Funds from Andorran donors will bolster UNICEF's emergency aid in nutrition, health, water, protection, and
education amid Gaza's crisis, aligning with the post-ceasefire response plan.
Key Points
- €10,000 raised from Andorran individuals, entities, and businesses.
- Supports nutritional care, aid for pregnant women, safe water, and sanitation.
- Funds vaccinations, neonatal care, mobile teams, child protection, and psychosocial support.
- Provides temporary learning spaces per Palestine Response Plan (Oct-Dec 2025).
UNICEF Andorra has raised €10,000 through its emergency campaign to aid children affected by the Gaza conflict, the organisation announced yesterday.
The donations, gathered from individuals, entities, and businesses in the country, will strengthen UNICEF's on-the-ground humanitarian response amid an extreme crisis marked by severe shortages of food, clean water, health services, education, and child protection. Funds will support key priorities including emergency nutritional care—such as screening and treating child malnutrition—along with aid for pregnant and breastfeeding women. Additional efforts include ensuring access to safe drinking water and sanitation through system rehabilitation, restoring essential health services like child vaccinations, neonatal care, and mobile medical teams for hard-hit areas, as well as child protection and psychosocial support to help youngsters cope with trauma, violence, and loss.
The initiative will also fund temporary learning spaces to restore structured education in safe environments.
These resources align with UNICEF's Palestine Response Plan for the first three months post-ceasefire (October to December 2025), when needs remain critically high. The organisation noted it currently has only partial funding to address urgent demands in nutrition, health, water, child protection, and emergency education.
"In contexts like Gaza, international solidarity is essential. This fundraising once again shows Andorran society's commitment to the children who need it most," UNICEF Andorra stated.
Original Sources
This article was aggregated from the following Catalan-language sources: