Just one-third of UNICEF’s US$50 million appeal received, with increased funding vital to ensure long-term assistance for children
BEIRUT, 11 November 2020 – Children and families affected by the explosions that tore through Beirut 100 days ago remain in need of crucial support as they rebuild their lives, UNICEF warned today as part of the report “Rising from Destruction. 100 days of UNICEF’s response to the Beirut explosions and the road ahead for children and families”.
Key to that support is providing children and families affected with psychosocial support to allow them to process trauma experienced during and after the explosions. UNICEF has reached more than 33,000 people through a range of interventions, including 7,200 children, parents and primary caregivers through child-friendly spaces in affected areas and peer-to-peer sessions.
“Providing children and parents with psycho-social support is a vital step in helping people rebuild their shattered lives,” said UNICEF Lebanon Representative Yukie Mokuo. “While the immediate scars are starting to heal, thanks to extraordinary efforts on the ground, the deep wounds – both visible and invisible– of children and families in a country experiencing multiple emergencies will require sustained solidarity, commitment and support.”
The sheer number of children, parents, and caregivers who remain in need of support, however, means that increased funding for key programmes, including child protection, is urgently required.
12-year old Hussein* is one child who has received this kind of support. “I stopped using colour on my drawings that show my life because everything changed on that day. After the explosion, my world has no colour. The explosion made all the colours in my life disappear. Everything changed,” said Hussein, who lives in the Karantina neighbourhood, one of the worst affected. Ten weeks on, and after sustained support, the life of Hussein and children like him is slowly returning to a semblance of normality. “The colour is back in my life again,” he says.
In the past 100 days, UNICEF and partners have:
- Provided more than 7,200 children, parents and primary caregivers with mental health and psychosocial support services through child-friendly spaces established in affected areas and peer to peer sessions;
- Established an emergency cash transfer programme that will support up to 80,000 vulnerable children and individuals over the coming month.
- Provided over 22,000 children under 5 with essential nutrition supplements including Vitamin A, high energy biscuits and emergency food rations;
- Re-established water supply connection in 1,060 buildings, reaching 20,765 people in 4,080 households;
- Installed 4,882 water tanks, including 111 in three heavily affected hospitals in Karantina, Wardiya and Geitaoui;
- Distributed critical humanitarian supplies and COVID-19 protection and hygiene items worth US$3.7 million to partners, with around 80 per cent of the supplies procured locally, supporting the Lebanese economy.
- Committed with partners to support the rehabilitation of 7 schools and provision of furniture and equipment for nearly 90 schools.
- Engaged more than 1,800 young people in a community-based response focusing on cleaning, minor rehabilitation of households, and preparation and distribution of meals for vulnerable families.
- Provided 7,500 girls and women sanitary pads or mini hygiene kits, including COVID-19 prevention items and information on sexual and gender-based violence referral pathway;
“UNICEF’s response over the past 100 days has been lifesaving, swift and essential,” said Mokuo. “Yet we cannot rest, and our work continues. Rebuilding Beirut and lifting the spirit of the people of Lebanon is a long-term commitment. UNICEF and partners have supported thousands of children and families affected by the blast, but the needs remain acute We thank our donors – individuals, governments, businesses – from the bottom of our hearts. Their efforts and commitment help us stand with Lebanon’s children, youths and families.”
UNICEF has received 33 per cent of the US$50 million required in responding to the needs of children and families. Reaching more children, young people and families will require sustained support. An increase in funding would allow UNICEF to become even more effective in addressing some of the escalating child protection challenges across the country, including supporting more families who cannot afford the cost of essential services, contributing towards the rebuilding of more schools, improve household water systems in affected areas, and provide training and employment opportunities to more youths working in the reconstruction of their city.
About UNICEF
UNICEF works in some of the world’s toughest places, to reach the world’s most disadvantaged children. Across more than 190 countries and territories, we work for every child, everywhere, to build a better world for everyone.
For more information about UNICEF and our work for children, visit www.unicef.org/
ANNEX. “The colour is back in my life again” – Hussein’s Story
Beirut’s August 4 port explosion touched the life of every one of the city’s residents. For many, in particular children, the impact has been profound. While some lost family members, others saw their parents severely injured. Even where such devasting events were somehow avoided, the sound of the blast and its devastating effects on their homes and neighbourhoods – – were impossible to escape. In the immediate aftermath of the explosions, UNICEF put into action an integrated emergency response plan to ensure the health and safety of thousands of affected families and their children.
For 12-year-old Hussein, a resident of Karantina – a Beirut suburb close to the port and home to many of the city’s most vulnerable families – this tragedy changed his life dramatically.
We first met Hussein in mid-August within the confines of the UNICEF-supported safe space in Karantina’s municipal park. An outwardly typical fun-loving boy who’s keen on drawing and an athletic footballer, it was only when he showed us his latest artworks that the change within this young boy became apparent.
The set of drawings he held so tightly highlighted a life divided. His pictures set before August 4 are bright, happy, and full of colour. All those reflecting images of his life since that evening are dark, gloomy, and monochromatic. Some represent the moment of the explosion’s impact on his home, his family, his life.
“I stopped using colour on my drawings that show my life because everything changed on that day”, Hussein explains. “after the explosion, my world has no colour. The explosion made all the colours in my life disappear. Everything changed”.
Ten weeks later, and we meet Hussein again. As energetic as before, although less on edge, he’s happy to report to us that he’s visited the park every day since he last saw us. Throughout that time, he’s spent many hours with members of a highly trained UNICEF-funded psychosocial support team. Ask Hussein though, and he’s been coming here only to meet his friends and to play.
In truth, and through play, he and his friends have started to heal their psychological wounds. Hussein is happy to talk about his life today. The biggest sign that he is making progress is in the pictures he’s brought to show us.
In August, Karantina’s municipal park was crowded with children in silence and no smiles on their faces. Today, 100 days after the explosions, there is joy, noise, and hope. “The colour is back in my life again”, professes a smiling Hussein.