Additional $482.05M to UNHC for Refugees
State Department Contributes an Additional $482.05 Million to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
Media Note
Office of the
Spokesperson
Washington, DC
April 12,
2012
________________________________________
The United States is pleased to announce a second contribution of $482.05 million toward the 2012 operations of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). The United States’ initial contribution of $125 million was announced on December 29, 2011 along with subsequent funding of $28.2 million toward emergency appeals this fiscal year for vulnerable populations from Syria, Sudan, South Sudan, and Mali. These contributions are funded through the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration, and help advance UNHCR initiatives worldwide.
Programmatically, U.S. funding will support refugee returns to countries such as Afghanistan and the Democratic Republic of Congo; local integration and resettlement; and protection and life-saving assistance. U.S. funding also supports the provision of water, shelter, food, healthcare, and education to refugees, internally displaced persons, and other persons under UNHCR’s care and protection in countries such as Iraq, Yemen, Nepal, Pakistan, Georgia, South Sudan, Chad, and Kenya.
Geographically, the contribution will support
UNHCR’s Annual and Supplementary Program activities listed
below:
Africa $ 218,425, 000
Asia and
Pacific $ 61,800, 000
Europe $ 22,000,000
Middle East
and North Africa $ 110,625,000
Syria Regional Response
Plan $ 3,000,000
Western
Hemisphere $ 15,525,000
Emergency Response
activities $ 25,775,000
Global
Operations $ 13,200,000
Headquarters $ 11,700,000
TOTAL $ 482,050,000
In 2011, the United States
contributed more than $690 million to UNHCR through multiple
tranches, a figure which included funding for on-going
operations as well as special appeals for emergencies. We
continue to salute the vital work of UNHCR, its many NGO
partners, and refugee-hosting countries in providing
protection to displaced populations around the
world.
ENDS