After almost a decade of conflict, Yemen is facing one of world’s worst emergencies. We are working around the clock to protect children, through providing access to primary health care and gender-based violence support, as well as reaching people with critical safe drinking water and sanitation supplies.
Donate to our Children’s Emergency Fund
Conflict and natural disasters put millions of children’s lives at risk every year. Our Children’s Emergency Fund helps us to respond to an emergency immediately. We operate the largest humanitarian warehouse in the world so we can:
- Respond within 48 hours with life-saving supplies and healthcare.
 - Protect children from conflict and its long-term impacts.
 - Help children physically and psychologically.
 
Help protect children affected by Hurricane Melissa
UNICEF has mobilised hundreds of tons of emergency supplies to reach children affected by Hurricane Melissa. Winds up to 100mph and extreme rainfall are causing devastation across the Caribbean. We need your urgent support.
How are we supporting children and families globally?
We are working with our partners and local communities to respond in emergencies like the 6.3 magnitude earthquake that struck Northern Afghanistan and the category 3 Cyclone Kalmaegi that is sweeping across the Philippines, Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia.
In regions vulnerable to disasters, our Children’s Emergency Fund allows us to prepare vital supplies and invest in our response plan, enabling us to act immediately to support affected families.
Many children and families around the globe will struggle to survive the previous harsh winter without warm clothes, fuel, and shelter. To help, we are supplying warm blankets and winter clothing to places like Afghanistan and Syria. We will also provide power and heating in Ukraine to help families survive the bitter winter months.
Furthermore, other crises we’re responding to include the devastating conflict and hunger catastrophe in Sudan, conflict in Lebanon, earthquakes in Myanmar, the outbreak of mpox in sub-Saharan Africa and increasing violence and food insecurity in Haiti.
Despite how much we have achieved together with our partners and supporters, our resources are limited, and the demand for life-saving supplies is growing. Please donate to our Children’s Emergency Fund to help us reach children and families in emergencies.
                        On 29 October 2025, a family repairs their flooded home damaged by the passage of Hurricane Melissa in the southern region of Les Cayes in Haiti.
Ready to support children affected by conflict
The number of countries in active armed conflicts is at its highest in 30 years. In fact, more than 43 million children have had to leave their homes because of conflict and many others have been injured, killed or left without a family.
Even though article 38 of the UN Convention on Child Rights states ‘governments must do everything they can to protect and care for children affected by war and armed conflicts,’ too often children and families are left to fend for themselves.
Children are always innocent
That is why we work with governments to ensure they stay true to their commitment to child protection. We call for ceasefires and humanitarian corridors to allow safe passage for children and families. We are always ready to deliver immediate support.
Please donate to our Children’s Emergency Fund for crises now and crises yet to come.
                        On 6 March 2022 in Iraq, children play at a playground in the Old City of Mosul. Mosul’s Old City is rising from the rubble in war-scarred Iraq, but there are still neighborhoods in ruins.
Where has our Children’s Emergency Fund helped?
Whenever you see a humanitarian crisis in the news, UNICEF is ready to support. Our Children’s Emergency Fund means we can also reach children in crises that don’t make the headlines.
Thanks to donations like yours to our Children’s Emergency Fund, we’ve sent vital supplies to children and families across the globe, from Mozambique to Armenia, Venezuela to Bangladesh.
Here are three examples of how the fund is supporting children:
								
							
								
							After almost 14 years since the beginning of the crisis in Syria, children and their families are still struggling to cope. Children face continued violence, multiple displacements and the impact of the ongoing economic crisis.
Children and families in Syria need food, water, sanitation and hygiene facilities. There is still a significant shortage of adequate shelter.
								
							Seven years since fleeing persecution in Myanmar, Rohingya families are still living precariously in huge refugee camps in Southern Bangladesh. To prevent the children living in these camps becoming a “lost generation,” we have enrolled 300,000 children in classes and continue to establish learning centres and safe spaces for children at risk of abuse and violence.