![]() ![]() Irish Aid also meets basic costs while on deployment including travel to and from the RRC member’s duty station, food and accommodation, visas, vaccinations and insurance. Public servants who are also Roster members may, subject to their employer’s approval, be deployed on assignment from the Roster and retain their salary and benefits. Rapid Responders usually receive a daily stipend during their deployment. We also encourage and support our Roster members to participate in UN and other donors’ specialised training courses from time to time, for example in civil-military coordination, child protection in emergencies, emergency preparedness and response, cluster coordination and gender-based violence in emergencies. It also includes training on personal safety and security to prepare Rapid Responders for the challenging and difficult environments they will work in. This includes a general orientation on humanitarian response, and training on humanitarian reform and architecture, and on humanitarian codes, standards and best practice. ![]() Irish Aid provides pre-departure training to Roster members, in conjunction with the Defence Forces’ UN Training School Ireland (UNTSI) in the Curragh Camp. ![]() The Standby Partnership Agreements commit Irish Aid to maintaining a Standby Roster of personnel with general skills profiles and other specialised qualifications that match the requirements of the UN Partner Agencies and who can be available at short notice for deployment where gaps exist.Ģ4 roster members deployed to in 2022 to Ethiopia, Madagascar, Zimbabwe, Kenya, Zambia, South Sudan, Uganda, Lebanon, Myanmar and to Romania, Czech Republic, Poland and Slovakia in response to the crisis in Ukraine. These five UN agencies are the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), the World Food Programme (WFP), the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), and the International Organisation for Migration (IOM). Individual members of the Corps are deployed at the request of those UN humanitarian agencies with which Ireland has concluded formal bilateral Standby Agreements under the UN Stand-by Partnership Programme. Most have worked extensively overseas in humanitarian and/or development settings. The Rapid Response Corps (RRC) currently comprises over 80 experts with specialised skills in logistics, engineering, water and sanitation, humanitarian coordination, protection and other areas. Rapid Response Corps member, Peter Cooney (on Right) visiting a camp for internally displaced persons in Maiduguri, Nigeria in his role with the UN Office for Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) as Civil Military Coordination Officer, to assist with the humanitarian response effort, including access to and protection of civilians. Under Ireland’s Rapid Response Initiative, we regularly deploy highly-skilled and experienced individuals from our Rapid Response Corps roster to work as surge capacity with Ireland’s UN Stand-by partners as part of their humanitarian and emergency response efforts. Ireland's Rapid Response Roster is not currently accepting applications. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |