Humanitarian action: A focus on local partners on the ground and the elderly
In a dangerous world filled with mistrust, people are in dire need and deserve a response based on our common humanity
In South Sudan, Saving Lives From Behind The Scenes
When many people think of the aid workers responding to the humanitarian crisis in South Sudan, most think of those distributing food, organising airdrops, or negotiating with armed groups for access. But there are many people who work tirelessly behind the scenes in administration, finance and human resources, and who are critical to ensuring that WFP's food and nutrition assistance reaches people in urgent need.
Humanitarians are paying the price for political inaction
UK to host a national memorial for humanitarian aid workers for the first time, but governments should do more
Tales From WFP Humanitarian Heroes In South Sudan (Staff Interviews)
The World Food Programme (WFP) and partners have been working all-out for months to try to prevent a hunger catastrophe in South Sudan, overcoming enormous obstacles to bring food and other assistance to people in desperate need. Part of WFP's response includes deploying emergency mobile teams to reach vulnerable people who have been isolated by conflict in some of the most food-insecure areasof the country. The teams set up distribution sites from scratch, managing air-drop zones and sleeping in tents - and facing challenges that range in size from tiny scorpions to big guns. Here are a few stories from WFP staff members who have been part of these mobile emergency response teams.
TRF-Attacks on aid workers worldwide hit worst levels on record
FOUNDATION-AID-ATTACKS:TRF-Attacks on aid workers worldwide hit worst levels on record
Attacks on aid workers worldwide hit worst levels on record
155 aid workers were killed, 171 wounded and 134 kidnapped in 2013 - 66 percent more than in 2012
Working together for a more resilient world
19 August marks the anniversary of the bombing of the United Nations headquarters in Baghdad, in which 22 people lost their lives. In 2008, the UN General Assembly designated this day as World Humanitarian Day in an effort to raise public awareness of the crucial role that humanitarian assistance plays in improving people's lives worldwide, and to recognize the contributions of those who risk their lives delivering it.
A Humanitarian Hero Made in Honduras
To help those who are in need has been part of a legacy that his father, a physician, sewed in his heart when he was a child. Mario Sibrian, a Honduran national working in South Sudan for WFP Aviation, has been living up to his father's legacy for the last 14 years. That is his driving force behind his commitment to humanitarian assistance during the tsunami in Asia, the Haiti Earthquake and Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines.
INSIGHT-Extreme medicine: The search for new antibiotics
Africa provides a glimpse of what world looks like when the drugs we rely on to fight disease stop working
Celebrating World Humanitarian Day – Fatmata in Gambela, Ethiopia
This week we celebrate World Humanitarian Day—a time to recognize our staff who are in the field, every day. Since conflict began in South Sudan over eight months ago, more than 180,000 people have sought refuge in neighboring Ethiopia. Fatmata Kokobaye is head of WFP office in Gambela responsible for providing life-saving support to South Sudanese refugees. Gambela is also an important corridor for food assistance to get into South Sudan, by air, land or river. Here she tells us her story.