particular in relation to the international armed
conflict in Ukraine. IFRC’s legal experts played
a key role in ensuring the inclusion of the IFRC
and its members in a number of licences, as well
as in the landmark Security Council Resolution
2664 introducing a cross-cutting exception for
humanitarian action in UN sanctions regimes.
Engagement also took place with suppliers
and service providers to address instances
of overcompliance, and workable solutions
were found to ensure humanitarian assistance
reached the most vulnerable communities.
Data protection The IFRC, on its own and through National Society
partners, collects and processes vast amounts
of personal data of vulnerable individuals around
the globe. IFRC Data Protection experts work to
ensure that IFRC practices are compliant with
the internally binding Policy on the Protection of
Personal Data, and that all processing is aligned
with local requirements and expectations. By
making personal data handling more efficient,
more responsible, more transparent and more
secure, the IFRC strives to protect individuals
from the risks of misuse of their data, whether
such risk is financial, physical, mental or digital.
Engaging with partners on best data practices Policies, guidelines, templates, privacy state-
ments and other materials were designed and
delivered by IFRC Data Protection specialists to
achieve the goals of more robust personal data
processing, internally and for Movement part-
ners. Virtual and in-person training sessions
are regularly held to sensitize staff of the issues
around personal data protection. The IFRC rou-
tinely engages with other humanitarian partners
and international organizations to help develop
and implement programmes that will minimize
data collected yet allow sufficient data to enable
well-functioning responses to humanitarian
crises. The coordination of matters relating to
personal data was managed across the global
IFRC via a network of data protection focal points.
Enhancing data sharing for humanitarian purposes In 2022, a Data Sharing Agreement template was
launched to support affected National Societies
in facilitating the safe, reliable, and compliant
transfer of personal data in response to the
Ukraine crisis. By entering into these agreements,
National Societies and the IFRC ensured the flow
of data necessary to implement and coordinate
the Cash programme in Ukraine and surround-
ing countries, while providing transparency of
the data transfers to affected persons.