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Sudan 2014 Strategic Response Plan Revision Presented by OCHA on behalf of Humanitarian Partners

Sudan 2014 Strategic Response Plan Revision Presented by OCHA on behalf of Humanitarian Partners. Summary. Greatly increased needs (IDPs, refugees and malnutrition) Improved efficiency in the plan (reduced duplication etc )

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Sudan 2014 Strategic Response Plan Revision Presented by OCHA on behalf of Humanitarian Partners

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  1. Sudan 2014 Strategic Response Plan Revision Presented by OCHA on behalf of Humanitarian Partners

  2. Summary • Greatly increased needs (IDPs, refugees and malnutrition) • Improved efficiency in the plan (reduced duplication etc) • Improved targeting (larger percentage in saving lives and much reduced proportion of out of strategic boundary projects) • Improved transparency in the plan

  3. Increased vulnerability • Alarminglevels of malnutrition • Increasednumber of IDPs in Darfur • Arrival of South Sudanrefugees

  4. More People in Need

  5. Breakdown of People in Need 6,898,829

  6. Multiple Crises Across Country • North Darfur, South Darfur, South Kordofan, Central Darfur remain top four states with highest numbers of people in need • Approximately 900,000 people in non-Government held areas whose needs cannot be assess and are NOT included in these estimates (no access)

  7. More Focused Strategy • Significant effort to better target most vulnerable • Reallocated resources to life saving objectives • Decrease in projectstargeting non-prioritylocalities • Small reduction in overallrequirementsdespite an overallincrease of people in need

  8. Key data

  9. Further work required • Preparedness STAIT mission advised HCT to include contingency plan. However, not all partners can appeal for funding for new projects that are not part of the centrally approved budget. Only WASH, FSL and Education requirements for contingency plans are currently included.

  10. Malnutrition • “Non-IDP severely food insecure” has been replaced by “non-IDP under 5 GAM” • GAM = Global Acute Malnutrition (SAM + MAM) • Severe Acute Malnutrition – SAM (below 70% weight for height) • Moderate Acute Malnutrition – MAM (between 70% and 80% weight for height) • 2.1 million people = estimated “burden” based upon prevalence plus incidence from 2013 S3M survey • GAM prevalence appears to stagnate in most places and deteriorating in some. GAM levels for children under-five in parts of Sudan stand at 28.2% (state level) and as high as 42% (locality level). Internationally accepted emergency “critical” threshold = 15%.

  11. Strategic monitoring • No progress in completing strategic indicator baselines and targets achieved in 2014 so far • Strategic mission-critical data needs to be more systematically collected (e.g. Crude Mortality Rate)

  12. Next steps • Humanitarian space: agree on simple monitoring mechanism and advocacy strategy. • Correct significant imbalances in sector funding. • Reinforce capacity to undertake strategic monitoring and demonstrate impact of funding and of underfunding. • Learn lessons for 2015 HNO and SRP – seek donor feedback and input

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