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The COVID-19 pandemic is more than a health crisis; it is an economic crisis, a security crisis, and a human rights crisis. This crisis has highlighted severe weaknesses and inequalities within and among nations. Coming out of this crisis will require a whole-of-society, whole-of-government and the whole-of-world approach driven by sympathy and unity. While other countries are giving their own responses for this pandemic the UN have given their own responses from its subparts. For Example:-
IOM: IOM has begun a COVID-19 vaccination campaign for migrants stranded in Yemen, aiming to inoculate around 7,500 people at its Migrant Response Points in Aden and Ma’rib.
WFP:
In Lebanon, WFP is scaling up its support to the Emergency Social Safety Net
project in partnership with the Government to channel funding from the World Bank through its social protection system. The project will transfer cash assistance to at least 147,000 of the most vulnerable Lebanese households, with additional support to 87,000 of these households with children in school to ensure they complete their studies. It will also transfer funds directly to schools so they can continue teaching throughout the crisis.
In Malawi, WFP—in collaboration with UNICEF, ILO and other partners—is rolling out the COVID-19 Urban Cash Intervention to support the livelihoods of vulnerable urban communities. The intervention will target over 850,000 people with emergency cash-based assistance for six months and will develop into a national social protection system for urban communities beyond the pandemic.
In Armenia, WFP continues to support the Government’s capacity to safely implement school feeding during the pandemic by donating PPE to the Ministry of Education. The protective materials will allow canteens to remain open and serve school meals to approximately 100,000 primary school children. Amazon Disaster Relief has supported WFP in these efforts through the donations of PPE worth an estimated $7 million.
UNHCR: In Jordan, UNHCR reports that 53 percent of the eligible population living in refugee camps and 33 percent of the eligible refugee population living in urban areas have been vaccinated against COVID-19.
UNICEF: UNICEF and Clover Biopharmaceutical signed a long-term agreement on December 7 that grants UNICEF access to up to 414 million doses of Clover’s COVID-19 vaccine until the end of 2022.
When a major health issue like COVID-19 faces Australia. The country work with state and territory governments to:
share information so they can provide the best possible care
ensure the response is consistent and integrated across the country.
Australia government response aims to:
Minimize the number of people becoming infected or sick with COVID-19
Minimize how sick people become and the mortality rate
manage the demand on our health systems
help you to manage your own risk and the risk to your family and community
make COVID-19 vaccines available to everyone in Australia.
Answers
The COVID-19 pandemic is more than a health crisis. This crisis has highlighted severe weaknesses and inequalities within and among nations.Coming out of this crisis will require a whole-of-society, whole-of-government and the whole-of-world approach driven by sympathy and unity. While other countries are giving their own responses for this pandemic the UN have given their own responses from its subparts. UNHCR: In Jordan, UNHCR reports that 53 percent of the eligible population living in refugee camps and 33 percent of the eligible refugee population living in urban areas have been vaccinated against COVID-19.
UNICEF: UNICEF and Clover Biopharmaceutical signed a long-term agreement on December 7 that grants UNICEF access to up to 414 million doses of Clover’s COVID-19 vaccine until the end of 2022.
When a major health issue like COVID-19 faces Australia. The country work with state and territory governments to:
share information so they can provide the best possible care
ensure the response is consistent and integrated across the country.
Australia government response aims to:
Minimize the number of people becoming infected or sick with COVID-19
Minimize how sick people become and the mortality rate
manage the demand on our health systems
help you to manage your own risk and the risk to your family and community
make COVID-19 vaccines available to everyone in Australia.
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Answer:
The COVID-19 pandemic is more than a health crisis; it is an economic ... has highlighted severe fragilities and inequalities within and among nations.
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