Press Release

Media Update: United Nations Pakistan, 8 June 2024

10 June 2024

This Media Update includes: 

  • UNITED NATIONS SECRETARY-GENERAL MESSAGE
  • WFP PRESS RELEASE Japan’s contribution enhances food security, nutrition and builds resilience in Pakistan through WFP support

THE SECRETARY-GENERAL

MESSAGE ON THE OCCASION OF UN WORLD OCEANS DAY 2024

8 June 2024

The ocean sustains and enhances all life on Earth.

But our ocean is in trouble. And we only have ourselves to blame.

Climate change is triggering rising seas and threatening the very existence of small island developing states and coastal populations.

Record sea temperatures are sparking extreme weather events that affect us all.

Ocean acidification is destroying coral reefs, breaking a vital link in food chains and threatening tourism and local economies.

And unsustainable coastal development, overfishing, deep-sea mining, unchecked pollution and plastic waste are wreaking havoc on marine ecosystems across the globe.

Yet there are glimmers of hope.

Last year, the UN General Assembly adopted the historic Agreement under the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea on the Conservation and Sustainable Use of Marine Biological Diversity of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction — the most significant new treaty on ocean governance in decades. 

The process underway to develop a legally binding treaty to end plastic pollution provides another opportunity to advance our shared goal of protecting our ocean.

The recent opinion by the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea is another breakthrough, calling on nations to take measures to reduce, control and prevent marine pollution caused by greenhouse gas emissions.

This year’s Summit of the Future and next year’s UN Oceans Conference in France are further opportunities to commit to action that can restore and protect our precious marine and coastal ecosystems.

Now is the time for governments, businesses, investors, scientists and communities to come together in defense of our ocean

On World Oceans Day, let’s heed this year’s theme, and awaken new depths of action for our ocean.

***

 

WFP

PRESS RELEASE

Japan’s contribution enhances food security, nutrition and builds resilience in Pakistan through WFP support

Islamabad– The United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) acknowledges the Government of Japan’s generous contributions under three projects that provided emergency assistance for the stabilization of food-insecure people in the flood-affected areas of Pakistan, implemented in Sindh, Balochistan, Punjab and Khyber Pakhtunkhwa.

WFP organised a Project Completion ceremony to recognize the vital contributions of USD 7.2 million (USD 3.7 million, USD 2.5 million and USD 1 million) from the Government of Japan to address the critical needs of 246,000 people affected by the unprecedented 2022 floods in Pakistan. The USD 2.5 million enabled WFP to provide emergency food assistance to flood-affected communities, ensuring their immediate food security and nutrition needs in 2022, while the USD 3.7 million and USD 1 million contributions helped WFP to deliver nutritionally balanced food every month to those actively involved in community rehabilitation, livelihood and resilience building initiatives and identified through district-level consultations in 2023. The USD 3.7 million grant also supported conditional cash assistance during the early recovery phase. Furthermore, tailored capacity-building activities were implemented to enhance local skills in disaster risk reduction, climate-smart agriculture, food production and storage, and other marketable skills.

The ceremony took place at the WFP Country office in Islamabad in the presence of Ms. Coco Ushiyama, WFP Country Director in Pakistan, H.E. Wada Mitsuhiro, Ambassador of Japan to Pakistan, along with senior Japan Embassy and National Disaster Management Authority officials.

Speaking at the occasion, H.E. Mr Wada, Ambassador of Japan to Pakistan, appreciated WFP’s Pakistan work and reaffirmed Japan’s commitment by noting “Food security and nutrition are among the priorities for Japanese Official Development Assistance, and we consider them to be the fundamental requirements for achieving sustainable development.”

“We greatly appreciate the unwavering support provided by the Government of Japan, which enabled us to address food insecurity and rebuild livelihoods in flood-affected areas at a critical time”, said Ms. Coco Ushiyama, Country Director of WFP Pakistan.

In 2023, Pakistan continued to grapple with the compounding impact of the devastating 2022 floods that affected more than one-third of the country. WFP played a pivotal role in supporting nearly 4.4 million people following the flood crisis through a variety of complementary interventions to address both critical and immediate humanitarian needs through unconditional cash support to approximately 1.7 million people in 2023 and longer-term needs to build resilience, enhance livelihoods opportunities, and address malnutrition.

Overall, with generous and timely support from donors and partners including this USD 7.2 million from Japan, WFP successfully mobilized over USD 150 million for its emergency flood response by December 2023.  

The United Nations World Food Programme is the world’s largest humanitarian organization saving lives in emergencies and using food assistance to build a pathway to peace, stability and prosperity for people recovering from conflict, disasters and the impact of climate change.

Follow us on X, formerly Twitter, via @WFPPakistan.

For more information please contact (email address: firstname.lastname@wfp.org):

Henriette Bjorge WFP/Islamabad + 92 301 2533988

Anam Abbas WFP/Islamabad, +92 311 5821307

UN entities involved in this initiative

UN
United Nations
WFP
World Food Programme

Goals we are supporting through this initiative