World Humanitarian Summit opened in Turkey

World Today

First world humanitarian summitFirst world humanitarian summit aims at improving response to crisis is held on Monday at Istanbul, Turkey.

An ambitious summit to revamp humanitarian aid and global responses to modern-day crises opened on Monday in Turkey. 

The World Humanitarian Summit focused on rendering financial aid more efficiently, mobilizing more funds to those in greatest need, and closing the $15-billion  funding gap – three goals laid out under a United Nations-backed initiative dubbed the “Grand Bargain”.

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon delivers a speech at the opening ceremony of the World Humanitarian Summit, in Istanbul, Monday, May 23, 2016. (Pool Photo via AP)

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon delivers a speech at the opening ceremony of the World Humanitarian Summit, in Istanbul, Monday, May 23, 2016. (Pool Photo via AP)

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urging governments, aid groups, private sector and other stakeholders to act to improve the global humanitarian system. He called on the participants to align themselves with the five core responsibilities, such as preventing and ending conflicts and respecting the rules of war.

He put a particular emphasis on the issue of displaced populations, calling on the world to significantly reduce the number of the displaced in the years to come.

“I urge you to commit to cutting half (the number of ) internally displaced people by 2030 and to find better long-term solutions for refugees and displaced people based on more equal sharing of responsibilities,” he said.

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, right, talks through an interpreter to Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, prior to a roundtable meeting on "Political Leadership to Prevent and End Conflicts" at the World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, Monday, May 23, 2016. (Salih Zeki Fazlioglu/Pool Photo via AP)

United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon, right, talks through an interpreter to Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, left, prior to a roundtable meeting on “Political Leadership to Prevent and End Conflicts” at the World Humanitarian Summit in Istanbul, Monday, May 23, 2016. (Salih Zeki Fazlioglu/Pool Photo via AP)


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While addressing the opening ceremony, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan cited the heavy burden on Turkey in tackling the Syrian refugee crisis and stressed the need to revamp the global humanitarian system.

“The current system fails to meet the demands in the face of emergency problems and fails to develop solutions. Only certain countries take the responsibility. From now on everyone should share the burden. We have to adopt a new system that would put the human beings at the center,” he said. Attending the summit are some 5,200 participants, including 65 heads of state and government and representatives from crises-affected communities, NGOs, the private sector and U.N. agencies, according to figures released by the United Nations. Of the 192 U.N. member states, 177 are represented at the summit.

The event, which was proposed by Ban Ki-moon in January 2012, is a culmination of a four-year-long preparatory process, including an extensive global consultation with 23,000 stakeholders in 153 countries to identify the key humanitarian challenges facing the world.The main topic for the summit is the Agenda for Humanity formulated by Ban, which focuses on five core commitments — preventing and ending conflicts, respecting the rules of war, reaching out the vulnerable, complementing humanitarian actions with development efforts, and ensuring sufficient funding for humanitarian responses.

Speaking to reporters Sunday in Istanbul, Stephen O’Brien, U.N. under-secretary-general for humanitarian affairs and emergency relief coordinator, described the summit as “a once in a generation opportunity to set in motion an ambitious and far-reaching agenda to change the way that we alleviate, and most importantly prevent, the suffering of the world’s most vulnerable people.”The United Nations estimates that more than 130 million people are currently in need of assistance and protection across the world. Due to an increase of conflicts in the past two decades and various natural disasters taking place in the period, the need for humanitarian funding is unprecedented, with UN-led appeals having grown six-fold from $3.4 billion in 2003 to nearly $21 billion in 2015.

Story from Xinhua.