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Cate Blanchett receives award for humanitarian work with UNHCR

Bangladesh. UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Cate Blanchett meets young Rohingya refugees at a UNHCR funded Temporary Learning Centre run by UNHCR Implementing Partner: CODEC in Kutupalong refugee settlement
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Cate Blanchett receives award for humanitarian work with UNHCR

Actor and director Cate Blanchett wins Variety award and honours Alessandra Morelli, representative in Niger for UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency.
25 June 2020
UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Cate Blanchett meets young Rohingya refugees at a Temporary Learning Centre funded by UNHCR and run by CODEC in Kutupalong refugee settlement.

Variety magazine on Thursday presented Cate Blanchett with an award for her humanitarian work with UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, and the actor and director immediately turned the spotlight on a woman whose career has been devoted to helping refugees.


Blanchett received Variety’s Power of Women award, joining fellow and past Variety honourees in a broadcast called ‘Lifetime Presents Variety’s Power of Women: Frontline Heroes’ that celebrated engagement in the fight against the COVID-19 pandemic.

But rather than soaking up praise herself, Blanchett singled out Alessandra Morelli, UNHCR’s representative in Niger, for attention, describing her as “absolutely inspirational”.

“She's been working tirelessly with the UN Refugee Agency for almost 30 years in emergency and conflict areas,” Blanchett said.

“I'm sure that the mental and physical cost has been enormous. And she's been making sure that refugees had the help and the hope and the resources they need not only to survive, but to thrive,” Blanchett said.

"Don't worry. You are not alone."

Morelli, an Italian, has spent her career working in conflict areas, often at great personal risk.

In 2014, a suicide car bomb exploded next to the vehicle in which she was travelling in Mogadishu, the capital of Somalia. Morelli survived, but seven others were killed.

Her career with UNHCR includes postings in the former Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, Rwanda and Indonesia after the 2004 tsunami. In 2016, she led the agency’s first emergency response in Greece, which has seen more than 1 million people fleeing famine, war and violence.

Since October 2017, she has been the representative in Niger, a large operation in the heart of the Sahel which is a crossroads for the central Mediterranean migration route to Europe via Libya. Recently, UNHCR announced that violence in parts of north-western Nigeria had forced an estimated 23,000 people to seek safety and security in Niger in April.

Somalia. UNHCR's Alessandra Morelli with IDPs in Somalia
UNHCR's Alessandra Morelli talks with an internally displaced woman at a garment production and tailoring workshop in Galkayo, north-central Somalia. In 2015, Morelli was UNHCR's representative in Somalia.

‘My job at UNHCR is ... (to) ensure that people who are without their homes, who have fled their countries, are fed. We ensure they receive clean and drinkable water. We ensure that the sick can access healthcare,” Morelli said.

“We are basically saying: ‘Don't worry, you're not alone’ to refugees who are at the most alone moment of their lives. We try to make them feel safe,” she said. The pandemic has made that task more difficult and UNHCR has responded by distributing soap as well as disseminating public health messages.

Blanchett described Morelli is an example of resilience. Morelli, for her part, applied the term to many of the refugees she has met.