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Qui sommes nous
Qui sommes nousL'Organisation internationale pour les migrations (OIM) fait partie du système des Nations Unies et est la première organisation intergouvernementale à promouvoir depuis 1951 une migration humaine et ordonnée qui profite à tous, composée de 175 Etats membres et présente dans 171 pays.
Structure
Structure
- Structure organisationnelle
- Directrice générale
- Directrice générale adjointe chargée de la gestion et des réformes
- Directrice générale adjointe chargée des opérations
- Bureau du Chef de Cabinet
- Bureau des partenariats, de la sensibilisation et de la communication
- Bureau de la stratégie et de la performance institutionnelle
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Notre travail
Notre travailEn tant que principale organisation intergouvernementale qui promeut depuis 1951 une migration humaine et ordonnée, l'OIM joue un rôle clé pour soutenir la réalisation du Programme 2030 à travers différents domaines d'intervention qui relient à la fois l'aide humanitaire et le développement durable.
Ce que nous faisons
Ce que nous faisons
Partenariats
Partenariats
- Où travaillons-nous
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Agir
Agir
Travailler avec nous
Travailler avec nous
Engagez-vous
Engagez-vous
- Données et recherche
- 2030 AGENDA
IOM Continues Earthquake Relief Work
The International Organization for Migration
continues to tap decades of experience responding to global
emergencies to deliver relief supplies and assist hundreds of
people injured by Saturday’s devastating earthquake on
Indonesia’s Java island.
IOM has delivered an estimated 190 tons of
food- and non-food items to earthquake-affected districts on behalf
of the Indonesian government and international relief
organizations.
In addition to conducting assessments of
damaged medical infrastructure, IOM’s 11-member medical team
has helped more than 150 patients newly discharged from hospitals
and 160 of their accompanying family members return to their home
villages.
“IOM is known for its transportation and
logistics expertise and the ability of its emergency medical teams
to react quickly to events in the field,” says IOM Executive
Officer Paul Norton. “We are applying decades of experience,
most recently in responding to the earthquake in Pakistan and
Kashmir, and the tsunami in Aceh and Sri Lanka, here in
Java.”
IOM created and maintained the crucial
land-based supply route into Aceh in the wake of the Dec. 2004
tsunami, delivering more than 80,000 tons of materials into the
country’s northernmost province. In addition to providing
emergency care, the Organization’s health staff coordinated
the return to Nias island of close to 600 patients treated at
hospitals in Medan, North Sumatra following the devastating March
2005 earthquake.
Thirty-five IOM staff from around Indonesia,
including many veterans of the tsunami response, are coordinating
operations in Yogjakarta, including the complicated logistics
behind the emergency. Trucks have been pre-positioned at regional
airports and a depot established at the governor’s office to
speed the delivery of supplies, and dozens of minivans have been
leased to provide support services to the injured.
Twenty vehicles have also been made available
to transport patients in need of immediate surgical assistance from
the overcrowded hospital in Bantul to a US Marine field hospital
for treatment. IOM is also searching for alternate accommodations
in Yogjakarta for those survivors who are not yet ready to return
home.
For more information, please contact:
Paul Dillon
National Press Officer
Yogjakarta, Indonesia
Banda Aceh, Indonesia:
Tel: +62 812 698 8035
E-mail:
"mailto:pdillon@iom.int">pdillon@iom.int
Shima Roy
Information Officer
Yogjakarta, Indonesia
Tel: 0811.947.143
E-mail:
"mailto:sroy@iom.int">sroy@iom.int