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UN Geneva Press Briefing: UNICEF, OCHA, WFP, FAO, WHO, UNEP, WMO, ILO

UN Geneva press briefing chaired by Rolando Gómez, Chief, Press and External Relations Section, UN Information Service

Concluded · 1h 12m 1 language

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UN GENEVA PRESS BRIEFING

15 May 2026

Rolando Gómez, Chief of the Press and External Relations Section at the United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, chaired the hybrid briefing, which was attended by the United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator and Deputy Special Representative to the United Nations Secretary General in Somalia , and spokespersons and representatives from the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, World Food Programme, Food and Agriculture Organization, United Nations Children's Fund, World Health Organization, United Nations Environment Programme, World Meteorological Organization and the International Labour Organization.

Risk of Famine in Somalia as Humanitarian Crisis Deteriorates

George Conway, United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, and Deputy Special Representative to the United Nations Secretary General in Somalia, said updated food and security figures from Somalia had been released, and these indicated a very worrying situation. The humanitarian context in Somalia was worsening faster than originally projected. Right now, around six million people in Somalia - nearly one in three - were facing serious hunger, meaning that they were skipping meals or going days without enough food.

Following a protracted multi-seasonal drought, a new rainy season, called the "Gu", was beginning, but rains had been erratic, and conditions were deteriorating rather than improving. Food insecurity was expected to remain extremely high over the next months, with a very real risk of further deterioration if these types of shocks continued.

The situation was the result of multiple compounding shocks, the combination of which was escalating the human impacts. In addition to the cumulative impacts of increased frequency and intensity of climate shocks, ongoing conflict and insecurity across the country, and repeated disease outbreaks, Somalia was experiencing spiking food and fuel prices due to the crisis in the Middle East and a precipitous drop in humanitarian assistance, reflecting global trends. The United Nations' response for this year was currently funded at around 15 per cent.

Together, these factors were eroding people's ability to cope and recover, pushing more families into crisis, and triggering large scale displacement. Looking ahead, a strengthened El Niño phenomenon could further compound the crisis in the months ahead.

Children were paying the highest price. Nearly two million young children were acutely malnourished, meaning they were dangerously undernourished and physically weakened, placing them at high risk of illness or death. Of these, almost half a million were so severely malnourished they require urgent treatment to survive. The outlook was particularly concerning, as malnutrition levels were expected to remain very high and worsen during the current season.

There was a real and credible risk of famine in Burhakaba district in Southwest state. Conditions were already extremely severe in the district, with very high levels of hunger and child malnutrition. Analysis showed that famine could occur if conditions worsened further, particularly if the current rains failed, food prices continued to rise sharply, and humanitarian assistance did not scale up to reach those most in need. This was a critical warning: current trends suggested deterioration rather than improvement.

There was a window of opportunity to prevent the worst outcomes. With rapid and scaled-up humanitarian action now, famine could still be averted. There was a narrow but critical window of opportunity in the coming weeks to prevent famine in high-risk areas such as Burhakaba district. The analysis made clear that famine was not yet occurring but could develop if conditions deteriorated further - meaning that timely action now could still change the trajectory.

To prevent the worst-case scenario, three priorities were essential: rapid scaling-up of humanitarian assistance to reach the most vulnerable populations; stabilising access to food, including mitigating the impact of rising prices on poor households; and sustained monitoring and response capacity in hotspot areas to detect and respond quickly to further deterioration. Without these measures and funding to support them, current assistance levels would not be enough to offset worsening food gaps, rising malnutrition, and increasing mortality risks.

Ricardo Pires for the United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) said that in Somalia today, hunger was no longer only about empty stomachs. It was becoming a fight for children to survive disease, displacement and the collapse of basic services. Nearly 1.9 million people were already in "emergency" levels of hunger. That number had tripled in less than a year. Now, famine risk had emerged in southwest Somalia if humanitarian aid could not scale up and if drought and economic shocks worsened further, which was expected.

Children were carrying an enormous share of this crisis. This year, around 1.9 million children under five were expected to suffer acute malnutrition across the country. Nearly half a million children were projected to suffer severe acute malnutrition, the deadliest form. These were children at imminent risk of death if they did not receive urgent treatment.

Hunger never travelled alone. Malnutrition was colliding with disease outbreaks, including measles and cholera, while health systems weakened under enormous pressure. Measles cases doubled during the first three months of this year compared to the same period last year. At the same time, more than 630 health facilities were already at risk of closing or scaling down. In practical terms, this meant more mothers walking for hours to reach treatment that could no longer exist. It meant more children arriving too late for care. In Somalia, severe acute malnutrition was becoming a death sentence for children when clinics closed, diseases spread, and families could not reach help in time.

The crisis was also being worsened by global economic shocks. Fuel prices in Mogadishu more than doubled within days following the escalation in the Middle East crisis. The cost of transporting life-saving nutrition supplies had surged. Water trucking, nutrition treatment and health outreach operations were all becoming dramatically more expensive at the exact moment needs were rising. At the same time, 3.5 million people remained displaced across Somalia. For millions of children, displacement was becoming a permanent part of childhood.

Somalia knew famine too well. It was the result of many warnings ignored. Today, the warnings were once again clear. The world could not wait for images of dying children to appear on screens before acting. Urgent funding was needed now to keep clinics open, scale up nutrition treatment, sustain water systems and reach vulnerable families before conditions deteriorate further. The window to prevent a deeper catastrophe was still open but it was closing fast.

In response to questions, Mr. Conway said the price of fuel in Mogadishu and elsewhere in Somalia had more than doubled in the aftermath of the crisis in the Middle East. Somalia was very import-dependent, and many imports came from the Middle East. The cost of those had increased variably by around 20 per cent. The cost of trucking water had also increased with the cost of fuel. In some locations, water trucking costs had tripled over the last month. Shipping had decreased by an estimated 49 per cent since last year. The cost of basic commodities and the cost of doing business had also increased, with some reporting increases of up to 40 per cent for implementation costs on the ground.

The United Nations had estimated that 852 million United States dollars would be needed to address the 4.8 million people in need in Somalia this year. However, that number was now at six million. Somalia had not been included in the priority countries that the United States had assigned for its latest contributions to the United Nations' humanitarian activities. There were multiple crises competing for the world's attention currently, which was why the current data demonstrating the situation in Somalia was so important.

Mr. Pires said UNICEF was extremely concerned about child malnutrition in pockets of the country where health services were no longer available and supplies were not moving fast enough, which could prevent children from dying. It was also concerned that the crisis was not receiving the attention it needed. Partners and governments were not acting fast enough. The international community needed to step up quicker, or the scale of the crisis would start being measured in children's lives.

UNICEF was very concerned by the rising cost of fuel and of moving supplies. The cost of air freight had increased significantly since the Middle East crisis, which was a grave concern in the long term for Somalia, where local production and road delivery was difficult. This made the future scenario in Somalia potentially catastrophic.

Jens Laerke for the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), said that for OCHA and the United Nations, Somalia was a priority country. The second tranche of money from the United States would be channelled through OCHA-managed pooled funds.

Integrated Food Security Phase Classification Report on Sudan

Ross Smith, Director of Emergencies and Preparedness, World Food Programme (WFP), speaking from Rome, said the latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) results confirmed what was being seen every day in Sudan. Hunger was not only widespread but was deepening. Nearly 19.5 million people were now facing crisis levels of hunger, and some were already in catastrophic conditions. There were multiple areas at risk of famine in the coming months. Famine had been stalking Sudan for far too long and showed no signs of abating.

This was not a sudden shock; it was a crisis that was now in its fourth year. The crisis was driven by conflict, mass displacement and systematic erosion of people's ability to feed themselves and earn a livelihood.

Farmers had exhausted every coping mechanism they had. There had been market collapse in many parts of the country, and agricultural production had been severely disrupted in some parts. Access to food was increasingly out of reach for millions of households.

At the same time, humanitarian operations were unable to match the scale of need. Insecurity, bureaucratic impediments and attacks on supply routes were preventing aid from reaching millions of people who urgently needed it. Food assistance needed to be scaled up now, ahead of the lean season, when conditions were expected to deteriorate further.

WFP had been on the ground responding and was ready to do more. However, it could not do it alone. Funding was far below what was required and access to the most vulnerable needed to be improved. For that, the fighting needed to stop. The crisis would not improve without sustained access. It would also not be solved without a political solution, which was years overdue.

WFP was calling for a scale-up of funding to sustain and an expansion of humanitarian assistance for United Nations agencies and partners, and a renewal and a redoubling of political efforts to end this conflict. Without these, the trajectory was quite clear: more hunger, more suffering and a growing risk of famine.

Rein Paulsen, Director of the Office of Emergencies and Resilience, Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), also speaking from Rome, said the updated IPC analysis made very clear that the hunger crisis in Sudan was not just about food availability but also about the food systems that were sustaining people's lives.

Years of conflict had had a substantial, devastating impact on agriculture and rural livelihoods in affected areas. Food assets had been destroyed, farmers had been displaced from their land, markets had been disrupted or were inaccessible to people. Basic infrastructure, productive infrastructure, water systems, storage and transportation had been severely damaged in conflict-affected areas. This combination of supply chain disruptions, input shortages, reduced agricultural production and missed planting seasons in conflict affected areas had led to a sustained increase in food prices.

Lean season was rapidly approaching, so urgent action is needed. Saving lives through food assistance and nutrition support was vital. The most vulnerable people needed support to plant, to harvest, and to be able to sustain their families. This meant delivering seeds, tools, and animal health services to keep local food production alive.

Time was critical. If support did not arrive for key agricultural seasons, the consequences would extend far beyond just this year. Heavy and sustained investment in the multi-sectoral response that was underway was urgently needed. Emergency food production and livelihood support needed to be prioritised, and humanitarian access at scale in conflict affected areas was vital. Peace was a prerequisite for food security, and the right to food was a basic human right.

Read the FAO press release on the situation in Sudan here.

Lucia Elmi, United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) Director of Emergencies, speaking from New York, said Sudan continued to face one of the world's largest and most severe hunger crises, and children were at the centre of it. The latest IPC analysis that showed that two out of every five people across Sudan were now facing high levels of acute food insecurity. More than five million people were in emergency level of hunger, with nearly 135,000 people already facing catastrophic conditions.

For children, the situation was particularly alarming. UNICEF estimated that around 825,000 children under the age of five were expected to suffer from severe acute malnutrition this year - the deadliest form of malnutrition. That was a seven per cent increase compared to last year and 25 per cent higher than the pre-conflict level. Between January and March alone, more than 98,500 children were admitted to treatment for severe acute malnutrition. Those were children whose immune systems had been pushed to the brink, children who became dangerously vulnerable to diarrhoea, cholera, measles, malaria and other diseases that continue to spread across the country.

In many parts of Sudan, conflict, displacement and collapsing of services were combined into a deadly cycle for children. Around 40 per cent of health facilities were non-functional. Some 70 million people lacked access to safe drinking water, and 24 million people did not have adequate sanitation.

At the same time, families continued to be uprooted by violence. More than 8.9 million people remained displaced in Sudan. Many were trapped in the areas where humanitarian access was extremely limited or had fled to a remote location with little access to food, health care or clean water. The IPC analysis warned that 14 areas across Darfur and Kordofan remain at high risk of famine in the coming months if conflict intensified further and humanitarian access deteriorated.

We could not wait to address this crisis. Without sustained humanitarian access, increased resources and an end to violence, more children in Sudan would slip beyond the reach of life-saving assistance in the weeks and months ahead.

In response to questions on the impact of the crisis in the Middle East on Sudan, Mr. Smith said WFP's prepositioning of food ahead of the rainy season had been impacted by the rising costs of fuel and other imported commodities from the Middle East. There had been at least a 25 per cent increase in average prices in Sudan, with higher prices in remote parts. WFP was unable to preposition in some parts because of insecurity and because of lack of approvals on supply routes.

Mr. Paulsen said that getting cereal seeds on the ground was crucial. Last year, FAO had demonstrated its potential, having been able to produce more than 500 million United States dollars' worth of food, and distribute about 15 million dollars' worth of seeds in different locations. It needed to repeat these efforts this year, so funding, timing and access were crucial.

Ms. Elmi said the Middle East crisis had been having an impact on UNICEF's response in Sudan, with prices increasing, delays in deliveries, and stockpiles of therapeutic feed decreasing.

Rolando Gómez, Chief of the Press and External Relations Section at the United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva said that the United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres had been stressing the need to stop the fighting in Sudan, for unhindered access of sustainable humanitarian access, and for safe and unhindered passage for people seeking to flee.

Health Situation in Ukraine

Dr Jarno Habicht, Ukraine Representative for the World Health Organization (WHO), said that yesterday, the world had witnessed death and devastation in Ukraine, as attacks on civilian infrastructure continued. On day 1,541 of the war, it was essential to discuss health and access to care.

During the cold winter, WHO had been ensuring facilities had electricity, heating and water so health care services could be continuously provided. Over the past years, WHO had supported the health system with around 300 generators and 26 heating stations. It had installed 15 water purification stations in hospitals and supported 24 health facilities with water heaters and around 80 water storage tanks. Now, preparations were underway for the coming winter.

Simultaneously, public health and health security efforts also needed to focus on summer. Summer heat, war-related infrastructure damage and service disruptions could increase the risk of heat-related illness and seasonal outbreaks, especially waterborne, foodborne, and vector-borne diseases, in the most affected oblasts in the south and east of Ukraine.

Attacks on civilian infrastructure across the country, including health infrastructure, were continuing. There had been 3,011 attacks since 24 February 2022 - two attacks every day - causing 239 deaths and 991 injuries, with every fifth attack affecting ambulances and medical transport. The scale increased sharply in 2025, with 582 verified attacks, around 20 per cent higher than in 2024, and attacks had continued in 2026, meaning that health workers, patients, facilities, and emergency medical transport remained exposed to serious and persistent risk.

The war had a long-term impact on human capital. Two out of three people reported that their health had worsened compared to the pre-war period. In the past year, every second person reported significant deterioration of health, related to sleep disorders, headaches and migraines, and anxiety, depression and post-traumatic stress disorders. The cumulative stress and disruption of the past four years was manifesting in increased chronic diseases and burden of non-communicable diseases, where hospital admissions had progressively increased by 11 per cent for stroke and seven per cent for myocardial infarction.

The health system was constantly adapting to a volatile environment. In the past year, 68 per cent of people had visited their primary care doctor, and 85 per cent said they were satisfied with the care received. There were attacks on health, but the health system was functioning. Ukraine was introducing new vaccines, ensuring that health services were provided on the frontline.

WHO actions addressed both humanitarian health needs and contributed to health system resilience through a strategic "response-recovery-reform" approach. It had delivered 320 metric tonnes of medical supplies in 2025 through 40 WHO and 41 UN interagency convoys, ensured around 20,000 primary care consultations in hard-to-reach areas, and built 28 modular units for primary and emergency care serving 168,000 people. It was facilitating capacity building in mental health, trauma care, rehabilitation, laboratory services, immunisation, and health financing to continuously invest in health care workers and strengthen institutions and trust in the health system.

Dr Habicht thanked all partners who were staying in solidarity, supporting the humanitarian effort and development in Ukraine. Resources for health support in Ukraine needed to continue to be made available so that daily life-saving health services could continue to be provided. He also thanked all partners providing budget support, thanks to which Ukraine doctors, nurses and ambulance workers could continue to work courageously. Support also needed to have a development focus, so that future generations of Ukrainians were not left behind.

In response to a question on mental health issues in Ukraine, Dr Habicht said unity among partners was needed to support mental health services. In February 2022, WHO had estimated that 10 million people in Ukraine would need mental health support. Entering the fifth year of the war, those needs were now increasing. Some 71 per cent of people had episodes of anxiety, stress and sleepless nights. The impact of the war on mental health would be seen for generations. There were more than 150,000 health care workers trained in the past years and mental health had been integrated to all healthcare sectors. There was much work to be done in the coming years regarding mental health, and WHO would support those efforts.

Announcements

Zeina Awad for the International Labour Organization (ILO) said ILO would hold an embargoed media briefing ahead of the launch of its new Employment and Social Outlook 2026 Update, which examined how the Middle East crisis was affecting global labour markets. The report presented new estimates of the potential impact on jobs, working hours, and labour incomes under different energy price scenarios. The briefing would be conducted online by the report's author, Sangheon Lee, ILO Chief Economist, Sher Verick, ILO Acting Deputy Chief Economist, and Maurizio Bussi, Director of the ILO Action Crisis Programme, on Monday, 18 May at 09:30–10:00 a.m. Accredited journalists could request embargoed copies of the report, press materials, and access details for the briefing at [email protected].

Ms. Awad said ILO would hold the 114th session of the International Labour Conference (ILC) from 1 to 12 June 2026. Details of the full agenda were available on the ILO website. Some of the sessions of the ILC would be webcast. The Conference activities would be held at three different venues including the ILO Headquarters building, the Palais des Nations and the Geneva International Conference Centre (CICG). At the ILC, workers, employers and Government delegates from the ILO's 187 Member States would discuss a wide range of key issues shaping the world of work. The Conference agenda included the reports of the Chairperson of the Governing Body and of the Director-General, discussions on the programme and budget, and the application of international labour standards. The Conference would also address major policy themes, including a recurrent discussion on social dialogue and tripartism, a standard-setting discussion on decent work in the platform economy, and a general discussion on advancing gender equality in the world of work.

Clare Nullis for the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said the WMO was releasing on Monday, 18 May was releasing its latest report on the state of the climate in Latin America and the Caribbean. This was one of WMO's regional series of climate reports. The current report was being released in Brasilia, and embargoed materials had been distributed. The report was published in Spanish and English.

Alejandro Laguna for the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) said the UNEP and the Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction had produced the Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction for 2025 to 2026, which would be officially launched next week on Tuesday, 19 May at 8 a.m. The report assessed progress across the sector, using several key indicators covering policies, finance, technologies and investment, aligned with global efforts and global commitments towards a 2050 net-zero emissions pathway. The report highlighted how climate action in buildings could reduce energy bills, improve living conditions, and strengthen resilience to climate impacts, while cutting greenhouse gas emissions. It covered issues such as the buildings and construction sector's impact in global material extraction, emissions and energy consumption, the percentage of buildings' energy demand supplied by renewables, and the investment in energy efficiency. An embargoed media kit was available, with a press release, key messages and the report itself.

Tarik Jašarević for the World Health Organization (WHO) said that the 79th World Health Assembly (WHA) was beginning on Sunday, 17 May with the "Walk the Talk" event that would start in front of the Palais des Nations. A media advisory had been sent last evening, which addressed the topics that would be discussed by Member States, from global health system to emergencies shaping health policies but also discussing budget finance and constitutional matters. This year, the WHA's Committee B would hold plenaries at the Palais des Nations, while Committee A would be held at WHO Headquarters.

Responding to questions on the Assembly, Mr. Jašarević said that the list of participants would be posted at the last moment, as delegations were constantly changing. The WHA would feature a high-level opening, election of officers, and different committees. There would be a speech from the President of the Assembly and a speech by Dr Tedros. It was difficult to predict how long discussions would last on particular items, as this did not depend on WHO but on the discussions of Member States. The agenda for the session had been posted online. Dr Tedros would hold a press briefing today at 3 p.m., in which he would talk about the WHA, among other issues. Next week, WHO would also hold a briefing at the Palais to discuss the Assembly's activities.

Rolando Gómez, Chief of the Press and External Relations Section at the United Nations Information Service (UNIS) in Geneva, said the United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres had issued a statement on the 1.8 billion United States dollar donation from the United States for lifesaving humanitarian work. He had also issued a message concerning the release of more than 1,600 conflict-related detainees in Yemen.

The Secretary-General would this weekend be travelling to Tokyo, where he would chair the biannual session of the United Nations System Chief Executives Board for Coordination (CEB), which brought together the heads of UN system organizations. He would also be meeting with the Emperor of Japan, the Prime Minister and Minister of Foreign Affairs. Further, he would participate in a high-level symposium entitled "Celebrating 70: Japan-UN Cooperation, Expo 2025 and the Future of Multilateralism". Mr. Guterres was also expected to hold a press conference on 20 May from Japan, the transcript of which would be shared.

The Universal Periodic Review of the Human Rights Council was closing its session today. This afternoon, it would adopt 14 State reports on the reviews which took place over the last two weeks.

The Working Group on the Right to Development would hold its 27th session from 18 to 21 May 2026 in the Tempus Building. The Working Group would continue to monitor and review progress made in the promotion and implementation of the right to development, holding an interactive dialogue with the Special Rapporteur on the right to development and with the Expert Mechanism on the Right to Development.

A press conference would be held on Monday, 18 May at 2 p.m. at Palais Wilson with Ajith Sunghay, the Head of the United Nations Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory.

The United Nations Security Council was meeting in public this afternoon Geneva time on the situation in the Middle East.

Full transcript en transcript

Good morning, colleagues. Thank you for joining us here at the UN office at Geneva today, Friday the 15th of May. Another very important, another heavy agenda. We'll have the situation, the humanitarian crisis, and the situation of children in Somalia. We have colleagues joining us also to speak to a report that just came out on Sudan concerning hunger and famine and the situation in Ukraine. We have a guest with us here who is going to speak to the health situation in Ukraine, as well as a number of announcements. So without further ado, I'm going to throw immediately to Mr. George Conway, who's the UN resident and humanitarian coordinator and deputy special representative to the UN Secretary General for Somalia. He's joining us from Nairobi. So over to you, Mr. Conway. Thank you. Good morning, colleagues, and grateful for this opportunity to brief. We've just had, as mentioned, updated food insecurity figures for Somalia released, which indicate a deeply worrying situation. From this data, we have five key takeaway messages. First, the humanitarian context in Somalia is worsening faster than we originally projected and expected. And right now, around 6 million people in Somalia, nearly one in three, are facing serious hunger, meaning that they're skipping meals or going days without enough food. Following a protracted multi-seasonal drought, we are entering into a new rainy season called the Gu, but the rains have been erratic, and conditions are deteriorating rather than improving. Looking ahead, food insecurity is expected to remain extremely high over the next months, with a very real risk of further deterioration if these types of shocks continue. Second, the situation is the result of multiple compounding shocks, the combination of which is escalating the human impacts. In addition to the cumulative impacts of increased frequency and intensity of climate shocks, including drought and erratic rains, ongoing conflict and insecurity across the country, and repeated disease outbreaks, Somalia is experiencing spiking food and fuel prices due to the crisis in the Middle East, and a precipitous drop in humanitarian assistance, reflecting global trends. Our current response as it stands right now for this year is funded at approximately 15%. Together, these factors are eroding people's ability to cope, to recover, and pushing more families into crisis and triggering large-scale displacement. Looking ahead toward the rest of this year, a strengthened El Nino phenomenon could further compound this crisis over the course of the next months. Thirdly, children are paying the highest price. Nearly 2 million young children are acutely malnourished, meaning they're dangerously undernourished and physically weakened, placing them at high risk of illness or death. Of these, almost half a million are so severely malnourished that they require urgent treatment to survive. This outlook is particularly concerning, as malnutrition levels are expected to remain very high and could worsen during the current season. Fourth, we have confirmed a real incredible risk of famine in Barakaba district in southwest state of Somalia. Conditions are already severe in the district with high levels of hunger and child malnutrition, and analysis shows that famine could occur if conditions continue to worsen and if the rains continue to be erratic. Food prices are, in the current global context, continuing to rise, and humanitarian assistance is not currently at scale to reach the most in need. So this is a critical warning, as current trends suggest deterioration rather than improvement. And finally, noting the previous comment in particular about the risk of famine in Barakaba, we have a window of opportunity to prevent the worst outcomes. With rapid and scaled up humanitarian action now, famine can still be averted. There's a narrow but critical window of opportunity in the coming weeks to prevent famine in Barakaba and other high-risk districts, and the analysis makes clear that while famine is not yet occurring today, it could develop if conditions deteriorate further, meaning that timely action now could change that trajectory. To prevent the worst-case scenario, three priorities are essential. Rapidly scaling up humanitarian assistance, particularly food, nutrition, health, and water services to reach the most vulnerable. Second, stabilizing access to food, including mitigating the impact of rising prices on poor households. And third, sustained response capacity and ongoing monitoring in hotspot areas to detect and respond quickly to further deterioration. With these measures and increased funding to support them, current assistance levels will not be enough to worsen ongoing food gaps, rising malnutrition, and increasing mortality risks. Thank you very much and very happy to take any questions. Thank you very much, Mr. Conway. Focusing on the children situation, I'm going to turn to Ricardo, and then afterwards we'll take questions from all speakers. And of course, Jens is also here to respond. Ricardo. Thanks, Roland. Good morning, everyone. It will be a little bit repetitive, but I'll try and focus more on the messaging around children because, as always, they pay the highest price in any crisis, and that's no different in Somalia. In Somalia today, hunger is no longer only about empty stomachs. It's about a fight for children to survive disease, displacement, and the collapse of basic services. Almost one-third of the population will face acute food insecurity between April and June 2026. Nearly 1.9 million people are already in emergency levels of hunger. That number has tripled in less than a year. And now, famine risk has emerged in southwest Somalia if humanitarian aid cannot scale up and if drought and economic shocks worsen further, which is expected. Children are carrying an enormous share of this crisis. This year alone, around 1.9 million children under five are expected to suffer acute malnutrition across the country. Nearly half a million children are projected to suffer severe acute malnutrition, the deadliest form. These are children at imminent risk of death if they do not receive urgent treatment. And hunger never travels alone. Malnutrition is colliding with disease outbreaks, including measles and cholera, while health systems weaken under enormous pressure. Measles cases doubled during the first three months of the year compared to the same period last year. At the same time, more than 630 health facilities are already at risk of closing or scaling down. Let's just hold and pause. Let's just see if we can correct that speaker issue. Is it okay? Okay. Sorry, go ahead. In practical terms, this means more mothers walking for hours to reach treatment that no longer exists. It means more children arriving too late for care. In Somalia, severe acute malnutrition is no longer only a nutrition issue. It is becoming a death sentence for children when clinics close, disease spread, and families cannot reach help in time. The crisis is also being worsened by global economic shocks. Fuel prices in Mogadishu more than doubled within days following the escalation of the Middle East crisis. The cost of transporting life-saving nutrition supplies has surged. Water trucking, nutrition treatment, and health outreach operations are still becoming dramatically more expensive at the exact moment needs are rising. At the same time, 3.5 million people remain displaced across Somalia, many of them children. For millions of children, displacement is becoming a permanent part of childhood. Somalia knows famine too well. Famine is not a sudden event. It is the result of many warnings ignored. Today, the warnings are once again clear. The world cannot wait for images of dying children to spread and appear on screens before acting. We need urgent funding now to keep clinics open, scale up nutrition treatment, sustain water systems, and reach vulnerable families before conditions deteriorate further. That window to prevent a deeper catastrophe is still open, but it's closing fast. Thank you. Thank you for those powerful briefings, Mr. Conway. We'll take questions now from your colleagues, starting, if any, in the room. Yes, Nina, AFP. Thank you very much for the briefings. I was wondering, obviously, Ricardo, you were talking about this being a death sentence. Are we already seeing children dying, or is it something that's looming? And then what indications have you received that this is going to – that countries might take advantage of this window of opportunity? How quickly do you think it will close? And, yeah, thanks. Thanks for the question, Nina. We don't have exact numbers now, but I can check in with my country office to make sure I can provide you with that data in terms of children already dying of severe acute malnutrition. But we are extremely concerned in pockets of the country where, again, the health they require is no longer available or the health systems are strained. And, again, our supplies might not be moving fast enough due to all the disruptions that are happening in the Middle East, which so far haven't impacted heavily our operations. But we are very concerned about delays in RUTF arriving to impacted areas and also other supplies that are important to prevent children from dying from severe acute malnutrition. We are – we're also concerned about the fact that things are not moving fast enough and that we are not, again, getting the attention we need given all the crises that are happening in the world. So I don't have any indications that that window of opportunity that we have to prevent the worst is being taken and that our partners, our governments, are acting fast enough. So this is indeed a call for international community to step up quicker because otherwise we will see this crisis being measured again in children's lives. Thank you so much, colleagues. And your role thereon is invaluable. So I'll try to get the word out. So thank you so much, Ricardo, for the questions. Yeah, go ahead. We do have one online, but let's go back to you, Nina, and then we'll take a question from Nick New York Times. I guess just a quick one for both of you on the disruptions mentioned and if you have any concrete examples of sort of how that's impacting the delivery of aid, the disruptions from the Middle East war. Thank you. Thank you. Mr. Conway. Thank you, Nina, for the question. I mean, very concretely, the price of fuel in Mogadishu and elsewhere in Somalia has more than doubled in the aftermath of the crisis. Inflation and food prices, broadly speaking, Somalia is very import dependent and a lot of the imports do come from the Middle East, have increased variably about 20%. Given the drug situation and the drying up of water points, a lot of communities are reliant on water trucking. And the cost of water trucking obviously increases with the cost of fuel. So in some locations, we've seen water prices for water trucking triple over the course of the past month. The impact on Somalia has been immediate and widespread. Shipping has decreased by an estimated 49% as against last year. And that impacts on basic commodities available in the markets as well. Implementing partners and organizations are indicating as a result of all this quite a spiked cost of doing business as well, with some reporting an increase of up to 40% for their implementation costs on the ground. Thank you. Yeah, from our side, we're very concerned about the rising costs of fuel, but also of moving the supplies themselves. For example, we depend a lot, obviously, on ready-to-use therapeutic feeding to treat malnourished children. And with this projection that was just mentioned, this is critical. It's a matter of my life or death for them. And the cost of air freight has increased significantly since the Middle East crisis to a point that it is of grave concern for us looking at the mid and long term. And this is because we do have localization of RUTF production. We have a factory in Nairobi, for example, that produces a lot of the RUTF that we provide for Africa and other countries. But Somalia is a specific case whereby moving these supplies by road is not as feasible, and we depend on air freight. And obviously, with the fuel prices rising so significantly, that cost will become very complicated for us to manage looking forward. So we're really looking at a potential catastrophic scenario here, and that's why this warning is so important. Absolutely. Okay. Let's take a question from Nick, New York Times. Yeah, thank you. A bunch of questions, please. Ricardo, just to – can I just be clear? You're saying children are already dying of starvation or associated diseases from that. I wasn't clear from your answer to Anina. And a question to you or to George Conway. Could you just remind us what some of the financial numbers here – you say your 15% fund is 15% of what? We hear now, you know, the United States and Tom Fletcher saying $1.8 billion is available now to OCHER, new emergency funding. Is any of this coming to you? And if not, why not? Or is it all going – I think we're going to hear about Sudan later. But is there competition or crises here that is just squeezing Somalia out of the picture? Thank you. Thanks for that, Nick. Just to clarify, no, we don't have numbers of children dying of severe acute malnutrition yet. We do have the projection of how many are expected to suffer from it this year. But again, if we don't act immediately, those numbers will start coming. It's just a matter of time. So this window cannot be missed. And in terms of the funding, I don't have a concrete answer for you on that. Thank you. Maybe, Mr. Conway, could you address that as well as the second part of the question? Over to you. Yeah, absolutely. No, thank you for the question. The total planned requirements for this year, based on what we then knew to be the situation, which had estimated 4.8 million people in need, was a financial requirement of 852 million to mount the level of response to address prioritized populations. The number of people in need has increased. As we mentioned, the 6 million people currently in food security crisis means that that number is, you know, the needs are actually quite higher. But when we say 50% funded, that's against the annual request in the Humanitarian Needs and Response Plan that was put out at the beginning of the year. On the 1.8 billion contribution, that would have to go to Ocha Geneva for feedback and comment. My understanding is Somalia has not been included in the priority countries that have been defined in that contribution, neither in the original 2 billion contribution, nor in this additional 1.8. Whether this is due to global competition amongst crises, which of course does exist. We know there were all figures of people in need globally. It is a very challenging situation across the world with multiple crises competing for attention. But this is why this particular data input and our current highlighting of Somalia's risks and threats right now is so important. Thank you. Indeed. Thank you very much, Mr. Conway. I think we do have another question. AFP again. Sorry. I just wanted to clarify because I think you said 15% and 50%. I wasn't sure which one it was. Yeah. 15%. Sorry if my speech wasn't clear. 1.5. Yeah. 1.5. Yeah. 1.5%. Thank you very much. I think that does it for... Well, no. I think... Sorry, Nick, New York Times has a quick follow-up perhaps. Go ahead, Nick. Yeah. This is... Since Jens is on the podium, why is Somalia not an emergency country? Why is it not a priority country given the emergency that we're hearing about? Thank you. Thank you, Nick. Sorry. Thank you, Nick. For OJ and the UN, Somalia is definitely a priority country and top of the list of the crisis that we are looking at. I will refer to what was said and what was shared yesterday regarding the second tranche of money from the United States that will be channeled through the auction-managed pooled funds. Thank you. Thanks for that, Jens. Okay. I think it does it for the questions on Somalia. Mr. Conway, thank you so very much for joining us here, and please do so whenever the opportunity arises, and of course, Ricardo as well. And thank you, Jens. We will now shift to... We're staying on the continent of the African continent. We're going to move to the situation of food insecurity in Sudan. We have three briefers to speak to the release of the IPC report, which came out yesterday. We have Mr. Ross Smith of WFP, Rain Paulson of FAO, and Lucia Elmi of UNICEF joining us from Rome and New York, respectively. So, Ross, we'll start with you. I believe Mr. Smith is connected. Yes. Yes, I'm connected. Can you hear me now? Yep. Go ahead. Perfect. Go ahead. Okay, David. Thanks very much, and thanks for the opportunity to be here this morning to talk about the situation in Sudan in the recent IPC report, and I'm pleased to be here with my colleagues from UNICEF and FAO. So, the latest IPC results confirm what we are seeing on the ground every day in Sudan. Hunger is not only widespread, but it is deepening. Near 19.5 million people are now facing crisis levels of hunger and some already in catastrophic conditions. We have multiple areas at risk of famine in the coming months. Famine has been stalking famines in Sudan for far too long, and sadly, this shows no sign of abating. I will say that this is not a sudden shock. It is a crisis that's now in its fourth year. It's driven by the conflict. It's driven by mass displacement and by the systematic erosion of people's ability to feed themselves and to earn a livelihood. Famines have exhausted every coping mechanism they have. We have seen market collapse in many parts of the country, and agricultural production has been severely disrupted in some parts. Access to food is increasingly out of reach for millions of households. At the same time, humanitarian operations are simply unable to match the scale of need. Insecurity, bureaucratic impediments, and attacks on supply routes, just to name three, are preventing need from reaching millions of people who urgently need it. For us, for WFP, the priority is clear. We must scale up food assistance now, ahead of the lean season. Lean conditions are expected to carry it further. We have been on the ground responding. We continue to be, but we are ready to do more. However, we can't do it alone. We have been on the ground. Reality is stark. Funding is farther than what is required, and access to the most vulnerable must be improved. And for that, the fighting must stop. The crisis won't stabilize on its own, and it will not improve without sustained access. It will also not be solved without a political solution. And that's a solution that is years overdue. So today, we're calling for three things. The first is a new need to scale up the funding to sustain and to expand humanitarian assistance for WFP, for UNICEF, for FAO, and for our partners. Second is unhindered humanitarian access to all affected areas. And third is we need a renewed and a redoubling of the political efforts, the diplomatic efforts to end this conflict. Without these, I think the trajectory is quite clear. We're seeing it in numbers. We're seeing more hunger, more suffering, and a growing risk of famine. So thank you, and I will turn to my colleague from UNICEF, me too. Thank you very much, Ross. Maybe we'll start with Rain Paulson first, and then we'll go to Lucia. Rain from FAO, sorry. Thank you. Thank you very much. And thank you for the opportunity to brief today on the headlines of this important report from IPC that was just released. And so to complement some of the elements that Ross just shared, one of the pieces made very clear by this updated IPC analysis is that the hunger crisis in Sudan is not just about food abatability right now. It's also about the food systems that are sustaining people's lives. And when we think about the impact that the years of conflict now have had on agriculture and rural livelihoods in conflict-affected areas, the consequences are substantial and, in many cases, devastating. Productive assets have been destroyed. Farmers have been displaced from their land. Markets have been disrupted or are inaccessible to people. Basic infrastructure, productive infrastructure, water systems, storage, transportation severely damaged in these conflict-affected areas. And so this combination of supply chain disruptions, input shortages, reduced agricultural production and missed planting seasons in these conflict-affected areas have led to a sustained increase in food prices. And as Ross was mentioning, we are rapidly approaching lean season and a particularly acute point of time in the calendar. So urgent action is needed. That's clearly the call that comes through this revised analysis. Saving lives through food assistance and nutrition support is vital. We need also to help the most vulnerable people to have food by helping themselves to plant, to harvest, and to be able to sustain their families. This means, in short, delivering seeds, tools, animal health services, and support to keep local food production alive. It's a vital life-saving priority at this time. And time is critical. If we miss key agricultural seasons, the consequences we know will extend far beyond just this year. So, again, what is required now to change the direction, what we urgently need collectively, is heavy and sustained investment in the multi-sectoral response that's underway. And within that, I'd highlight the need for emergency food production and livelihood support to also be prioritized. As Ross was saying, humanitarian access at scale in conflict-affected areas is vital. And let me just close with underscoring the fact that peace is a prerequisite for food security and that the right to food is a basic human right. And thank you for the opportunity to brief today. And I look forward to questions later. Thank you so very much. Now we'll throw to Lucia Elmi, who's UNICEF's Director of Emergencies, joining us from New York. And thank you very much for this. I know it's very early in the morning for you, but important to hear your voice. So, over to you. Thank you. And good morning, everyone. And thank you for having us together with the colleagues from the FAO and WFP. We work very closely together. We will continue to do so, and particularly in this very dire situation in Sudan. Sudan now continues to face one of the worst largest and most severe hunger crises, and children are at the center of it. The latest IPC analysis shows that nearly 19.5 million people, or two out of every five people across Sudan, as my colleagues have already said, are now facing high levels of acute food insecurity. More than 5 million people are in emergency level of hunger, while nearly 135,000 people are already facing catastrophic conditions. For children, the situation is particularly alarming. UNICEF estimates that around 825,000 children under the age of five are expected to suffer from severe acute malnutrition this year. They did this form of malnutrition. That is a 7% increase compared to last year, and 25% higher than the pre-conflict level. Between January and March alone, more than 98,500 children were admitted to treatment for severe acute malnutrition. Those are children whose immune systems have been pushed to the brink. Children who became dangerously vulnerable to diarrhea, cholera, measles, malaria, and other diseases that continue to spread across the country. In many parts of Sudan, conflict, displacement, and collapsing of services are combining into a deadly cycle for children. Around 40% of health facilities are non-functional. 17 million people are lack of access to safe drinking water, while 24 million people do not have adequate sanitation. At the same time, families continue to be uprooted by violence. More than 8.9 million people remain displaced in Sudan. Many are trapped in the areas where humanitarian access is extremely limited, but where a flight to remote location will lead to access to food, healthcare, or clean water. The IPC analysis warns that 14 areas across Darfur and Kordofar remain a high risk of famine in the coming months, if conflicts intensify further and humanitarian access deteriorate. This is not a crisis we can wait. Without sustained humanitarian access, increased resources enable an end to violence. More children in Sudan will sleep beyond the reach of life-saving assistance in weeks and months ahead. Thank you. Thank you all very much. It's hard to imagine the gravity of the situation, but you've really helped paint this picture, which hopefully creates some sort of response. So we'll start off with any questions in the room, if any. Yes, we have AFP Nina Larson. Over to you. Yeah. Thank you very much for the update. I was wondering if you could say a little bit about the hunger gap that's quickly approaching and efforts to sort of stock aid for that period and how that's being impacted by the current disruptions, and how that will impact on hunger at this current moment. Thank you. Maybe, Ross, if you want to start off, and colleagues, please chime in. Okay. Thank you. Yeah, indeed. I think you're referring to the rainy season that I mentioned, but obviously we have a big gap in the overall response. Pre-positioning ahead of the rainy season has always been a major feature of the operations in Sudan. We are being impacted. The operations in Sudan are being impacted by the rising costs of fuel and other imported commodities from the Middle East. This is at least 25% increase on the average level in Sudan, and I have seen some figures from other parts of Sudan, some of the more remote parts, which are much higher than that. So, indeed, it limits, you know, it effectively reduces the amount of coverage we have. It makes the operations more expensive. And, you know, another major factor in that pre-positioning has been the lack of access to some areas. So, we're just unable to pre-position in some parts because of insecurity, but also because of lack of approvals to access certain supply routes. Okay. Thank you. Thanks to you, Ross. Colleagues, if anyone wants to jump in, just maybe put your hand up. Yeah, go ahead, Rain. I think, did you want to add something? Yes, go ahead. Please, just quickly. I think this issue of time sensitivity and windows of opportunity is really key and comes through clearly in the analysis that was released by the IPC. And as Ross was referring to rainy season, I mean, if you think in terms of what people need to be able to plant to produce for themselves, these rains that vary a little bit by parts of the country. But in this period, end of June, July, August, this is the key period for getting cereal seeds in the ground, sorghum and millet, the key staples. And we know what can be done because last year FAO alone was able to produce more than 500 million U.S. dollars worth of food with about 15 million dollars worth of seeds and inputs in a number of different locations. But that was still only allowing the production of about 22 percent of the sorghum production that was produced nationally last year. And, of course, the overall numbers are down a little bit. So the points around funding, timing and access are absolutely indispensable, whether we're talking about emergency agriculture or other sectors. And I think that's one of the things that I hope readers and those that are following this take with them for action. Thank you very much. Ms. Elmi, I think you wanted to add in. Yes. As also was said for Somalia and also my previous colleagues, the impact of the Middle East crisis is also showing up in Sudan, particularly for the stockpiling of ready-to-use therapeutic feeding. So we're already seeing delays, the increase of prices, very similar situation of Somalia. So this is also, unfortunately, we continue to have an impact as well on our response in Sudan. It's funding, but it's access, as Ossureen was saying, but it's really the impact of the overall crisis and the delays that we're already starting to see linked also to price increases. Absolutely. Thank you very much, all three of you. Let's see if there are any further questions before we move on to the next subject. I don't see that's the case. You mentioned about, I think it was you, Ossureen, who talked about the fighting to stop this. Precisely what the Secretary General has been saying since day one, cessation of hostilities, unhindered access of sustainable, sustained humanitarian access, safe unhindered passage for people also seeking to flee. So these are other very important messages in addition to yours, which you shared with us. So thank you very much on this important announcement today. And thanks for your amazing work. Ricardo, thanks for joining me here. We now will shift to the situation in Ukraine. And if I could call our guest to join me here on the podium, who I believe, Yono, you've been here before. I think so. Yes. I think also online, if I'm not mistaken. So Yono Habikt is a Ukraine representative for the World Health Organization. And Tarek is also joining us on the podium. He's going to speak to the health situation in Ukraine. And thank you very much again for joining us. Thank you. Thank you. And thank you and great pleasure to talk to you in person as there are delegations coming to forthcoming World Health Assembly. At the same time in Ukraine, we witnessed yesterday the death and devastation as there were a number of attacks to the civilian infrastructure, which has continued since the 24th of February 2022 and the Russian Federation invasion. But in addition, I'd like to bring to your attention the attack against the UN convoy, as the UN convoy delivering essential support to people in Kherson was attacked yesterday twice, where the OECA and UN DSS mission was on the ground. And there is more information. But what it means is that humanitarians are not safe as well as many Ukrainians across Ukraine. And we need to continue this essential work. But as the war continues at the day of 1541, I'd like to bring more the topic of health and public health to you, and few aspects, and particularly concentrate on six of them. First, seasonality and health. We are out of the cold winter, where it has been essential to ensure that the hospitals and primary care centers have power, heating, water, to ensure that there is a continuity of essential services. And over the past years, WHO has been supporting facilities and hospitals with more than 300 generators and 26 heating stations to have the heat in the hospitals. We have also installed a number of water purification centers and water tanks that the services can be provided. But now, when I have been traveling across Ukraine, being in Mykolaiv, Odessa, also in Kharkiv and Sumy, now everybody is getting ready to prepare for the next winter as the war goes on. So the seasonality is extremely important. But for public health, it's not only about winter. For us, as a public health specialist, equally important is the summer. Because due to the summer heat, war-related infrastructure damages, as well as service disruptions, we need to ensure that we are ready for the heat-related illnesses, outbreaks, and particularly water-borne, food-borne, and vector-borne outbreaks, as these will affect mostly the people living in the south and east part of Ukraine. Second, attacks on health. The attacks on civilian infrastructure and the impact across the whole country has been there for years long. But just last week, we passed 3,000 attacks on health's mark. It means two attacks per every day. And this is putting in risk having access to care. We have lost a number of health care workers. And since 24th of February 2022, this has caused 239 deaths and 991 injuries, where every fifth attack is against ambulances and medical transport. So those who are going to save others are actually putting their lives in risk every day. We have seen intensified attacks on health since 2024. As we enter to the 26th, this has continued. The third I'd like to bring to you is health of people. The war has devastating effect to health of people. Now, if we compare to the time before the war, two out of three people will say that their health has worsened through this war and during over four years in the past. Every second person in the past year has said that their health has deteriorated related to the sleep disorders, having headaches and migraines, anxiety, depression, and PTSD. The cumulative stress and also the past four years disruption in the health system has manifested also in increase of chronic diseases. And why I'm talking about that is extremely important aspects of human capital, because these are the people who are at the same time living in Ukraine and also there to contribute to the development. We have seen in hospital admissions 11% increase of strokes and 7% increase in mycardial infarctions. And we notice that health situation is commonly worse among those who are looking shelter, those who are the internally displaced, who have been pushed out from their homes. And these are millions of people within Ukraine, more than 3 million, and we see that their health situation is worse. Fourth, I wanted to mention the adaptation, because the health system in Ukraine is working, but it is adapting to this very volatile and very violent environment which is there around. When we have surveyed a population, we see that 68% of people have visited their primary care. And it's very similar to our own countries in the West and other parts of the world, where there are no wars. And 85% of people say that they are satisfied with the quality of services they are getting. So we need to put these two sides together. There are attacks on health, but the health system is functioning. But healthcare workers are under constant risk. So in that environment, also Ukraine is introducing new vaccines, ensuring that the services are provided, and ensuring that also services are provided in the frontline. So a few words as a fifth on WHO's actions. There are a lot that we have been doing, as well as many partners, and I'd like to thank everybody who has been very busy in the last years. As WHO, we have delivered 320 metric tons of medical supplies to the hard-to-reach areas. These are done together with the UN convoys, 41 convoys last year. And as I started, I mentioned these convoys have been attacked as of yesterday, as well the WHO, WFP, and UN convoy was attacked also in October last year. But we need to continue to do that. And WHO has been also working on our own convoys to ensure that the medicines are available for those living in the frontline. Primary care has been provided to 20,000 people, and we are building back. And that's why WHO has invested to 28 modular primary care and emergency care units that have been built to provide services to 168,000 people. And this is important to have a trust to the system. Of course, the capacities need to be built on mental health, trauma care, rehabilitation, because we have 168,000 medical devices, assistive devices distributed for rehabilitation. Without war, these 168,000 assistive technologies would not have been needed. So this is the scale of the devastation and the disruption. Finally, I'd like to thank all the partners who are staying with solidarity, with energy, and with a focus in that new environment where we are living globally to support also the humanitarian and the development support. However, the humanitarian partners in health, we have more than 100 partners under health cluster. They have available, as of today, only every third dollar that they planned to reach 1.3 million in Ukraine. So we need to continue to ensure that the resources are there as the attacks continue and people need care. At the same time, I'd like to thank all the partners who are providing budget support. Because of this budget support, actually, Ukrainian doctors, nurses, those who are in the ambulances have continued to work. And I'd like to thank those who are providing resources, but also those who have courage to do every day the work they do. And finally, I'd like to mention, with a hope, that there is a recovery and reconstruction going on that builds the trust, and that allows us to continuously invest that actually the services are available. And why that is important is that means that we have the courage to work on humanitarian response, recovery, but keeping the development focus also for the future, because we don't want to leave behind those who are living currently in Ukraine and those next generations to live in Ukraine. So thank you. Thanks to you. It was excellent and incredibly important brief. Thank you very much, Yano. Let's see if there are any questions. I'm looking to you in the room. Yes, Nina, AFP. Thank you. Thank you for coming. It's nice to see you. So I was just wondering, could you say a little bit more about the mental health concerns, because you're talking about these constant attacks and the health system that's continuing to function, but it must be under an incredible strain. So how are you dealing with, I guess, especially among health workers? Thank you. Thank you. So mental health has been a priority for many partners and also for the government. And particularly Ukraine has launched its own all-Ukrainian mental health program under the leadership of First Lady Olena Zelenska. And we as partners have been behind that. So first, what is important, what I have seen, the unity among the partners, both national, internationals, to work on mental health altogether. And that's important because we need to support many. Now, the needs have been growing, because in the beginning, if you remember our first briefs in February, March 2022, we said that we estimate that 10 million people would need support on mental health. Now, as the war goes on, on the fifth year, these needs have been increasing, those who need support. But also our latest data shows that 71% of people have episodes of anxiety, stress, sleepless nights. So when we look to the mental health, we see the impact now. We know that there will be impact for generations to come. So from mental health, the focus, from my personal perspective, we have work to do until end of the century. And now, how we have addressed that is, there are more than 150,000 healthcare workers trained in the past years, in the WHO tools called MHCAP and others, which has allowed the primary care doctors and many specialists in the hospitals to provide services to people. Are we reaching to all people? No. We know that not everybody who has mental health needs reaches out to the doctors, to the caregivers. And that's why also mental health support has been integrated to all the sectors. So it's not only the work of the health sector, but equally across many. But there is a lot of work to be done in the mental health for the coming years, and we are there to support that area. Thank you very much. Further questions? Online or in the room? I don't see that's the case. I think you were very, very clear and comprehensive in your brief. So thank you again to come back and join us again for this update. Thank you. And good to be in person. Yeah, absolutely. Nice to see you. Okay, colleagues. Maybe Zena, do you want to come up? We have a few announcements. We'll start off with Zena, the ILO, and then we have an announcement as well from UNEP and WMO. But I'll turn immediately to Zena, who's going to talk about the International Labour Conference starting next month. Yeah, please. Thank you. Good morning. Yeah. Good morning, colleagues. Thank you very much. I've got two announcements to share with you today. The first one is to let you know, if you're not aware already, that on Monday we will be releasing the new Employment and Social Outlook 2026 update, which will be looking at the impact of the Middle East crisis on labour markets. The report is available under embargo. We've received a couple of requests and we'll be sharing the embargoed copy with you quite soon. On Monday, we're holding an embargoed briefing at 9.30 a.m. Geneva local time, which is until 10 o'clock in the morning. And 10 o'clock is when the embargo will be lifted on both the content of the online press briefing as well as the actual report. The briefing will be led by our ILO chief economist, Sang-yeon Lee, along with Cher Veric, his deputy, and Maurizio Buzio, who's the director of our Action Crisis Program. And you can expect to see new estimates on potential impact on jobs, working hours, labour incomes, under different energy price scenarios, depending on how long the current crisis continues. Do reach out to us, newsroom at ilo.org, and we will make sure to share with you the embargoed copy as soon as it's ready. And if you'd like to attend the online Zoom briefing, also do reach out to us, and we will make sure that you have all the information that you need. I'd also like to... It's not an announcement. It's a reminder-slash-reannouncement about our upcoming International Labour Conference. It's the 114th session of the ILC, and it will be held from the 1st until the 12th of June. This is our annual conference where workers, employers, and government delegates from our 187 member states come together to discuss some of the most important issues in the world of work. They will be looking at the report of our Director General and of our Chairperson. They'll be looking at programming and budget and application of international labour standards. Now, there are a number of important policy themes, discussions that will be taking place, including one on social dialogue and tripartism. We'll have a second standard-setting discussion on decent work in the platform economy and a general discussion on gender equality and the world of work. The full agenda is available on our ILO website. The website is being updated slowly but surely with relevant documents and information, and you can also find the accreditation information as it relates to you on the website as well. And as always, my team and myself are available if you'd like to reach us via email. Thank you very much. Thanks to you, Saina. Do we have questions? Yes. Sorry. Accreditation information. So we won't have access with our UN badges? You will have access to your UN badges, yeah. But there'll be information about... I forgot to mention one important thing is that this year it's taking place on three different sites. So it's taking place here at the Palais. It's also taking place at the ILO, as well as the... Sorry, give me a minute. The CICG, which is the Geneva International Conference Centre. So it would be good to just take a look and reach out if you've got any questions about any of the sites. It's an unusual setup this year, but yeah. The badges will be good for all three locations? They should be in principle, but do get in touch because we're still ironing out the back and forth to the CICG. Will things be available? Can we follow online or is it only in person? It depends. Some sessions will be streamed online and others will not be streamed online, in which case it would have to be in person. Okay. No problem. Thank you very much. Did you have another question? Do you have some information about the road office? Yeah, that's what I was looking at. Tarek as rudely turning the other way towards my colleague in the front row. But we do have a few other announcements. Maybe if there are no further announcements for Saina, I'm going to release her. And then maybe before we go to you, Tarek, let me just quickly throw to Alejandro and Claire, who have been waiting patiently. Thank you very much, Saina. So Alejandro, maybe we'll start with you. Thank you. Alejandro? Alejandro? Alejandro? Okay. You're... We can't hear you. We can see you. We just can't hear you. Yeah, I think we have an issue. Is he unmuted? Yes? No? No. Okay. Tell you what, we'll go back to you. Maybe we'll go to Claire quickly and then we'll come back to you. Maybe just log out and then come back in. Claire Nullis of the World Meteorological Organization, announcement from you. Claire. Okay, right. Can you see and hear me? Yes, we can. Okay. Thank you. I'll be very quick. Just to say that the World Meteorological Organization on Monday, the 18th of May, is releasing its report on the state of the climate in Latin America and the Caribbean. It's one of our regional series of climate reports. We issued the one for Europe a couple of weeks ago. So this is the one for Latin America and the Caribbean. It's being released in Brasilia. I'm not sure that there's actually going to be a press conference because we're not responsible for the launch arrangements. But if you do need interviews with any of the principal authors, just please let me know and I can facilitate it. And you should have received the embargoed materials this morning in your inboxes. We're still awaiting the press release in Spanish. The full report is already available in Spanish. But all the material is also in English. So that's all I have to say. Thanks very much. Okay. Thank you very much, Claire. Any questions for Claire? I think that was very clear. So thank you very much for joining us and for your patience. Okay. We're going to try again with Alejandro to see if that's working your link. Otherwise, I'll go to Tarek for an update on the WHA. Alejandro? I think it should work now. Okay. You hear me? Yes, we can. Back to you. Thank you very much. Thank you. Good morning. I'm here to speak to you about a report by the UN Environment Programme, UNEP, and the Global Alliance for Buildings and Construction. It's the 10th edition of the Global Status Report for Buildings and Construction from 2025 to 2026. And it's going to be officially launched next week on Tuesday, the 19th of May at 8 a.m. Geneva time. It assesses progress across the sector, the buildings and construction sector, using several key indicators covering policies, finance, technologies, and investment aligned with global efforts, global commitments towards a 2050 net zero emissions pathway. It is very timely because it is published in the middle of a global housing and energy affordability crisis. And it stresses how climate action in buildings can reduce energy bills, improve living conditions, and strengthen resilience to climate impacts while cutting greenhouse gas emissions. Now, there's a series of very interesting figures and percentages that I can't share now because it is under embargo. But I will at least give you a sense of what to expect to find in the report. How much are we building? Or rather, how much more are we building? What is the environmental footprint of the building sector? What percentage of global material extraction does the building and construction sector account for? What about global emissions and global energy consumption? How are buildings becoming more energy efficient? And at what rate? What are buildings' operation emissions like? What percentage of buildings' energy demand is supplied by renewables at this moment? And what has the trend been? And are green building certifications increasing? There's also a series of examples in many different countries across the world, positive examples related to operational emissions, emissions released before and during construction, growth in renewables, national climate action plans, covering building sector strategies, etc. I'm going to stop there. As I mentioned, it's going to be launched on the 19th. We do have a set of materials, including a press release, key messages, and the report itself that can be shared with you under embargo. Thank you very much and have a good rest of the day. Thanks to you, Alejandro. Do we have questions for Alejandro? Well, no, I think it was very, very clear. So thanks for your intervention and, again, for your patience. So we'll go now to Tarek for the WHA. Kicking off Monday? Yeah. All right. Well, on Sunday morning, we will have a walk to talk just here in front of the UN as we had previous years. I hope you all received the media advisory we have sent last evening that has all the practical information that all reporters have to know. Also, that spells out a little bit areas that will be discussed by member states from global health system to emergencies, shaping health policies, but also discussing budget finance and constitutional matters of WHO. So we will, this year, exceptionally have assembly at both at Palais and at WHO. So here at Palais we will have a plenary in Committee B, while Committee A will be in the auditorium in WHO. So there will be shuttle services that reporters may use. So for Palais journalists, your badge will be activated on the first day when you come to WHO. So you can use your badge at WHO and it will be activated for the duration of the assembly, so until 23rd. We have, as always, a number of reporters who are accredited specifically for the World Health Assembly. They are not here today, they are not listening, but we have, again, a group of journalists who we will be following specifically. For them, the system is a little bit different, but they have been informed about that. So we, at WHO, we have, as you know, our media team is much smaller this year than previous years, but we will do our best to help you with whatever you may need. At the plenary, there will be dedicated press space. Usually you would have it, it was on the right side when you look from the stage. This year it will be on the left side. And at WHO, there will be a press area near new press room that you can come and use. So that's it. Otherwise, as always, there will be daily journals. We will issue notes on what has happened, what has been adopted. And again, we will be there for you. Thank you very much. And we'll be there for you as well, the support, of course. Thank you very much for that announcement. Okay, maybe, Nina, we're going to go to somebody else first, if that's okay. Go ahead, Dina. And then back to you. Dina, over to you. Thank you. Thank you, Tarek. And sorry, Nina. My question is about the accreditation. During our last meeting with Dr. Tedros, he promised to give us accreditation until the end of 2026. And I sent an email from Akanu email and a follow-up without receiving any reply from your side. I would like to follow up here today about this. And when will we receive our, or maybe activate our badges, UN badges, also at the WHO building? Thank you, Tarek. Thank you very much. We are aware of your request. Now, again, this is a decision that will be first with our security services. So we are checking with our security services, and we will follow their advice. For the time being, so badges that are issued by UNOG can be activated very easily, as you know. It really takes a few seconds just to come to the reception, and your badge gets activated for the duration that is needed. So this time around, it will be for the duration of the assembly. But we are aware of your request. But again, this is something that has to be approved by our security. Thank you. Madam Morrison? Thank you. Yeah, I have a few questions on the program for next week. Thank you. Thank you. The list of participants will be posted. It's usually at the last moment. So we have to see with our colleagues from governing bodies when they will have that list posted. And it's changing. You know, the delegations announced, but then there are always changes. So on the first day, as you have seen in a media advisory, so we will have a high-level welcome, opening of the assembly, election of the officers, different committees. There will be addresses from the president. And then there will be speech by Dr. Tedros, as always. What time? I have to check, really. I have to check, really. But what we are planning to do every year is that we will have an email list with all the Palais reporters, plus those who are specifically accredited for the assembly. And we send you things as we get to know. So then we say, hey, look, we expect the Dr. Tedros speech at this particular time. Or we expect the discussion at this particular point at that time. It's really moving. But just stay with us. You know that we can't really predict how long discussions will go on certain items. And then it can be that items are moved either forward, but more usually they are moved to the later stage. But, again, we will do our best. So journals are a good thing to look in the morning. It gives you, really, the orientation of what's going to happen that day. And then you just call us, and then we will try to get. Again, it really doesn't – a lot of these things do not depend on WHO. It depends on the discussions of member states. So it's not us deciding that the item will start at 11 o'clock. Sorry, but just on some of the specific issues. Generally, you have some kind of idea when maybe resolutions might be discussed or when there's a specific day for – Yes. Look at the agenda. The agenda is posted. So it's not – daily journal is something that is a little bit more precise. But agenda is already there, so you can look at it. I don't have it here in front of me. Okay. I think – all right. Thanks. I'm sure there will be a lot more information to come. There is another question for you. Don't move. Just said – Isabel, Efe. Good morning. Thank you, Tariq. We all know that you and the WHO press team do a lot of – does a lot of – or do a lot of efforts to keep us informed. You may – as Nina said, what is important for us, especially, you know, for agencies, but because we cannot catch – I mean, we need to follow at the moment what is happening. And as you said, everything can move at the last minute. So you may also, apart from awareness by email, you can use also maybe the Akanu contact through the Akanu secretariat to inform us about – you know, we have an Akanu group. And this is very useful because it's something that we see very rapidly. So you may do this also at the same time that you send the emails. I don't know if you find that this is a good idea, but the question is to be really, at the last minute, to be able to connect to the assembly if it's necessary. Thank you. No, no, thanks, Isabella. The thing for us is that, you know, usually we send – we have a platform that we send all our press releases. It's through Campaign Monitor. Now, with assembly, it's a little bit different because we have all those people who are here just for the assembly. So we want to inform you and them at the same time. And that's why this email system worked pretty well previous years. So you receive email directly from my email address or from Christian's email address saying, hey, this is happening or this is what we have to tell you. And I hope it will work this time as well because we have really, truly, there is only three of us in a team now. And we have two venues. So we have to discuss, like, you know, one person will have to stay probably at Palais. Another person will have to be at WHO. So we will see how we can do it. Yeah. It's not easy. We understand and appreciate the efforts for this important meeting. And, sir, we'll be hearing from you regularly. So thanks, Tarek. I don't think – oh, is that a follow-up, Isabelle? Yes, yes, yes, just very quickly. I wonder if you may have any idea if you want to organize some press briefing or technical press briefings, you know, like you did a few years ago for any important issue or not. We cannot expect that. Well, that reminds me. I didn't mention – I didn't remind you that we have a press briefing today. So Dr. Tedros is having press briefing today at 3 o'clock. And he will obviously talk about upcoming assembly as well, among other issues. So that's one. Next week, well, we have Palais briefings so that we can come and speak. We will see. It's really on the – during the assembly, we really have to be flexible and see what's – as situation develops, as resolutions are being adopted or there are issues being discussed, then we are flexible and to organize. But again, we have a press area. We have a stakeout area. We can – if you have a particular topic, we can find WHO experts for you to speak when it comes to delegates. As always, you know, you approach delegates and try to get information from them and their point of view. Noted. Yep. Go ahead. Sorry. I just wanted to back up, Isabel, on the fact that we miss those briefings that you used to have, which were daily briefings during the World Health Assembly where we actually got some information about what had happened during the day and what to expect the next day because your program is very – or the agenda is very difficult to read and to understand when things are going to happen. So I just – I know that you guys are understaffed, but it would be very helpful. Noted. Okay. Thank you, Tarek. Good luck. You can count on us for support as well. I know it's a very big event for you as well, journalists, so thanks for your reporting thereon. Okay. Just a few announcements. As usual, the Secretary General's statements – we'll start off with a couple that were shared with you yesterday. One speaks to the donation from the United States of $1.8 billion for life-saving humanitarian work. This was following an announcement yesterday by the U.S., so the SGE responded to that. There was a message as well from the Secretary General concerning the release of more than 1,600 conflict-related detainees in Yemen, so a very welcome development, which we have a statement on. A couple of meetings taking place here. We have the Universal Periodic Review of the Human Rights Council closing its session today. This afternoon, we'll adopt 14 state reports on the reviews which took place over the last two weeks, so that's this afternoon. We also have another update I received from Pascal concerning another Human Rights Council-related meeting taking place starting on Monday, the 18th, 18, 19, 2021, so the next four days, next week, the Working Group on the Right to Development's 27th session taking place in the Tempest Building. And this is an important gathering of the Working Group will continue to monitor and review progress made in the promotion and implementation on the right to development. It will also hold an interactive discussion with the Special Rapporteur on the right to development, as well as the expert mechanism on the same subject, the right to development. So that's taking place to consult Pascal if you have any questions. Just to mention that the Security Council on the other side of the pond is meeting this afternoon, our time, on the situation in the Middle East in a public meeting. Press conferences, we did announce it once, I'll announce it again. Press conference at Paley Wilson, down by the lake, a very important gathering with the head of the UN Human Rights Office in the Occupied Palestinian Territory press conference, 2 p.m. on this coming Monday, the 18th, with Ajit Sunge, who is the head of that office, who you know well. I have an announcement from the Secretary General's travel plans. The Secretary General this weekend will be traveling to Tokyo, where he will chair the biannual session of the UN System Chief Executive Board for Coordination, otherwise known as the CEB, which brings together heads of UN agencies, head of UN systems organizations. So the SG will also be meeting with the Emperor of Japan. I don't have the specific time, as well as the Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign Affairs, will share with you, as we always do, readouts of those meetings. Mr. Guterres will also participate in a high-level symposium entitled Celebrating 70 Japan-UN Cooperation Expo 2025 in the Future of Multilateralism. Lastly, in terms of Secretary General's plans, he is planning, expected to hold a press conference on the 20th of May. That's Wednesday. And, of course, this will be in Japan, so we'll share with you the transcript, as we always do. That's all I have. So, any questions? No? Thank you very much. Have a nice afternoon. See you here on Tuesday. Thanks. Bye.

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