U.N. Announces Start of Fuel Delivery to Vital Institutions in Lebanon

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The U.N. Deputy Special Coordinator for Lebanon and Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Najat Rochdi, has announced the start of the delivery of fuel to critical healthcare and water institutions across Lebanon to ensure continuous provision of services to the most vulnerable populations affected by the energy and fuel crisis.

The severe electricity and fuel shortages which have been affecting Lebanon over the past weeks are impeding the provision of essential services, including health care and water, and have resulted in “tremendous additional hardship across all populations,” Rochdi’s office said in a statement.

The fuel shortage has also posed additional operational challenges to the humanitarian community assisting the country’s most vulnerable populations.

“In order to mitigate additional suffering and preventing loss of lives, I have asked the World Food Program (WFP) in Lebanon, as the global humanitarian lead on logistics, to develop an emergency fuel-supply plan to maintain critical health, water and sanitation services for the most vulnerable populations and prevent the discontinuation of lifesaving activities implemented by humanitarian actors,” Rochdi said.

The three-month plan, developed in collaboration with UNICEF, WHO and the NGOs working on health and WASH issues, will provide fuel to all public hospitals, primary health care centres and dispensaries servicing the most vulnerable communities in the different regions in Lebanon and relied upon by an estimated 2.1 million annually. It will also provide fuel to four water establishments to secure continuous water supply to about 2.3 million people across the country.

“The implementation of this emergency fuel supply plan will not impact existing national fuel reserves, nor will the program interrupt future national fuel deliveries,” Rodchi clarified. “All fuel will be purchased at a non-subsidized rate and add to the existing national fuel stocks,” she stressed.

“This is an exceptional emergency support for a maximum duration of three months. The responsibility to ensure uninterrupted provision of basic services remains with the Government of Lebanon,” the statement said.

“I call on the government to save no effort to implement, at the earliest possible, sustainable solutions to the on-going energy crisis and to protect the rights of families in Lebanon to access essential services,” Rochdi said.

Her office added that “this exceptional intervention is part of the broader U.N. coordinated Emergency Response Plan launched in early August with a financial ask of US$383 million, to provide critical life-saving humanitarian assistance to most vulnerable Lebanese and migrants affected by the ongoing crises.”

“It complements and supports humanitarian assistance provided through UNRWA programs as well as the Lebanon Crisis Response Plan for Syrian refugees and their host communities,” it said.

SourceNaharnet
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