience.

Furthermore, the project will focus on building community capacity for the prevention of communicable diseases, including COVID-19, through the provision of training and health and hygiene facilities, assisting persons displaced by disasters, and training vulnerable persons for livelihoods. This programme will actively seek to benefit women, youth, and Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) in Sierra Leone.   

Maximizing the potential of fishing to meet food and nutritional needs by addressing the sector’s vulnerabilities to multiple forms of illegal activities, such as trafficking in marine species, corruption, document fraud, forgery, and human trafficking, is key in the rollout of this project. Efforts will be made, particularly in the fisheries sector, by enhancing the capacity in the sector to meet the food and nutritional needs of vulnerable communities through a strengthened governance and trade environment.

“The interventions are timely and key to ensure that vulnerable communities, including border areas, improve their capacities to mitigate the impacts of crises and have the necessary skills and tools to control COVID-19 and other emerging public health risks whilst also providing Non-Food Items (NFI) to persons in crisis-affected communities,” said Dr. James Bagonza, Head of Office at IOM Sierra Leone.   

“Crimes in the fisheries sector are especially detrimental in a country such as Sierra Leone, where fish accounts for more than 40 percent of the total animal protein intake. The enhanced capacities of local authorities to prevent and counter these threats in the fishery sector is paramount to unlock this sector’s potential towards food security”, said Dr. Amado Philip de Andrés, UNODC Regional Representative for West and Central Africa.

                                                                                              

For more information or Media Enquiries, please contact Alfred Fornah at IOM Sierra Leone, Email: afornah@iom.int

 

To learn more about the United Nations Trust Fund for Human Security (UNTFHS), visit the website: https://www.un.org/humansecurity/

 

 

 

 

 

UN entities involved in this initiative

IOM
International Organization for Migration

Goals we are supporting through this initiative