The UN Peacebuilding Fund: Scaling up engagement in Sudan amid heightened fragility
The military coup of 25 October 2021 plunged Sudan into a political crisis with profound implications for the country’s development and peacebuilding prospects. It also presented donors with a difficult question: how do we uphold our commitment to supporting Sudan’s most vulnerable without legitimizing an unconstitutional change? While political crises naturally present challenges for international donors, the UN Secretary-General’s Peacebuilding Fund (PBF) is demonstrating how to respond to such situations in a targeted and strategic way to ensure that essential support continues to reach those who need it most.
Against a backdrop of political tensions, inter-communal conflicts, large-scale displacement, economic crises, deepening inequalities, rising unemployment, devastating floods and popular protests for democratic reforms, the PBF has remained active in Sudan. Its comparative advantage as a timely, risk-tolerant, demand-driven and catalytic investor presents an opportunity to provide desperately needed funding in high-risk environments. Since the coup, the PBF active portfolio and project pipeline have grown to cover twelve states, demonstrating that when crises strike, its commitment does not falter - it strengthens.
Alongside ongoing - like the flagship programme that supports durable solutions, rule of law and local peacebuilding across the five Darfur states – the PBF added six new projects to the portfolio in 2021, with four more in the pipeline. These pipeline projects include a new initiative in the disputed territory of Abyei and a USD 10 million investment in East Sudan, which adopts an area-based approach to stabilizing conflict-affected communities and enhancing their resilience to future crisis. Based on an assessment of conflict hotspots and key conflict drivers for each area, the projects will leverage the comparative advantages of four UN agencies accordingly to restore access to basic services, such as water and sanitation, roll out livelihoods support and job creation schemes, and strengthen community-level conflict resolution and natural resource management bodies.?
So how do we navigate the complex political landscape to ensure support reaches those who need it most? Part of the answer lies in the PBF’s community-based approach, which empowers local communities, promotes inclusive participation, strengthens the capacities of local governance and other community structures; transforms the relationships between different actors; fosters local ownership; directs funding to community-based organizations by expanding partnerships with CSOs; and foregrounds women and youth as agents of peaceful change and inclusive development.
With Sudan’s peacebuilding trajectory remaining fragile and uncertain, support from the international community - at the right time and in a targeted way - is critical. The question, then, is not whether development and peacebuilding partners should remain engaged, but how to remain engaged. Through its investments, the PBF is empowering local stakeholders to respond to the rapidly evolving situation on the ground in Sudan and ensuring relevant and reliable support to those who need it most.?
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