$500 million appeal for Iraq to be launched: UNICEF

$500 million appeal for Iraq to be launched: UNICEF

PARIS - Agence France-Presse
$500 million appeal for Iraq to be launched: UNICEF

Displaced children push a cart with humanitarian aid that they received from UNICEF at a camp set up for people from Ramadi and the area in al-Shurta neighborhood of west Baghdad, Iraq, Thursday, April 30, 2015. AP Photo

Humanitarian organisations are preparing to launch a fundraising appeal for $500 million (454 million euros) for the crisis created by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in Iraq, UNICEF, the United Nations children's agency said on June 1. 

The announcement came a day ahead of a meeting in Paris of the US-led coalition of countries working to defeat the jihadist group in Iraq and Syria.
 
"The humanitarian situation in Irak [Iraq] is close to disaster! We urgently need extra resources in order to continue assistance," Philippe Heffinck, UNICEF's representative in Iraq, said in a statement in French.
 
According to the UN agency, eight million Iraqis are in urgent need of humanitarian aid, in particular the roughly three million people who have been forced to flee their homes since the start of the ISIL offensive in June 2014.
 
Access, however, has been hampered by the fighting and a lack of funding is now even threatening such humanitarian assistance as has been possible, UNICEF said.
 
As a result, all those organisations currently active in Iraq would be in Brussels on June 4 launch "a fundraising appeal for nearly $500 million to cover relief operations over the next six months", the agency added.
 
The US-led coalition of some 60 nations was formed last year after ISIL went on a rampage across Iraq and Syria, seizing key territory upon which it declared a caliphate.
 
Ministers from Turkey, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates are expected to be among 24 participants attending the anti-ISIL coalition meeting in Paris.
 
The main focus of the meeting will be the situation in Iraq, where ISIL seized the city of Ramadi two weeks ago in the biggest blow to the coalition since it began bombarding jihadist positions in August.