GPC Operations Cell: gpc[at]unhcr.org
Gender-Based Violence: chase[at]unfpa.org
Child Protection: rpouwels[at]unicef.org
Housing, Land and Property: jim.robinson[at]nrc.no
Mine Action: unmasgeneva[at]un.org
Conflicts, combined with climate shocks, political crises and rising food and energy prices, will make 2023 a year of vast humanitarian needs. Violence continues to grow with no signs of deceleration across several countries where Protection Clusters are active.
This Global Protection Update, covering the first quarter of 2023, provides a country-by-country news update, explores emerging protection trends and tracks the risks faced by vulnerable populations in crises.
According to the Global Protection Cluster’s Global Protection Risks Tracker, in the first quarter of 2023, 13 Protection Cluster operations (50%) reported a combined severity of 15 protection risks as high or very high.
The population in the majority of the territory of Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, DR Congo, Mali, Mozambique, Myanmar, Niger, South Sudan, oPt, Syria and Ukraine is extensively exposed to simultaneous sources of harm directly related to human actions.
Similarly, in these countries the population faces serious barriers in accessing protection services.
This Update also places a thematic focus on protection during elections. Around the world, internally displaced persons face several obstacles in exercising their right to public and political participation, including a lack of information and documentation, insecurity hampering return of IDPs to their areas of origin, legal and administrative issues.
Protection Clusters and partners are working together, across sectors and with governments and authorities, identifying protection risks related to the public and political participation of IDPs, elaborating guidance and recommendations aimed at supporting IDP participation, and revising strategic advocacy approaches. The Global Protection Update provides examples from Nigeria, Somalia and DR Congo aimed at highlighting the challenges faced by IDPs in participating in elections, and the measures undertaken by Protection Clusters to support their enfranchisement and prospects for durable solutions.