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    Summary of country programme

    UN Women in Bangladesh supports the government to implement commitments to international normative standards on gender equality and women’s human rights. The UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (UNSDCF) for 2022-2026 and the corresponding UN Women Bangladesh Strategic Note (2022-2026) define UN Women’s strategic engagement in Bangladesh. The country strategy focuses on strengthening the national structures and mechanisms for gender mainstreaming in policies, plans, and budgets; supporting efforts to prevent and eliminate violence against women; promoting women’s access to decent and safe work; promoting policies and government investment in women’s empowerment and resilience building in the context of climate change, humanitarian crisis as well as other threats to peace and security. UN Women works with a range of stakeholders in Bangladesh including the government, civil society, women’s organisations, youth, UN system, and development partners, to promote gender equality and women’s empowerment.

    Planned Budget (Total) Other resources (non-core)
    Country Indexes

    UN Women in action: Strategic insights and achievements

    View annual report narratives for the year

    Advancing SDGs: UN Women's impact and key achievements

    Sexual harassment remains widespread in Bangladesh � with 84 per cent of women in general and 76 per cent female students reporting sexual harassment in workplaces/public spaces and in higher educational institutions respectively. Recognizing the criticality of a robust legislative framework in ending violence against women, women�s rights advocates have long called for a dedicated law on sexual harassment � a demand bolstered significantly by the 2019 High Court Directive. As a result of this sustained advocacy, the Government of Bangladesh reinitiated the drafting of the �Sexual Harassment Prevention and Protection� bill in workplaces and educational institutions in 2024. In line with international normative standards (CEDAW General Recommendation 35 and ILO Convention 190) the draft bill defines harassment, outlines the reporting steps, and includes penalties for perpetrators. Substantive engagement by civil society and women�s rights organizations ensured a strong normative framing of the bill, which was facilitated by UN Women as a member of the Legislative Task Team for UNSDCF Strategic Priority 5. In addition to direct technical support to the Ministry of Women and Children Affairs (MoWCA), UN Women coordinated consultations with legal experts from women�s organizations � ensuring a collaborative and inclusive process. By December, MoWCA began the legislative review process at the interministerial level. This was also one of the �immediate demands� from women�s groups engaged in the intergenerational and intersectional feminist movement-building initiative facilitated by UN Women partners�Bangladesh Mahila Parishad (BMP) and Bonhishikha. Through divisional dialogues with 116 CSOs, a Charter of Demands (CoD) was crafted, outlining priority areas to advance gender equality commitments including the urgent need for a comprehensive sexual harassment law. Initially drafted before the 2024 national elections, the CoD was updated post the civil unrest, to reflect emerging issues for advocacy and was submitted to the Women�s Affairs Reform Commission formed by the Interim Government. The government�s actions, bolstered by the efforts of civil society, demonstrated that collaborative, evidence-based advocacy is key. The continued alignment of policy and grassroots action will be vital to sustaining progress and ensuring a violence-free future for all women and girls, thereby contributing to the Sustainable Development Goals. Once the law is enacted, UN Women will continue to support the government and other stakeholders to ensure its effective implementation. This will include engagement with apex bodies to intensify efforts to institutionalise the prevention of violence against women. Lessons from recent evaluation informed the design of a 4.8 million Euro, comprehensive multi-year gender-based violence prevention programme, funded by the European Union (EU) � a first for UN Women in Bangladesh.

    Advancing SDGs: UN Women's impact and key achievements

    In 2023, Bangladesh adopted the updated Climate Change and Gender Action Plan (CCGAP), first developed in 2013. As the world�s seventh most climate-vulnerable country (2021, IPCC), the CCGAP underscores the unique challenges of women in coping with climate change due to limited access to information, resources, finances, and technologies. To address these issues, the updated CCGAP includes, for the first time, a dedicated priority on women�s leadership, in addition to five other areas: natural resources, livelihoods, infrastructure, gender-responsive implementations; and capacity-building, knowledge management and communication. Aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Declaration, the CCGAP seeks to accelerate the implementation of the National Adaptation Plan 2023-2050, enabling the operationalization of gender-responsive climate action. Since 2021, UN Women has worked with the Bangladesh Climate Change Trust, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, the Centre for Climate Change and Resilience, the Bangladesh Centre for Advance Studies, and the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), under the leadership of the Ministry of Environment, Forests and Climate Change (MoEFCC) to support the participatory development of the CCGAP. The consultations were complemented by a comprehensive situational analysis, with technical and financial support from UN Women. The voices of national and grassroots women-led organizations (WLOs) were centre-staged, through extensive consultations across eight divisions of Bangladesh, which highlighted locally-led adaptation as a key component of climate change action. UN Women has been developing capacity of a cohort of grassroots WLOs on gender responsive climate actions under the Regional EmPower Programme implemented jointly with UNEP. This led to some of these WLOs to design and implement low-cost and low-tech community-based adaptation initiatives, such as solar-powered irrigation pumps. Building on lessons learnt, including the Phase I evaluation, UN Women is supporting the network of 56 WLOs, empowering them as critical actors leading local adaptation solutions. Examples of the catalytic initiatives were showcased at COP28, during a joint event hosted by MoEFCC, with high-level representation from the Government, including Mr. Saber Hossain Chowdhury, Member of Parliament and Special Envoy of the Prime Minister on Climate Change and Dr. Farhina Ahmed, Secretary MoEFCC. The event demonstrated the potential of locally-led adaptation to address structural inequalities faced by women and other vulnerable groups, by shifting power to local stakeholders without expecting them to shoulder the burden of adaptation investments. UN Women will continue to promote WLOs� leadership in climate action, in response to the urgent call from women leaders to amplify their voice, "Women need to be at the table where decisions are being made about their lives" said Shampa Goswami, a WLO leader from Satkhira.

    Results and resources

    Impact: All women and girls in Cameroon will fully enjoy and exercise their human rights, in a gender equal society, and meaningfully contribute to the country's sustainable and inclusive socio-economic development and EU integration

    Impact

    All women and girls in Cameroon will fully enjoy and exercise their human rights, in a gender equal society, and meaningfully contribute to the country's sustainable and inclusive socio-economic development and EU integrations

    Outcomes (aligned with interagency frameworks)
    BGD_D_1.1

    By 2026, more people in Bangladesh, particularly the most vulnerable and marginalized from all gender and social groups and those from lagging districts benefit from sustainable livelihood and decent work opportunities resulting from responsible, inclusive, sustainable, green, and equitable economic development

    BGD_D_1.1.1

    The government, at both the national and sub-national levels, has enhanced capacities to draft laws, policies and practices promoting inclusive and resilient women’s economic empowerment, gender-responsive green growth and decent work (including addressing unpaid care and domestic work and supporting informal sector workers), with support from UN Women

    BGD_D_1.1.2

    Women workers, employees and entrepreneurs, in particular migrant workers, internally displaced women, WWDs and indigenous women, have enhanced knowledge, capacities and agency to demand and benefit from gender-responsive public and private services and skills for green jobs and decent work opportunities at home and abroad, and to influence related policies, regulations and practices (i.e. the national social protection system, renewable energy and low carbon technology).

    BGD_D_1.1.3

    Women-led or women-oriented enterprises cottage, micro, small and medium enterprises, with an enhanced capacity to implement gender-responsive and green business policies, practices and services

    BGD_D_1.2

    By 2026, ecosystems are healthier, and all people, in particular the most vulnerable and marginalized in both rural and urban settings, benefit from and contribute to, in a gender responsive manner, a cleaner environment, an enriched natural resource base, low carbon development, and are more resilient to climate change, shocks and disasters

    BGD_D_1.2.3

    Multi-stakeholder, inter-sectoral and multi-level coordination groups, platforms, networks, and forums are supported and/or strengthened to effectively coordinate and oversee gender-responsive DRR and humanitarian actions

    BGD_D_1.2.1

    Women, in particular the most vulnerable to climate change, natural disasters and environmental hazards, have the required knowledge and skills to lead and influence climate action, and have increased access to the relevant resources (i.e. resilient infrastructure and basic services, information, finance, capacity and technology) needed to adapt to and mitigate the effects of climate change and related disasters

    BGD_D_1.2.2

    National and local-level government institutions, CSOs and private sector actors are capacitated and supported with the necessary skills, knowledge and evidence to address GEWE and promote women’s leadership in DDR, CCA and resilience building

    BGD_D_1.2.2

    National and local-level government institutions, CSOs and private sector actors are capacitated and supported with the necessary skills, knowledge and evidence to address GEWE and promote women’s leadership in DRR, CCA and resilience building

    BGD_D_1.3

    By 2026, more people, especially the most vulnerable, benefit from more equitable, non-discriminatory, gender-responsive, participatory, accountable governance and justice, in a peaceful and tolerant society governed by the rule of law.

    BGD_D_1.3.1

    Government institutions have strengthened capacities to promote and implement CEDAW general recommendations, concluding observations 2016 and the WPS agenda (including the NAP on UNSCR 1325) to realize gender equality, non-discrimination and the empowerment of women and promote peace and social cohesion

    BGD_D_1.3.2

    Women’s groups and youth groups have strengthened skills and knowledge to promote positive social norms in support of women’s human rights and to build resilient, cohesive and peaceful societies

    BGD_D_1.4

    By 2026, women, girls and gender diverse people benefit from an environment in which they are empowered to exercise their rights, agency and decision-making power over all aspects of their lives and are free from all forms of discrimination, violence and harmful norms and practices

    BGD_D_1.4.1

    Government institutions have strengthened capacities to mainstream GEWE into public policies, laws, plans, financing strategies, institutional frameworks and data collection processes, in line with global GE standards, including for VAW prevention and reduction

    BGD_D_1.4.2

    Selected public sector service providers (law enforcement and judiciary) and civil society service providers have strengthened capacities to deliver high-quality and comprehensive gender-responsive and survivor-centred VAW services in line with international standards, with UN Women’s support.

    BGD_D_1.4.2

    Law enforcement and policing services at national and local level have strengthened capacities to support survivours of violence perpetrated in the workplace, and public spaces.

    BGD_D_1.4.3

    Civil society, especially WLOs and youth networks, have strengthened capacities, budgets and access to platforms that facilitate their engagement with government actors and enable them to influence policies promoting GEWE and eliminating VAW.

    BGD_D_1.4.4

    The government, public and private Institutions and CSOs have strengthened capacities to adapt and/or implement evidence-driven strategies and to promote knowledge generation, coordination, advocacy and partnerships to advance social norms that prevent VAW

    BGD_D_1.4.4

    The government and public institutions (such as Bangladesh Roads and Transport Authorities (BRTA) and the MoWCA ) have strengthened capacities to implement evidence driven SGBV prevention initiatives at workplace and public spaces, including public transports.

    BGD_D_1.4.5

    The Bangladesh UNCT has increased access to technical assistance, capacity building support, and resources (incl. data/tools/guidance) to facilitate the full implementation of agreed-upon actions of the UNCT SWAP-GE Comprehensive Assessment, and enhance system-wide accountability and inter-agency coordination on GEWE through UN Women’s support

    BGD_D_1.4.5

    The Bangladesh UNCT has increased access to technical assistance, capacity building support, and resources (incl. data/tools/guidance) to facilitate the full implementation of Gender Equality Acceleration Plan, agreed-upon actions of the UNCT SWAP-GE Comprehensive Assessment, and enhance system-wide accountability and inter-agency coordination on GEWE through UN Women’s support.

    BGD_D_1.4.6

    Government institutions at the national and local level (DCOs, UNOs, upazilas and union parishads) have strengthened capacities to review, reform and enact gender responsive laws and policies and apply gender responsive budgeting to address GBV at the workplace, and public space.

    BGD_D_1.4.7

    University Grant Commission (UGC) and the tertiary educational institutions have strengthened capacities to adapt, implement and monitor the whole-of-school approach to prevent SGBV and encourage attitudes, behaviour and norm change.

    BGD_D_1.4.8

    Civil society organisations, especially WLOs, OPDs and youth networks have strengthened capacities to gain access to platforms that facilitate their engagement with government actors and advocate initiatives to address SGBV in public space, workplace and tertiary educational institutions.

    BGD_D_1.5

    By 2026 more women and girls are empowered by gender responsive enabling environment, to exercise their agency and decision-making with improved access to protection, education, and socio-economic opportunities.

    BGD_D_1.5.1

    Women and girls from both the Rohingya community and host community have increased capacities to participate meaningfully in decision making and access multi-sectorial services, protection, education, and socio-economic opportunities

    BGD_D_1.5.1

    More Rohingya and host community women have access to diversified livelihood opportunities and are empowered with increased social and economic security.

    BGD_D_1.5.2

    Rohingya and host community women and WLOs have enhanced advocacy and leadership capacities to promote GEWE, GBV prevention and response, and social cohesion

    BGD_D_1.5.2

    More Rohingya and host community women and local women-led organizations and networks exercise their leadership to advance social cohesion and gender-responsive service delivery and governance in the Rohingya camps and in Cox's Bazar.

    BGD_D_1.5.3

    Humanitarian actors’ (including WLOs) coordination mechanisms, leadership and gender-responsive programming capacities in Cox’s Bazar are enhanced

    BGD_D_1.5.3

    Increased accountability of humanitarian actors, including government officials in Cox's Bazar to coordinate and deliver gender-responsive services, with the participation of women leaders and women-led organizations.

    Organizational effectiveness and efficiency
    BGD_O_1

    With its unique and inclusive culture, UN Women is an employer of choice with a diverse and highly performing cadre of personnel that embodies UN values

    BGD_O_2

    UN-Women efficiently and effectively discharges of all business processes that advance integrated delivery of its normative, operational and coordination mandate at HQ, Regional and Country level, including through shared services

    BGD_O_3

    OEE Output 2.5

    BGD_O_4

    OEE Output 4

    BGD_O_5

    OEE Output 3

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    Budget
    Expenses
    Outcome Result statement IATI identifier
    OutcomeBGD_D_1.1
    Outcome result statementAdvancing business transformation
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_D_1.1
    OutcomeBGD_D_1.2
    Outcome result statementNurturing an empowered workforce and advancing an inclusive UN-Women culture
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_D_1.2
    OutcomeBGD_D_1.3
    Outcome result statementEffective normative, programmatic and coordination products, services and processes
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_D_1.3
    OutcomeBGD_D_1.4
    Outcome result statementUN-Women is an accountable and trustworthy development organization that manages its financial and other resources with integrity and in line with its programmatic ambitions and fiducia
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_D_1.4
    OutcomeBGD_D_1.5
    Outcome result statementUN-Women strategically plans for and transforms its business model to deliver impact at scale, through agile and ethical leadership rooted in a continuous improvement culture
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_D_1.5
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    Budget
    Expenses
    Outcome Result statement IATI identifier
    OutcomeBGD_O_1
    Outcome result statementWith its unique and inclusive culture, UN Women is an employer of choice with a diverse and highly performing cadre of personnel that embodies UN values
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_O_1
    OutcomeBGD_O_2
    Outcome result statementUN-Women efficiently and effectively discharges of all business processes that advance integrated delivery of its normative, operational and coordination mandate at HQ, Regional and Country level, including through shared services
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_O_2
    OutcomeBGD_O_3
    Outcome result statementOEE Output 2.5
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_O_3
    OutcomeBGD_O_4
    Outcome result statementOEE Output 4
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_O_4
    OutcomeBGD_O_5
    Outcome result statementOEE Output 3
    IATI identifierXM-DAC-41146-BGD_O_5
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    Resources allocated towards SDGs

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    Our funding partners contributions

    Regular resources (core)

    Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.

    $723.67 K in total
    Other resources (non-core)
    $14.03 M in total
    Regular resources (core)

    Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.

    $723.67 K in total
    2023 2022
    United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women) $361,837
    2023
    United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women)
    Total contribution:$361,837
    Development:$361,837(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $361,837
    2022
    United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women)
    Total contribution:$361,837
    Development:$361,837(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    2023
    United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women)$361,837
    Total contribution$361,837
    Development$361,837(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    2022
    United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women (UN Women)$361,837
    Total contribution$361,837
    Development$361,837(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Other resources (non-core)

    Lorem Ipsum is simply dummy text of the printing and typesetting industry.

    $14.03 M in total
    2023 2022
    Australia $351,165
    2023
    AustraliaOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$351,165
    Development:$351,165(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $351,165
    2022
    AustraliaOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$351,165
    Development:$351,165(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Australian National Committee $99,410
    2023
    Australian National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$99,410
    Development:$99,410(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $99,410
    2022
    Australian National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$99,410
    Development:$99,410(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation $29,630
    2023
    Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationFoundation
    Total contribution:$29,630
    Development:$29,630(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $29,630
    2022
    Bill & Melinda Gates FoundationFoundation
    Total contribution:$29,630
    Development:$29,630(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Canada $1,167,404
    2023
    CanadaOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$1,167,404
    Development:$1,167,404(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $1,167,404
    2022
    CanadaOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$1,167,404
    Development:$1,167,404(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Fast Retailing Co. Ltd. $26,699
    2023
    Fast Retailing Co. Ltd.Private sector
    Total contribution:$26,699
    Development:$26,699(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $26,699
    2022
    Fast Retailing Co. Ltd.Private sector
    Total contribution:$26,699
    Development:$26,699(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Germany National Committee $17,365
    2023
    Germany National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$17,365
    Development:$17,365(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $17,365
    2022
    Germany National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$17,365
    Development:$17,365(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Iceland National Committee $3,510
    2023
    Iceland National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$3,510
    Development:$3,510(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $3,510
    2022
    Iceland National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$3,510
    Development:$3,510(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    International Organization for Migration (IOM) $205,477
    2023
    International Organization for Migration (IOM)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$205,477
    Development:$205,477(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $205,477
    2022
    International Organization for Migration (IOM)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$205,477
    Development:$205,477(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Japan $70,625
    2023
    JapanOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$70,625
    Development:$70,625(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $70,625
    2022
    JapanOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$70,625
    Development:$70,625(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Japan National Committee $23,383
    2023
    Japan National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$23,383
    Development:$23,383(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $23,383
    2022
    Japan National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$23,383
    Development:$23,383(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Miscellaneous Donors $10,700
    2023
    Miscellaneous DonorsPrivate sector
    Total contribution:$10,700
    Development:$10,700(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $10,700
    2022
    Miscellaneous DonorsPrivate sector
    Total contribution:$10,700
    Development:$10,700(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Singapore National Committee $6,399
    2023
    Singapore National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$6,399
    Development:$6,399(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $6,399
    2022
    Singapore National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$6,399
    Development:$6,399(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Sweden $2,385,628
    2023
    SwedenOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$2,385,628
    Development:$2,385,628(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $2,385,628
    2022
    SwedenOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$2,385,628
    Development:$2,385,628(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Sweden National Committee $7,649
    2023
    Sweden National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$7,649
    Development:$7,649(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $7,649
    2022
    Sweden National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$7,649
    Development:$7,649(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    Switzerland $368,637
    2023
    SwitzerlandOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$368,637
    Development:$368,637(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $368,637
    2022
    SwitzerlandOECD-DAC donor
    Total contribution:$368,637
    Development:$368,637(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) $14,815
    2023
    United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$14,815
    Development:$14,815(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $14,815
    2022
    United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$14,815
    Development:$14,815(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) $89,489
    2023
    United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$89,489
    Development:$89,489(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $89,489
    2022
    United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$89,489
    Development:$89,489(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund Office $620,940
    2023
    United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund OfficeUnited Nations pooled fund
    Total contribution:$620,940
    Development:$620,940(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $620,940
    2022
    United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund OfficeUnited Nations pooled fund
    Total contribution:$620,940
    Development:$620,940(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS) $417,628
    2023
    United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$417,628
    Development:$417,628(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $417,628
    2022
    United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)United Nations organization
    Total contribution:$417,628
    Development:$417,628(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA) $799,527
    2023
    United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA)United Nations pooled fund
    Total contribution:$799,527
    Development:$799,527(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $799,527
    2022
    United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA)United Nations pooled fund
    Total contribution:$799,527
    Development:$799,527(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    United Nations Women as Administrative Agent for Joint Programmes $300,000
    2023
    United Nations Women as Administrative Agent for Joint ProgrammesUnited Nations pooled fund
    Total contribution:$300,000
    Development:$300,000(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $300,000
    2022
    United Nations Women as Administrative Agent for Joint ProgrammesUnited Nations pooled fund
    Total contribution:$300,000
    Development:$300,000(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    United States of America National Committee $10
    2023
    United States of America National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$10
    Development:$10(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    $10
    2022
    United States of America National CommitteeNational Committee
    Total contribution:$10
    Development:$10(100%)
    Humanitarian:$0(0%)
    2023
    Australia$351,165
    Total contribution$351,165
    Development$351,165(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Australian National Committee$99,410
    Total contribution$99,410
    Development$99,410(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation$29,630
    Total contribution$29,630
    Development$29,630(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Canada$1,167,404
    Total contribution$1,167,404
    Development$1,167,404(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Fast Retailing Co. Ltd.$26,699
    Total contribution$26,699
    Development$26,699(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Germany National Committee$17,365
    Total contribution$17,365
    Development$17,365(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Iceland National Committee$3,510
    Total contribution$3,510
    Development$3,510(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    International Organization for Migration (IOM)$205,477
    Total contribution$205,477
    Development$205,477(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Japan$70,625
    Total contribution$70,625
    Development$70,625(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Japan National Committee$23,383
    Total contribution$23,383
    Development$23,383(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Miscellaneous Donors$10,700
    Total contribution$10,700
    Development$10,700(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Singapore National Committee$6,399
    Total contribution$6,399
    Development$6,399(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Sweden$2,385,628
    Total contribution$2,385,628
    Development$2,385,628(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Sweden National Committee$7,649
    Total contribution$7,649
    Development$7,649(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Switzerland$368,637
    Total contribution$368,637
    Development$368,637(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)$14,815
    Total contribution$14,815
    Development$14,815(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)$89,489
    Total contribution$89,489
    Development$89,489(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund Office$620,940
    Total contribution$620,940
    Development$620,940(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)$417,628
    Total contribution$417,628
    Development$417,628(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA)$799,527
    Total contribution$799,527
    Development$799,527(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Women as Administrative Agent for Joint Programmes$300,000
    Total contribution$300,000
    Development$300,000(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United States of America National Committee$10
    Total contribution$10
    Development$10(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    2022
    Australia$351,165
    Total contribution$351,165
    Development$351,165(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Australian National Committee$99,410
    Total contribution$99,410
    Development$99,410(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation$29,630
    Total contribution$29,630
    Development$29,630(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Canada$1,167,404
    Total contribution$1,167,404
    Development$1,167,404(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Fast Retailing Co. Ltd.$26,699
    Total contribution$26,699
    Development$26,699(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Germany National Committee$17,365
    Total contribution$17,365
    Development$17,365(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Iceland National Committee$3,510
    Total contribution$3,510
    Development$3,510(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    International Organization for Migration (IOM)$205,477
    Total contribution$205,477
    Development$205,477(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Japan$70,625
    Total contribution$70,625
    Development$70,625(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Japan National Committee$23,383
    Total contribution$23,383
    Development$23,383(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Miscellaneous Donors$10,700
    Total contribution$10,700
    Development$10,700(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Singapore National Committee$6,399
    Total contribution$6,399
    Development$6,399(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Sweden$2,385,628
    Total contribution$2,385,628
    Development$2,385,628(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Sweden National Committee$7,649
    Total contribution$7,649
    Development$7,649(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    Switzerland$368,637
    Total contribution$368,637
    Development$368,637(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF)$14,815
    Total contribution$14,815
    Development$14,815(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)$89,489
    Total contribution$89,489
    Development$89,489(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Multi-Partner Trust Fund Office$620,940
    Total contribution$620,940
    Development$620,940(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Office for Project Services (UNOPS)$417,628
    Total contribution$417,628
    Development$417,628(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (UNOCHA)$799,527
    Total contribution$799,527
    Development$799,527(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United Nations Women as Administrative Agent for Joint Programmes$300,000
    Total contribution$300,000
    Development$300,000(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
    United States of America National Committee$10
    Total contribution$10
    Development$10(100%)
    Humanitarian$0(0%)
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