Sudan Crisis

Gaza Emergency

Afghanistan Earthquake

Türkiye and Syria Earthquakes

Ukraine Crisis

Displacement in Armenia

Sudan Crisis

Gaza Emergency

Afghanistan Earthquake

Türkiye and Syria Earthquakes

Ukraine Crisis

UNFPA Global Content 

All Content 
Humanitarian/Emergencies 
Campaigns & Fundraising 
Themes 
Observances, Days & Moments 
Executive Director Dr Natalia Kanem, Leadership & Events 
Reports & Publications 

Regions 

Arab States 
We are making real progress. Since UNFPA started working in Eastern Europe and Central Asia in the early 1990s, the number – and rate – of women dying from pregnancy or childbirth has nearly halved. Women are better able to plan when to have children – and how many. Young people are more connected and empowered than ever before.

But not everyone has benefitted equally from this progress. Young women and men often face difficulties in accessing sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services. Serious barriers still exist for poor women, migrants, ethnic minorities and those who live in rural areas. Often left unprepared by school, young people bear a high risk of unintended pregnancy and sexually transmitted infections. As a result, too many adolescents give birth, too many women resort to unsafe abortions, and the Eastern Europe and Central Asia region has one of the world’s fastest growing HIV epidemics. Women face persistent discrimination and gender-based violence remains widespread.

Much more needs to be done to ensure that all individuals in the region can exercise their basic human rights, including those related to the most intimate and fundamental aspects of life.

And as societies grapple with the effects of population ageing, migration, and in some cases population decline, new policies are needed to build human capital through investment in health, education and job opportunities.
Eastern Europe & Central Asia 
Asia & The Pacific 
East & Southern Africa 
West & Central Africa 
Latin America & The Caribbean