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Lossless FTS flow provenance

Flow 343972

Inspect the normalized flow version, every ordered object and report, current year memberships, family links and escaped raw source JSON.

Source refreshed
13 Jul 2026
Import completed
13 Jul 2026
Source runs
1
Covered years
2026
Stable FTS ID
343972
Import checksum
9dca9a2ec0cca70caa2b383b78937e9aab82f901dbc5bb5dc397f9f3d0965e44
Reported amount $176,287
Status paid
Boundary incoming
Version 1
Year membership 2026
Reference 27_21808

Normalized source fields

Flow record

All normalized fields are displayed; unreported scalars remain explicit.
Description
Multi-Sector - GBV Programming Context: In the aftermath of Myanmar’s 2021 military coup, the country has experienced one of the most intense civil wars within its borders, deepening the refugee crisis in South Asia, with India becoming a primary destination. The UNHCR estimates that more than 60,000 refugees (unofficial figures go up to 100,000) from Myanmar have entered India since 2021 with a majority of them being hosted in the north-eastern states of the country and New Delhi. Given that India is non-signatory to the Refugee Convention and lacks a domestic asylum law, refugees in the country find themselves in a volatile protection environment with severely limited rights against detention, deportation and other violations. The recent security situation in the northeast has further compounded the poor protection ecosystem for refugees. Under these circumstances, women and girls remain at their most vulnerable, caught in a cycle of sexual violence and exploitation, in their home countries and throughout their displacement journeys. The UN has repeatedly highlighted the differential and devastating impact of this crisis on women and girls, who are at heightened risk of rights violations. Target Population: As mentioned, the dramatic upheaval in Myanmar’s socio-economic and political structures has been catastrophic for its women and girls. Without legal pathways to safety, refugees fleeing Myanmar, a majority of whom are women and children, have increasingly been forced to embark on dangerous routes to enter neighbouring countries in search of asylum, often willing to risk facing trafficking, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence (SGBV), detention and deportation, and even death. Project Goal: The proposed project focuses on striking at the root cause of the vulnerability of refugee women and girls from Myanmar—their lack of legal protection—which leaves them susceptible to severe forms of SGBV without any recourse to justice or redressal systems. The idea is to spark a social movement towards justice, accountability, and peacebuilding led by refugee women themselves to mitigate their vulnerability to SGBV and to ensure the nonrecurrence of Conflict-related Sexual Violence (CRSV) while promoting truth-telling and reconciliation. The project has been designed in consultation with UNHCR India and its partners who are currently working to meet the emergency post-conflict protection needs of the community. While these partners are focusing on emergency relief measures, they have highlighted the urgent need to have a dedicated program to address the long-term needs of survivors or those at-risk of SGBV which includes the need for immediate access to - SGBV-specific counselling and medical assistance, SRHR services, justice systems (including UN systems) to seek redressal for rights violations. Project Strategy: To this end, the project’s objective will be to build an inclusive and responsive legal system for refugees. The project would adopt an integrated and multipronged approach aimed at: a) building capacities of community-based structures Refugee-led Organizations (RLOs) and civil society organizations (CSOs) who will be familiarised on issues pertaining to refugee women/girls, applicable domestic laws and structures pertaining to SGBV, confidentiality protocols, traumainformed care, and documentation. b) establishing a referral pathway between the community and available institutional structures to facilitate better coordination of ongoing relief efforts and respond to the heightened needs of refugee women/girls; and c) developing pathways for justice and accountability such that Burmese women have access to both domestic and international justice systems for protection, relief and redressal for the violence faced by them in both in the home and host country. Geographical Coverage: The project will be implemented in States that are currently hosting refugee communities in India. These primarily include, Mizoram, New Delhi, with smaller number of refugee groups being hosted by States including Manipur, Nagaland, and Arunachal Pradesh. Please note that the geographical focus may change if the refugee community shifts base due to socio-political and economic factors. Further, please note that depending on the security situation in the North Eastern region of India, the programme will be implemented strictly in compliance with government directives and advisory which may sometimes restrict access of civil society in certain States. Budget: Regarding the resourcing plan, as mentioned in the detailed project budget, Ara expects the estimated cost of the proposed project to be roughly $809,000.
Contribution type
financial
Flow type
Standard
Decision date
01 Nov 2024
First reported
01 Apr 2025
Flow date
21 May 2025
Budget year
Not reported
Parked amount
Not reported
Original amount
Not reported
Original currency
Not reported
Exchange rate
Not reported
Earmarking
earmarked
Method
Traditional aid
New money
Yes
Keywords
Not reported
On boundary
"single"
Source created
21 May 2025
Source updated
21 May 2025
Source fetched
13 Jul 2026

Canonical dimensions

Linked evidence

Only single resolved IDs become entity or filter links.
Recipient agency
The Ara Trustsingle
Country
Indiasingle
Plan
Unspecifiedmissing
Source and destination objects 6
Source and destination objects in source order
DirectionPositionTypeNameExternal IDBehaviorStateOrganization traits
source0OrganizationUN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women15182singlesinglePooled Funds, Global UN Pooled Funds, Pooled Funds
source1UsageYear202445singleunresolvedNot reported
destination0OrganizationThe Ara Trust15290singlesingleNGOs, National NGOs/CSOs, Local and National Non-State Actors
destination1GlobalClusterProtection - Gender-Based Violence13singlesingleNot reported
destination2LocationIndia103singlesingleNot reported
destination3UsageYear202647singleunresolvedNot reported
Report details 1
Report details in source order
PositionSource typeOrganizationChannelReport date
0PrimaryUN Trust Fund to End Violence against WomenEmail01 Apr 2025
Year memberships 2
Current completed-run memberships
YearBoundaryOn boundaryObservedImport run
2026incoming"single"13 Jul 2026115
2024outgoing"single"12 Jul 202634
Parent and child flows 0
Raw FTS JSON

Escaped source evidence is shown verbatim; unknown fields are preserved and not interpreted.

{
  "amountUSD": 176287,
  "boundary": "incoming",
  "budgetYear": null,
  "childFlowIds": null,
  "contributionType": "financial",
  "createdAt": "2025-05-21T09:33:25.310Z",
  "date": "2025-05-21T00:00:00Z",
  "decisionDate": "2024-11-01T00:00:00Z",
  "description": "Multi-Sector - GBV Programming\nContext: In the aftermath of Myanmar’s 2021 military coup, the country has experienced one of the most intense civil wars within its borders, deepening the refugee crisis in South Asia, with India\nbecoming a primary destination. The UNHCR estimates that more than 60,000 refugees (unofficial figures go up to 100,000) from Myanmar have entered India since 2021 with a majority of them\nbeing hosted in the north-eastern states of the country and New Delhi. Given that India is non-signatory to the Refugee Convention and lacks a domestic asylum law, refugees in the country find\nthemselves in a volatile protection environment with severely limited rights against detention, deportation and other violations. The recent security situation in the northeast has further\ncompounded the poor protection ecosystem for refugees. Under these circumstances, women and girls remain at their most vulnerable, caught in a cycle of sexual violence and exploitation, in their\nhome countries and throughout their displacement journeys. The UN has repeatedly highlighted the differential and devastating impact of this crisis on women and girls, who are at heightened risk of\nrights violations. Target Population: As mentioned, the dramatic upheaval in Myanmar’s socio-economic and political structures has been catastrophic for its women and girls. Without legal pathways\nto safety, refugees fleeing Myanmar, a majority of whom are women and children, have increasingly been forced to embark on dangerous routes to enter neighbouring countries in search of asylum,\noften willing to risk facing trafficking, Sexual and Gender-Based Violence (SGBV), detention and deportation, and even death. Project Goal: The proposed project focuses on striking at the root cause\nof the vulnerability of refugee women and girls from Myanmar—their lack of legal protection—which leaves them susceptible to severe forms of SGBV without any recourse to justice or redressal\nsystems. The idea is to spark a social movement towards justice, accountability, and peacebuilding led by refugee women themselves to mitigate their vulnerability to SGBV and to ensure the nonrecurrence of Conflict-related Sexual Violence (CRSV) while promoting truth-telling and reconciliation. The project has been designed in consultation with UNHCR India and its partners who are\ncurrently working to meet the emergency post-conflict protection needs of the community. While these partners are focusing on emergency relief measures, they have highlighted the urgent need to\nhave a dedicated program to address the long-term needs of survivors or those at-risk of SGBV which includes the need for immediate access to - SGBV-specific counselling and medical assistance,\nSRHR services, justice systems (including UN systems) to seek redressal for rights violations. Project Strategy: To this end, the project’s objective will be to build an inclusive and responsive legal\nsystem for refugees. The project would adopt an integrated and multipronged approach aimed at: a) building capacities of community-based structures Refugee-led Organizations (RLOs) and civil\nsociety organizations (CSOs) who will be familiarised on issues pertaining to refugee women/girls, applicable domestic laws and structures pertaining to SGBV, confidentiality protocols, traumainformed care, and documentation. b) establishing a referral pathway between the community and available institutional structures to facilitate better coordination of ongoing relief efforts and\nrespond to the heightened needs of refugee women/girls; and c) developing pathways for justice and accountability such that Burmese women have access to both domestic and international justice\nsystems for protection, relief and redressal for the violence faced by them in both in the home and host country. Geographical Coverage: The project will be implemented in States that are currently\nhosting refugee communities in India. These primarily include, Mizoram, New Delhi, with smaller number of refugee groups being hosted by States including Manipur, Nagaland, and Arunachal\nPradesh. Please note that the geographical focus may change if the refugee community shifts base due to socio-political and economic factors. Further, please note that depending on the security\nsituation in the North Eastern region of India, the programme will be implemented strictly in compliance with government directives and advisory which may sometimes restrict access of civil society\nin certain States. Budget: Regarding the resourcing plan, as mentioned in the detailed project budget, Ara expects the estimated cost of the proposed project to be roughly $809,000.",
  "destinationObjects": [
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "15290",
      "name": "The Ara Trust",
      "organizationLevels": [
        "Local and National Non-State Actors"
      ],
      "organizationSubTypes": [
        "National NGOs/CSOs"
      ],
      "organizationTypes": [
        "NGOs"
      ],
      "type": "Organization"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "13",
      "name": "Protection - Gender-Based Violence",
      "type": "GlobalCluster"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "103",
      "name": "India",
      "type": "Location"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "47",
      "name": "2026",
      "type": "UsageYear"
    }
  ],
  "exchangeRate": null,
  "firstReportedDate": "2025-04-01T00:00:00Z",
  "flowType": "Standard",
  "grandBargainEarmarkingType": [
    "earmarked"
  ],
  "id": "343972",
  "keywords": null,
  "method": "Traditional aid",
  "newMoney": true,
  "onBoundary": "single",
  "parentFlowId": null,
  "refCode": "27_21808",
  "reportDetails": [
    {
      "date": "2025-04-01T00:00:00.000Z",
      "organization": "UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women",
      "reportChannel": "Email",
      "sourceType": "Primary"
    }
  ],
  "sourceObjects": [
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "15182",
      "name": "UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women",
      "organizationLevels": [
        "Pooled Funds"
      ],
      "organizationSubTypes": [
        "Global UN Pooled Funds"
      ],
      "organizationTypes": [
        "Pooled Funds"
      ],
      "type": "Organization"
    },
    {
      "behavior": "single",
      "id": "45",
      "name": "2024",
      "type": "UsageYear"
    }
  ],
  "status": "paid",
  "updatedAt": "2025-05-21T09:33:25.310Z",
  "versionId": 1
}