IRAQ: MOSUL BRIEFING PACK MOSUL
Iraq: Mosul
MOSUL HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
MOSUL HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE Camps and emergency sites (as of 14 November 2016)
HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
Response Partner Operational Presence (as of 07 December 2016)
ACTED
Shikhan: 27 Partners
SAMARITAN’S PURSE, BCF IOM, DoH Ninewa/Erbil, UNFPA, ACF, DAMA, WHO, BCF PU-I, IMC, MSF-Fr, UNICEF, WAHA, QRCS
RAPID RESPONSE MECHANISM
CAMP COORDINATION AND CAMP MANAGEMENT
Makhmur : 30 Partners UNICEF, NRC, TDH. INTERSOS, DoE Erbil BCF DAMA, WHO, UNICEF, IOM, UNFPA, IMC, EMIRATE RCS, QATARI RCS, WAHA, HELP THE NEEDY, MSF-Fr, DoH ERBIL, DOH NINEWA, JCF, JIM-NET, MRDS, AL-MESALLAH, ZIAN AND ALMUSTAQBAL FOUNDATION (MFS) LA CHAÎNE DE L'ESPOIR
DWOD, UIHA, UNICEF, UNHCR, BRHA, BCF
UNICEF, DWOD, BCF, DRC
UNOPS*
WFP
UNOPS*
UNOPS*
Dahuk: 2 Partners WRO
191,620
RRM KITS: INCLUDING FOOD, WATER AND HYGIENE ITEMS
112,000
CAMPS RECEIVING IDPS
PEOPLE REACHED
OCHA / Themba Linden
ZELIKAN OPEN
Mosul FOOD SECURITY
SHELTER AND NON-FOOD ITEMS
385,901
PEOPLE REACHED
OF DISPLACED PEOPLE
ARE IN EMERGENCY CAMPS
38,000
AL HASUDIYA NO ACCESS
TO SHELTER DISPLACED PEOPLE IN EMERGENCY CAMPS
513,005
WASH SERVICES IN AND OUT OF CAMPS
PEOPLE RECEIVING SERVICES IN AND OUTSIDE OF CAMPS
PEOPLE REACHED
•
CAMPS, HAVE BEEN REACHED BY ASSISTANCE
277,307
HEALTH CONSULATIONS
11,370
TEMPORARY LEARNING SPACES IN CAMPS
PEOPLE REACHED
CAMP / SITE NAME STATUS
DISPLACED CHILDREN ENROLLED
COORDINATION
LOGISTICS
17,873m2
COMMON STORAGE FACILITIES
80km
BASATEEN – AL SHEUOKH TBC
AL SH’HAMAH OPEN
Penjwin
Darbandihkan
Halabja
Chamchamal: 6 Partners
Kalar
UNOPS*
Kifri
Salah al-Din
Khanaqin: 6 Partners Khanaqin
MUSLIM AID, SCI, WFP UNOPS*
Ba'quba
Adhamia Kadhimia Abu Resafa Ghraib Karkh Mada'in
Shirqat: 10 Partners INTERSOS
Mahmoudiya
Resafa: 2 Partners
UNOPS*
Daquq: 30 Partners
Tikrit:: 30 Partners SOROUH, MERCY CORPS, REACH INTERSOS, SAVE THE CHILDREN, ALMORTAQA
ISLAMIC RELIEF, WRO, NPA/ISFL, DIGC, HARIKAR, IRC, INTERSOS/SEWAN UNHCR, NRC, MERCY CORPS, CRS
TAJDID, IMC, DRC, WEO, WAHA
NRC
UNHCR, MERCY CORPS, SAVE THE CHILDREN
Erbil Ninewa Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Diyala Kirkuk Dahuk Baghdad
UNOPS*
MERCY HANDS UNOPS*
Note: The map will be continuously updated as new information becomes available
Number of implementing partners per district No partner 1-5 reported 6 - 10
11 - 15 16 - 20
Number of implementing partners by governorate per cluster (as of 07 December 2016)
UNICEF, DWOD, UIHA, ARCHENOVA
UNICEF, RIRP, MODM, JANNAT AL FIRDAWS
Boundary
UNOPS*
MDM, DOH, WHO, MSF, MEDAIR, UNFPA, ZHYAN, DAMA
MUSLIM AID, WFP, SCI, WFP,
Map Symbols
MERCY HANDS
UNICEF, SAVE THE CHILDREN, WORLD VISION, MERCY CORPS WFP, WEO, SCI, REACH
WHO, MSF, RI, IMC, IOM, UNFPA, UNICEF
UN agencies and partners implementing activities in Mosul
Baladrooz
Baghdad
SVI (WFP), MUSLIM AID, SCI, WFP DoH Salah al-Din, INTERSOS, WHO RELIEF INTERNATIONAL, IOM
NPA
IOM
UNOPS*
Diyala Tarmia
WHO, DOH, MSF
UNOPS*
Tilkaif: 12 Partners
107
Muqdadiya
Fares
CDO, REACH
INTERSOS
UNOPS*
UNHCR
Balad
DoE Sulaymaniyah
IOM, WHO, UNFPA, PUI, MSF-CH, MEDAIR, MDM
Map Reference: Creation Date: Projection/Datum: Web Resources: E-mail: Nominal Scale at A3 paper size:
110 Km
21 - 25
MOSUL HUMANITARIAN CRISIS IN NUMBERS
DISPLACED PEOPLE BY GOVERNORATE
RETURNEES BY GOVERNORATE
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
3W_Operational_Presence_Iraq 07/12/2016 Geographic/WGS 84 http://www.unocha.org/iraq ocha.iraq@un.org
Above 25
MOSUL CAMPS AND EMERGENCY SITES STATUS/ OPENING DATE
DoE SULAYMANIYAH CDO, PDO, TAJDID
Khalis
Thethar
Baiji: 10 Partners
Potentially, up to 1.2-1.5 million people could be affected by military operations.
SCI
UNICEF, PWJ, BCF, UPP MODM, QRCS
Tooz
Tikrit
MERCY HANDS
UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR THE COORDINATION OF HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS IN IRAQ (OCHA IRAQ) unocha.org/iraq | @ochairaq
(latest 1 Jan 2017)
Chamchamal
Daquq
Baiji
MUSLIM AID, MERCY HANDS, REACH, SAMARITAN’S PURSE, HA, IHAO
61
MOSUL CUMULATIVE HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
Sharbazher
Sulaymaniya
Kirkuk
UNFPA, WHO, IMC, UNICEF, WAHA
* The UNOPS-implemented Iraq IDP information centre (call centre) is a humanitarian helpline through which affected populations can receive and give information, as well as lodge complaints. Any mobile user (Korek, Asiacell, Zain) can call for free on 80069999.
UN AGENCIES AND NGOs RESPONDING TO THE HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
UNOPS*
Dokan
Sulaymaniyah
Mosul: 46 Partners INTERSOS, TRIANGLE, SAVE THE CHILDREN, WARCHILD, WVI, ALMORTAQA, BCF DoE Sulaymaniyah, TBC
• Between 4 - 19 December, the Government’s Public Distribution System distributed 3,700 boxes of cooking oil, 1,200 bags of rice, 4,000 bags of flour, 2,600 bags of sugar in newly retaken areas of Ninewa Governorate. Some 30,000 blankets, 14,000 food parcels, 7,500 hygiene kits, 1,600 heaters, and 1,000 tents were also distributed.
AL-ALAM/RUBEIDA OPEN
20 Km
COORDINATED HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
OF COMMON STORAGE SPACE AVAILABLE
CHAMCHAMAL TBC
NRC SAMARITAN’S PURSE (WFP), NRC (WFP), ACTED (WFP) ACF, IOM, UNFPA
Koisnjaq
Dabes
Kirkuk
Kalar: 8 Partners
UNOPS*
Pshdar
Rania
Erbil Erbil
Makhmur
UNHCR, MODM, IOM, NRC, SAVE THE CHILDREN, QRCS UNICEF, BRHA, RNVDO, DWOD, UIHA, IOM, OXFAM, DRC, MODM
• As soon as access opens up, wherever possible, efforts are being made to undertake access and security assessment missions in newly retaken areas close to the front lines, rapidly followed by the distribution of emergency response assistance. Partners have reached 356,000 people in need with multi- sectoral emergency response packages of food, water and basic hygiene items. Mobile clinics are providing health care to vulnerable people in hard-to-reach areas.
36km
CAMP / SITE NAME OPENING DATE
MODM, QRCS
Shaqlawa Hamdaniya
MOBILE TEAM, WAHA, TAJDID, IMC, WEO, SCI, WRO, PAO, PDO, REACH, IRC, INTERSOS/SEWAN, HARIKAR, HEARTLAND ALLIANCE, IOM
• More than 99,000 people have found shelter in camps and emergency sites to the east and south of Mosul. Shelter is currently available to accommodate a further 38,000 displaced people. Construction of new sites and plots sites is urgently underway to ensure adequate capacity is available for potential new displacements.
HAJJ ALI 50% end November
DRC (TBC), DRC
Shirqat Hawiga
HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
QAYYARAH-AIRSTRIP 50% end November
QAYYARAH-JAD’AH FULL
SAVE THE CHILDREN, INTERSOS, ALMORTAQA, SOROUTH
Choman
Tilkaif
Mosul
Hatra
• Humanitarian actors have gained access to recently retaken areas, including neighborhoods in eastern Mosul city. Vulnerable residents, particularly those people in retaken areas of Mosul city, are in urgent need of drinking water, food, and trauma care.
PEOPLE IN NEED, IN AND OUT OF
EDUCATION
Dokan: 7 Partners
Soran
Akre
Ninewa
Ba'aj
DRC UNOPS*
FIRST-LINE EMERGENCY
HEALTH
Mergasur
Shikhan
Sinjar
DRC, UNHCR
• The majority of new displacements continue eastwards from Mosul city. Intensification of military activities in Mosul city is likely to trigger new large scale displacement.
356,000
70,000
PROTECTION INTERVENTIONS AND SERVICES
Amedi
Dahuk
Sumel
Telafar
UNICEF, DWOD, BCF
• Protection concerns define this crisis. Between 17 October and 18 December, 2,582 people were referred to Erbil hospitals from Mosul city due to trauma injuries, primarily from gunshot wounds and indirect fire. More trauma stabilization points are urgently needed, particularly near frontline areas.
MORE SPACES ARE AVAILABLE NOW
Dahuk
UNOPS*
Sumel: 2 Partners UNOPS*
IMC, HCR/WRO, SCI NPA/PDO, NPA, DRC, HARIKAR, NCA, AL-MESELLAH, SEWAN, DOH
• Up to one million people in Mosul city are estimated to remain largely inaccessible to humanitarians, sheltering from the fighting, or waiting for an opportune time to flee. The humanitarian community remains extremely concerned for the safety of civilians in conflict areas. Parties to the conflict are being called upon to do everything possible to uphold their obligations under international humanitarian law to protect civilians and ensure they have access to the assistance they need.
AS SALAMYIAH NO ACCESS
AL BWEYER TBC
Zakho
WFP
WHO, IOM, DOH, HEEVIE, IMC, MEDAIR, MSF-CH, CHAIN OF HOPE, La Chaîne de l'Espoir
• Current displacement has risen to 110,000 people. More than three quarters of displaced families are in camps and emergency sites, while the remainder are in host communities, sheltering in private settings or public buildings.
85%
TEL ASWAD – ASSAGHIR 31/12/2016
PROTECTION
WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE
INTERSOS, PIN, HARIKAR, BCF
• Two months into the military operation to retake the city from Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the Mosul crisis continues to have a significant humanitarian impact. Humanitarian needs are severe among displaced families in and out of camps, vulnerable residents of newly- retaken communities, and people fleeing fighting in Mosul city.
PEOPLE ARE CURRENTLY DISPLACED
KHAZER M1 OPEN CHAMAKOL (TEL ASWAD) 31/12/2016
333,000
ESSENTIAL NON-FOOD ITEMS
PEOPLE REACHED WITH 30-DAY DRY FOOD RATIONS
110,000
HASANSHAM K TBC
KHAZER M3 TBC HASANSHAM U2 31/12/2016
Telafar: 25 Partners
23 December 2016
OVERVIEW
KHAZER M2 TBC
HASANSHAM U3 OPEN
36km AMALLA OPEN
DRY FOOD RATIONS, READY-TO-EAT RATIONS, HOT MEALS
IN NUMBERS
PEOPLE HOSTED IN CAMPS
¯
DRC, UNHCR
ACTED
ACTED
Akre
DIGC, HARIKAR, AL-MESALLAH, DRC, IOM IMC, DOH, WRO, ZSVP, HEARTLAND ALLIANCE
MERCY CORPS, UNHCR, DRC
MODM, OXFAM, BCF, ERC, BRHA, UNICEF, KUWAIT, IOM, WVI, UNHCR NRC
NARGIZLIA 3 TBC
LA CHAÎNE DE L'ESPOIR
BCF
IMC, HCR/WRO, DRC/UNHCR, SEWAN, DOH, WRO, ZSVP, DRC, HARIKAR, IOM
MERCY CORPS, UNHCR, IOM, NRC, SAMARITAN’S PURSE, WORLD VISION, IRCS/FRC, QRCS, MODM, REACH, TEARFUND
NARGIZLIA 2 TBC
ACTED, WARCHILD, HARIKAR, WVI AMAR NGO / PU-I, ACF, MEDAIR, IMC, UNFPA, UNICEF, ALMUSTAQBAL FOUNDATION (MFS)
AL-MESALLAH, WRO, NRC, WEO, QUANDIL, UNHCR, UNFPA UNICEF, ISLAMIC RELIEF, IMC, TAJDID
NARGIZLIA 1 TBC
Akre: 3 Partners
UNOPS*
Hamdaniya: 44 Partners NRC, INTERSOS, TRIANGLE, REACH, SAVE THE CHILDREN WORLD VISION, MERCY CORPS, WARCHILD, HARIKAR, WVI, ALMORTAQA, SOROUH
SINCE 17 OCTOBER (AS OF 1 JANUARY 2017)
6 17 8 9 1 4 0 0
1 8 4 3 0 4 0 0
20 25 10 3 0 8 0 0
10 32 7 0 3 9 1 0
0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0
1 12 3 0 1 4 0 0
3 11 4 2 0 4 0 0
1 3 1 0 0 0 1 1
Map data source(s): All Admin. layers: OCHA-COD 3W data: CCCM CLUSTER Disclaimers: The designations employed and the presentation of material on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
MOSUL RESPONSE PARTNER OPERATIONAL PRESENCE
(latest 23 Dec 2016)
(Latest 7 Dec 2016)
(Latest 14 November 2016)
(Latest round 59)
MOSUL OPERATIONS DEVELOPMENTS
FOR INTERNAL USE
16 DEC 2016
7 JAN 2017
30 DEC 2016
(Latest round 59)
Iraq: Mosul corridor displacement overview
(as of 24 October 2016)
Military operations to retake Mosul city, which has been held by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) since 2014, began on 17 October.
Kafrok 2,100
About 7,400 people have been displaced in the first days of the military operation. The majority of families have fled southwards towards Qayyarah, within Tilkeif district, to Zelikan camp in the north-east, and to Debaga camp in the south-east. In addition, about 900 people have reportedly crossed into Syria, where they are being housed in Al Hol camp in Hassakeh. Displacement and return patterns remain fluid as the conflict moves towards Mosul city.
Bashiqa
Zelikan 204 Bartalah
Tilkaif
Mosul
Al Hol camp (Syria) appox. 200km
Ibrahim Al Khalil Gwer
Al Adla
1,800
Debaga
3,084
31,734
Al Jadaa Tinah
Dibs
KIRKUK
5,028
15 Neighbourhoods under ISF control 5 Neighbourhoods under ISF partial control
21 Neighbourhoods under ISF control 4 Neighbourhoods under ISF partial control
28 Neighbourhoods under ISF control 3 Neighbourhoods under ISF partial control
73,008 Armed clash Checkpoint IDP site Returnees
80 K
Indirect Fire Impact
ISF: Iraqi Security Forces
Al Adheam
Balad
River Main road Displacement route
IDPs since the start of Mosul military operation 17 October: : 7,428 0 29-Mar
SV/BBIED: Suicide vehicle/Body-Borne Improvised Explosive Device
450
xx IDPs post 24 March 2016
IDPs in Makhmur district in Erbil since 24 March: 31,734
20 K
SV/BBIED Detonation
Sulaiman Bag
Samarra
Displacement
60 K
Screening site
Direct Fire Incident
ISF Partial Control
Touz Khou rmato
Tikrit Al Door 372
Legend
40 K
ISF Control
Neighbourhood
Touz CP
Amirli Al Alam
IDPs in Salah al-Din and Kirkuk governorates since 16 June: 100,626
Village
Al Rashad
Al Fathah CP
Baiji Al Hajjaj
100 K
Legend
Nazrawa Yahyawa
20,628
Daquq
SALAH AL-DIN
120 K
CURRENT SITUATION
Taza khurmatu
Al Riyadh Fertiliz er plant
Laylan
1,140
Maryam Beg CP
Hawiga
20km
Kirkuk
Maktab Khalid CP
Al Mojamma'at
NINEWA
Taqtaq
Makhmur
ERBIL
Tulul Baq
The fluidity of population movements in the Mosul corridor is happening against the backdrop of voluntary, spontaneous and forced movements of return. IOM has recorded almost 3,000 displaced families – over 17,000 people – returning to Baiji, Shirqat and Tikrit in Salah al-Din. Many returnees are finding their communities destroyed by the armed conflict, and continue to require humanitarian assistance.
CURRENT SITUATION
Erbil
Qu shtappa Big Debaga Stadium
Shirqat
Hatra
People who have been and remain displaced along the Mosul corridor in 2016
CURRENT SITUATION
240
Al Hawd
Qayyarah
140,000 people currently displaced along the Mosul corridor since 24 March Tikrit in Salah al-Din is hosting 70,000 of the newly-displaced people along the Mosul corridor. Many displaced people have also headed to Debaga camp in Erbil, where the population has increased from 3,700 people in March 2016 to over 32,000 by 19 October. Over 58,000 people have passed through the camp since March, although at least 12,000 have left through sponsorship mechanisms, largely to Kirkuk. A further 28,000 people are currently being housed in Makhmur screening site. The majority of new arrivals in Makhmur and Debaga camp in recent months have come from Hawiga in Kirkuk, where some 33,000 people have been displaced since the intensification of military operations in early August. The continuous arrival of newly-displaced families is causing overcrowding in Debaga in particular, and is placing a strain on available services and partners’ capacity to respond to the humanitarian needs across sectors.
Ainkawa
Namrod
Shura
These latest displacements from Mosul are part of a wider pattern of displacement along the Mosul corridor that started at the end of March 2016 and intensified in mid-June. This year, about 140,000 people have been, and remain, displaced along the Mosul corridor.
Shaqlawa
Baharka
Al Hamdaniyah
Hamam al Alil
28-Apr
28-May
27-Jun
Al Khalis
Displacement route post 17 October 2016
27-Jul
26-Aug
25-Sep
Ba`aqubah
25-Oct
Disclaimer: This document is subject to availability of data at the time of circulation. The context is evolving and the information is subject to constant change. Top line figures are not fully mutually exclusive. The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. Creation date: 24 October 2016; Sources: IOM/DTM, CCCM; Feedback: iraq.humanitarianresponse.info, iraqinfo@un.org;
Heet
MOSUL OPERATIONS DEVELOPMENT
ANBAR
MOSUL CORRIDOR DISPLACEMENT OVERVIEW (IOM)
(latest 7 Jan 2017)
MOSUL OPERATIONAL MAP
(latest 24 Oct 2016)
(latest 7 Dec 2016)
IRAQ: People currently displaced by Mosul military operations (as of 03 January 2017)
Derig
Zone
Telafar
Shikhan Tilkaif
Tal Askuf
ZONE 2
Kafrij
Tilkef
ZONE 3
21
Access missions
10
RRM distributions
5
Multi-sectoral distributions
59
Mosul
Bashiqa
Hay Al Zahra Hay Al Tahrir Bartella Gogchali
Ninewa
Food distributions
1
Al Fadhliyah Baybukht
ZONE 1
Hamdaniya
2
Karemless Qaraqosh Kharabat
Mosul
ASSISTANCE PROVIDED OUT OF CAMPS
Hamam al Alil Bweyr
Salahiya
Salamiya Namrod
ZONE 4
Emergency response missions close to the front lines have reached tens of thousands of displaced people and vulnerable residents. Over just two days in the Namrod area, the UN and partners reached 60,000 people in 23 villages with emergency food, water and basic hygiene. Follow-up food distributions are taking place to supplement emergency rations with 30-day food packages. The Government is also providing emergency assistance to vulnerable communities in retaken areas.
4
Ar Rasif Ibrahim Khalil Shura
124,800
people reached with multi-sectoral distributions
130,000
people reached with 30-day food rations
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.
Creation date: 27 Nov 2016 Sources: Clusters, Partners, CCCM
Feedback: iraqinfo@un.org
www.unocha.org
Hasansham U3
Nin.
Khazer M1
Lead Agency
Occupied
UNHCR
1,936
Plots Available
Al Hawd Romana School
Qayyarah Distribution mission Access & distribution mission Access mission
Makuk Sultan Abdulah Qaryat Azhalaila Sert Khabata
Planned
FULL
-
MOMD
6,517
MOMD
5,000
Sul.
Surdesh
MOMD
-
400
-
Nin.
Chamakor
UNHCR
-
1,008
1,392
Nin.
Hasansham U2
UNHCR
-
Under construction
1,500
Nin.
Bartella
N.GOV**
-
Under construction
3,500
Nin.
Qaymawa (former Zelikan)
UNHCR
1,029
Nin.
Amalla
UNHCR
Nin.
Nargizlia 1
Nin.
Hasansham M2 (Khazer M2)
Nin.
Zelikan (new)
Nin.
Nargizlia 2
MOMD MOMD MOMD
4,080
To be assessed
1,000
FULL
3,500
Sal.
Al-Alam 2 (MoMD)
MOMD
750
As Salamyiah
N.GOV**
Hamam Al Alil
MOMD
Al Sh'hamah
MOMD
Tilkaif
FULL
1,750
-
Under construction
3,500
-
Under construction
4,000
-
Under construction
2,500
Zelikan (new)
4
Nin.
Qayyarah Airstrip
Sal.
Basateen Al Sheuokh
Nin.
Haj Ali
Hasansham U3
IOM UNDP IOM
2,320
FULL
4,680
-
Under construction
2,500
Under construction
2,100
-
Hasansham M2 (former Kazer M2)
Hasansham U2
Ninewa
Hamam Al Alil
Hamdaniya
Available:
ISIL Control (24 November 2016) ISIL Control (17 October 2016)
20 Km
www.reliefweb.int
Under Construction Or Planned:
(125,602 People1)
6,867 Plots
(41,202 People)
41,362 Plots
(248,172 People)
Qayyarah Jad’ah
For planning purposes one plot = one family of 6 individuals. This relationship may vary depending on familiy size and preferences. Creation date: 8 Jan 2017 Sources: OCHA, GoI, CCCM cluster, 1IOM DTM Info: johnston@unhcr.org
1,500
Sayyid Hamad village
1,440
4,578
Qayyarah Airstrip Qayyarah Jad’ah
Legend
Haj Ali
IDP site Displacement
Basateen
Salah Al Sheuokh al-Din Shirqat
Displacement route post 17 October 2016 River
80km
732
21,540
Bzeibiz camp (Fallujah)
Ameriyat al Falluja camp Kilo 18 (Ramadi)
444
To Baghdad
Displacement by type of shelter
88%
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.
Camps/Emergency Sites
Private arrangements
Trauma casualties remain extremely high, particularly near frontline areas. In the last week, 683 people were referred from eastern Mosul city to hospitals in Erbil and Dahuk. In the previous week, some 817 trauma cases required referral to hospitals, with most of these injuries occurring just after fighting intensified at the end of December.
In critical shelter conditions*
Displacement over time Thousands
80,000
140
129,642
120 100 80
60,000
60
40,000
•
On 8 January, an NGO opened a 50 bed field hospital in Bartalah yesterday, to provide triage, surgery and secondary care. This is the nearest hospital to frontline areas and will relieve some of the pressure placed on Erbil’s emergency hospitals.
•
This week distributions by humanitarian partners in eastern Mosul city reached 50,000 people with ready-to-eat food, water and hygiene items.
475,000
People received emergency response packages of food, water and hygiene items (since 17 October)
419,000
People received food to last one month (since 17 October)
136,000
People currently displaced by fighting in Mosul city (since 17 October)
299,000
Medical consultations have been provided (since 17 October)
112,000
People currently displaced to camps and emergency sites
7,700
plots are available now for new arrivals in camps and emergency sites
Situation Overview
11% 1%
*IDPs currently living in unfinished/abandoned buildings, school buildings, religious buildings and other informal settlements
Displacement by location
120,000
On 29 December, military operations in Mosul City intensified causing, over the following five days, a corresponding increase in the scale of newly displaced people in eastern Mosul city. On 2 January, some 4,000 people were displaced in one day from eastern Mosul city; one of the largest daily movements of people since the beginning of the crisis. Since 3 January, displacement numbers have returned to an average of approximately 1,000 people per day. Newly displaced people are largely moving to the south and east, where camps run by government and humanitarian partners are taking in the new arrivals and further humanitarian assistance is provided. People are also seeking shelter with friends and family members in neighborhoods further east of frontline areas, such as Gogchaly.
40
20,000
Tikrit
Baghdad
Dano Village
Mamilian Camp
Derig
Bzeibiz camp
Ameriyat al Falluja
Um Kdor
Debaga Camp
Kubaiba village
Sayyid Hamad village
Baybokht
Al Haj 'Ali
Qayyarah…
Al-Adla Village
Al-Hood Village
Ibrahim Alkhalil Village
Qayyarah…
Khazer M1
Hasansham M2
Hasansham U3
Qayyarah Airstrip
Qaymawa(Zelikan)
20
-
AL-Maghfera Village
MOSUL OPERATIONAL PLANNING: CAMPS AND EMERGENCY SITES
Al Qadissiya (Tikrit) Tal-Al Sibaat Village (Al-Alam) Markaz Tikrit
120
216
10km
The information reflected in this infographic is constantly changing and captures information available at the moment of production.
(latest 8 Jan 2017)
114 294 228
100,000
(latest 27 Nov 2016)
78
Makhmur
Al Haj ‘Ali
Debaga Reception Center
People currently displaced by Mosul military operations since 17 October 2016
140,000
HUMANITARIAN ACCESS AND EMERGENCY RESPONSE TO NEWLY-RETAKEN AREAS
462
Displacement to other locations
From Altal (Hatra)
Main road
•
Daratu (BanslawaKasnazan)
Al-Adla village
xx IDPs post 17 October 2016
Al-Alam 2 (MoDM) Al Sh’hamah
135,500 people are currently displaced as a result of conflict in Mosul city that began on 17 October 2017, an increase of nearly 10,000 people in the last week. Some 15,700 returnees and hundreds of thousands of highly vulnerable residents in newly-accessible areas also require humanitarian assistance.
12 To
Erbil
900
Qayyarah Centre
810
10,806
Qayyarah Airstrip
Ibrahim Alkhalil village Gwer
420
Al-Hood Um Kdor
•
Khazer M1
Namrod
600
Shura
Makhmur
Hatra
No access
Highlights
Hasansham U3
30,030
Ninewa
Surdesh
Erbil
To be assessed
20 Km
This report is produced by OCHA Iraq in collaboration with humanitarian partners. Due to the rapidly changing situation, it is possible that the numbers and locations listed in this report may no longer be current at the time of reading. The next report will be issued on or around 16 January 2017.
32,892
150km
ZONE 4
Full
Hamam al `Alil
From Muhalabiya
Khazer M1
Suitable/Constr.
22,172 Plots
Bartellla
ZONE 1
Mosul
Ready to receive
Occupied:
11,550
Al Hamdaniyah
Within Telafar
Chamakor
As Salamyiah
*Islamic Kurdish League
Nin=Ninewa; Sul=Sulaymaniyah; Sal=Salah al-Din
Makhmur
Qaryat Azhalaila
Mamilian camp (Akre)
Hasansham U2 60
Bartella
36km
Situation Report No. 15 (2 January - 8 January 2017)
48 To
5,598
Bashiqa
Mosul
Nargizlia 1 Nargizlia 2
Piran (Nargizlia 3) Qaymawa (former Zelikan)
Mosul
Amalla
1,830
ZONE 2 Tilkef
4,360
Under construction
-
Shikhan
Telafar
-
Under construction
-
MOMD
Sal.
FULL 1,944
-
IKL*
Qayyarah Jad'ah
Nin.
1,000
3,032
620
Piran (Nargizlia 3)
Nin. Nin.
483 FULL
4,000
Nin.
**Ninewa Goverment
Hatra
23,831
Nin.
Emergency Sites
Erbil
people reached with RRM package
Gov. Emergency Camps
2,100
Iraq: Mosul Humanitarian Response
Qaymawa (Zelikan) camp
Al-Maghfera Village
840
Baybokht
Daratu
MISSIONS TO NEWLY RETAKEN AREAS
Red Valley village
0
19-Oct-16 21-Oct-16 23-Oct-16 25-Oct-16 27-Oct-16 29-Oct-16 31-Oct-16 2-Nov-16 4-Nov-16 6-Nov-16 8-Nov-16 10-Nov-16 12-Nov-16 14-Nov-16 16-Nov-16 18-Nov-16 20-Nov-16 22-Nov-16 24-Nov-16 26-Nov-16 28-Nov-16 30-Nov-16 2-Dec-16 4-Dec-16 6-Dec-16 8-Dec-16 10-Dec-16 12-Dec-16 14-Dec-16 16-Dec-16 18-Dec-16 20-Dec-16 22-Dec-16 24-Dec-16 26-Dec-16 28-Dec-16 30-Dec-16 1-Jan-17 3-Jan-17
MOSUL : Humanitarian access and emergency response to newly-retaken areas (as of 27 November 2016) Since 17 October, 21 access missions have reached newly-retaken areas close to the front lines to assess needs and prospects for subsequent distribution. Access missions pave the way for concurrent or follow-up emergency response missions to provide immediate relief to displaced people and residents of newly-retaken areas. The Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM)provides assistance to displaced people. Multi-sectoral emergency response packages are designed for residents who have chosen to stay in their homes. Both contain emergency ready-to-eat food rations, water and basic hygiene items. Supplementary food distributions provide longer-term food assistance to people in need.
Tilkef
IRAQ: Mosul Operational Planning - Camps and Emergency Sites (8 January 2017)
www.unocha.org The mission of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) is to mobilize and coordinate effective and principled humanitarian action in partnership with national and international actors. Coordination Saves Lives
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations Creation date: 03 Jan. 2017 Sources: OCHA, CCCM and IOM DTM Feedback: iraqinfo@un.org iraq@humanitarianresponse.info www.reliefweb.int
MOSUL DISPLACEMENT OVERVIEW BY MOSUL OPERATIONS (Latest 3 Jan 2017)
MOSUL HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE SITUATION REPORT (Latest 9 Jan 2017)
BACK
MOSUL
HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE SINCE 17 OCTOBER (AS OF 1 JANUARY 2017)
RAPID RESPONSE MECHANISM
CAMP COORDINATION AND CAMP MANAGEMENT
191,620
RRM KITS: INCLUDING FOOD, WATER AND HYGIENE ITEMS
PEOPLE REACHED
FOOD SECURITY
DRY FOOD RATIONS, READY-TO-EAT RATIONS, HOT MEALS
385,901
PEOPLE REACHED WITH 30-DAY DRY FOOD RATIONS
513,005
PEOPLE RECEIVING SERVICES IN AND OUTSIDE OF CAMPS
ESSENTIAL NON-FOOD ITEMS
333,000 PEOPLE REACHED
PROTECTION INTERVENTIONS AND SERVICES
70,000
PEOPLE REACHED
EDUCATION
277,307 PEOPLE REACHED
TEMPORARY LEARNING SPACES IN CAMPS
11,370
DISPLACED CHILDREN ENROLLED
COORDINATION
LOGISTICS
COMMON STORAGE FACILITIES
PEOPLE HOSTED IN CAMPS
PROTECTION
HEALTH
HEALTH CONSULATIONS
112,000
SHELTER AND NON-FOOD ITEMS
WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE
WASH SERVICES IN AND OUT OF CAMPS
CAMPS RECEIVING IDPS
17,873m2
OF COMMON STORAGE SPACE AVAILABLE
COORDINATED HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE
61
UN AGENCIES AND NGOs RESPONDING TO THE HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
BACK
MOSUL HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE Camps and emergency sites (as of 14 November 2016) NARGIZLIA 1 TBC
NARGIZLIA 2 TBC NARGIZLIA 3 TBC
ZELIKAN OPEN
Mosul
HASANSHAM U3 OPEN
36km
HASANSHAM K TBC
KHAZER M3 TBC
AMALLA OPEN
KHAZER M2 TBC
HASANSHAM U2 31/12/2016
KHAZER M1 OPEN CHAMAKOL (TEL ASWAD) 31/12/2016 TEL ASWAD – ASSAGHIR 31/12/2016
AS SALAMYIAH NO ACCESS
AL HASUDIYA NO ACCESS
AL BWEYER TBC
QAYYARAH-AIRSTRIP 50% end November
QAYYARAH-JAD’AH FULL
HAJJ ALI 50% end November
CAMP / SITE NAME STATUS CAMP / SITE NAME OPENING DATE
20 Km
36km CHAMCHAMAL TBC BASATEEN – AL SHEUOKH TBC
80km AL-ALAM/RUBEIDA OPEN AL SH’HAMAH OPEN
BACK
MOSUL HUMANITARIAN CRISIS
OCHA / Themba Linden
IN NUMBERS
23 December 2016
OVERVIEW
110,000
PEOPLE ARE CURRENTLY DISPLACED
85%
OF DISPLACED PEOPLE
ARE IN EMERGENCY CAMPS
38,000
MORE SPACES ARE AVAILABLE NOW TO SHELTER DISPLACED PEOPLE IN EMERGENCY CAMPS
356,000
PEOPLE IN NEED, IN AND OUT OF CAMPS, HAVE BEEN REACHED BY
• Two months into the military operation to retake the city from Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the Mosul crisis continues to have a significant humanitarian impact. Humanitarian needs are severe among displaced families in and out of camps, vulnerable residents of newly- retaken communities, and people fleeing fighting in Mosul city. • Current displacement has risen to 110,000 people. More than three quarters of displaced families are in camps and emergency sites, while the remainder are in host communities, sheltering in private settings or public buildings. • Up to one million people in Mosul city are estimated to remain largely inaccessible to humanitarians, sheltering from the fighting, or waiting for an opportune time to flee. The humanitarian community remains extremely concerned for the safety of civilians in conflict areas. Parties to the conflict are being called upon to do everything possible to uphold their obligations under international humanitarian law to protect civilians and ensure they have access to the assistance they need. • Protection concerns define this crisis. Between 17 October and 18 December, 2,582 people were referred to Erbil hospitals from Mosul city due to trauma injuries, primarily from gunshot wounds and indirect fire. More trauma stabilization points are urgently needed, particularly near frontline areas. • The majority of new displacements continue eastwards from Mosul city. Intensification of military activities in Mosul city is likely to trigger new large scale displacement. • Humanitarian actors have gained access to recently retaken areas, including neighborhoods in eastern Mosul city. Vulnerable residents, particularly those people in retaken areas of Mosul city, are in urgent need of drinking water, food, and trauma care. •
Potentially, up to 1.2-1.5 million people could be affected by military operations.
FIRST-LINE EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE
HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE • More than 99,000 people have found shelter in camps and emergency sites to the east and south of Mosul. Shelter is currently available to accommodate a further 38,000 displaced people. Construction of new sites and plots sites is urgently underway to ensure adequate capacity is available for potential new displacements. • As soon as access opens up, wherever possible, efforts are being made to undertake access and security assessment missions in newly retaken areas close to the front lines, rapidly followed by the distribution of emergency response assistance. Partners have reached 356,000 people in need with multi- sectoral emergency response packages of food, water and basic hygiene items. Mobile clinics are providing health care to vulnerable people in hard-to-reach areas. • Between 4 - 19 December, the Government’s Public Distribution System distributed 3,700 boxes of cooking oil, 1,200 bags of rice, 4,000 bags of flour, 2,600 bags of sugar in newly retaken areas of Ninewa Governorate. Some 30,000 blankets, 14,000 food parcels, 7,500 hygiene kits, 1,600 heaters, and 1,000 tents were also distributed.
UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR THE COORDINATION OF HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS IN IRAQ (OCHA IRAQ) unocha.org/iraq | @ochairaq
BACK
MOSUL HUMANITARIAN CRISIS IN NUMBERS
1.2-1.5m
PEOPLE COULD BE AFFECTED OVERALL BY THE MILITARY OPERATIONS
US$284m*
REQUESTED FOR THE FLASH APPEAL TO PREPARE AHEAD OF THE MILITARY OPERATION
83%
OF THE REQUIRED AMOUNT FOR THE MOSUL FLASH APPEAL HAS BEEN RECEIVED
$861m
REQUESTED FOR THE 2016 IRAQ HUMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN (HRP) *funding requirement under revision to respond to the crisis
81%
OF THE REQUESTED FUNDING FOR THE HRP HAS BEEN RECEIVED
• Humanitarian partners have also distributed winter items, such as heaters, thermal mattresses, and blankets to 22,875 families and have stocks available to cover anticipated needs. In the last week, three flights carrying in-kind emergency assistance from the European Union Civil Protection Mechanism arrived in Erbil. These flights contained blankets, tents, maternity kits, mattresses, medical supplies, and 17 generators, including a 300KVA generator to power a hospital. • Aid packages containing water and food, amongst other items, have been distributed by the UN to approximately 45,000 people in some areas of eastern Mosul city. Security permitting, further rapid aid distribution of multi-sectoral assistance is scheduled. Humanitarian partners continue water trucking to 15 neighbourhoods in eastern Mosul city, delivering approximately 450,000 litres of water per day to approximately 45,000 people. • Displacement tracking is conducted on a daily basis to monitor new movements of people. • Family separation, gender-based violence, maintaining the humanitarian and civilian nature of camps, and confiscation of legal documentation are some of the protection concerns being monitored by mobile protection teams. Children, women, the elderly and disabled are particularly vulnerable. At least 263 children have been registered for follow-up with social case workers.
HUMANITARIAN PRIORITIES • Advocating for the protection of civilians is a top priority for the humanitarian community. Security forces have committed to alerting residents to developments in the military operation, identifying escape routes when it is deemed safe to do so, arranging transport for highly vulnerable civilians to safety, and putting in place dignified, transparent screening procedures. • Ensuring that camp capacity keeps pace with the rise in displacement is critical. Clusters and partners continue to urgently prepare camp spaces, services and facilities for vulnerable families in need of safe and dignified shelter. • Residents who remain in recently retaken areas, particularly those in eastern Mosul city, are as vulnerable as those who have been displaced, as there is a severe shortage of basic services in most locations. As humanitarian access becomes possible in retaken urban areas of Mosul city, the delivery of first-line emergency assistance to all people in need, including vulnerable residents, is a priority. • Heavy rains and snow in the last week have compounded the hardship faced by both those remaining in retaken towns and neighborhoods, and those who have fled to camps. Protective shelter, heating and fuel, warm clothing and blankets are priority needs for many affected people.
FUNDING • As of 18 December, contributions totaling US$236.6 million have been confirmed for the Mosul Flash Appeal, representing 83 per cent of the required amount. Reports of additional funding have also been received and are in the process of being confirmed. Partners have continued to ramp up preparedness efforts to boost camp capacity and emergency supplies, and undertake initial response activities. • As fighting continues in urban areas of Mosul, more people are becoming affected by the crisis. Partners are therefore planning for new contingencies. Despite the generous contributions received so far, further funding is required to meet shifting priorities and prepare fully for the worst-case scenario. The delivery of clean drinking water and trauma care are funding priorities. • The 2016 Humanitarian Response Plan for all of Iraq requests $861 million. To date 81 per cent of the required amount has been received. Underfunding limits the ability of the humanitarian community to sustain the level of response needed to provide life-saving assistance to 7.3 million vulnerable Iraqis across the country. Overall funding requirements for Iraq in 2017, including the Mosul response, are presently under review.
The next information sheet on Mosul’s humanitarian response will be issued as more information becomes available. For media enquiries: Karim Elkorany, elkorany@un.org, +964 790 193 1292; Other enquiries: Damian Rance, rance@un.org Disclaimer: This document is subject to availability of data at the time of circulation and does not claim to be exhaustive or fully verified.
UNITED NATIONS OFFICE FOR THE COORDINATION OF HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS IN IRAQ (OCHA IRAQ) unocha.org/iraq | @ochairaq
BACK
Iraq: Mosul
Response Partner Operational Presence (as of 07 December 2016) Akre: 3 Partners
UNOPS*
Hamdaniya: 44 Partners
ACTED
NRC, INTERSOS, TRIANGLE, REACH, SAVE THE CHILDREN WORLD VISION, MERCY CORPS, WARCHILD, HARIKAR, WVI, ALMORTAQA, SOROUH
Shikhan: 27 Partners
SAMARITAN’S PURSE, BCF IOM, DoH Ninewa/Erbil, UNFPA, ACF, DAMA, WHO, BCF PU-I, IMC, MSF-Fr, UNICEF, WAHA, QRCS
LA CHAÎNE DE L'ESPOIR
Makhmur : 30 Partners
ACTED, WARCHILD, HARIKAR, WVI
UNICEF, NRC, TDH. INTERSOS, DoE Erbil
BCF
BCF DAMA, WHO, UNICEF, IOM, UNFPA, IMC, EMIRATE RCS, QATARI RCS, WAHA, HELP THE NEEDY, MSF-Fr, DoH ERBIL, DOH NINEWA, JCF, JIM-NET, MRDS, AL-MESALLAH, ZIAN AND ALMUSTAQBAL FOUNDATION (MFS) LA CHAÎNE DE L'ESPOIR
AMAR NGO / PU-I, ACF, MEDAIR, IMC, UNFPA, UNICEF, ALMUSTAQBAL FOUNDATION (MFS)
AL-MESALLAH, WRO, NRC, WEO, QUANDIL, UNHCR, UNFPA UNICEF, ISLAMIC RELIEF, IMC, TAJDID
IMC, HCR/WRO, DRC/UNHCR, SEWAN, DOH, WRO, ZSVP, DRC, HARIKAR, IOM
MERCY CORPS, UNHCR, IOM, NRC, SAMARITAN’S PURSE, WORLD VISION, IRCS/FRC, QRCS, MODM, REACH, TEARFUND
DWOD, UIHA, UNICEF, UNHCR, BRHA, BCF
DRC, UNHCR
ACTED
ACTED
UNICEF, DWOD, BCF, DRC
UNOPS*
WFP
UNOPS*
UNOPS*
Dahuk: 2 Partners WRO
Telafar: 25 Partners INTERSOS, PIN, HARIKAR, BCF
Zakho
UNOPS*
Mergasur
Shikhan
Telafar
IMC, HCR/WRO, SCI NPA/PDO, NPA, DRC, HARIKAR, NCA, AL-MESELLAH, SEWAN, DOH
Amedi
Dahuk
Sumel
WFP
WHO, IOM, DOH, HEEVIE, IMC, MEDAIR, MSF-CH, CHAIN OF HOPE, La Chaîne de l'Espoir
Dahuk
UNOPS*
Sumel: 2 Partners
Dokan: 7 Partners
Soran
SAVE THE CHILDREN, INTERSOS, ALMORTAQA, SOROUTH DRC (TBC), DRC
Akre
Tilkaif
Sinjar
Erbil
ACF, IOM, UNFPA
Koisnjaq
Ba'aj Hatra
Sharbazher
Dabes
Makhmur Shirqat
Kirkuk
Penjwin
Sulaymaniyah Sulaymaniya
Kirkuk Hawiga
UNOPS*
Dokan
UNICEF, DWOD, BCF
UNOPS*
NRC SAMARITAN’S PURSE (WFP), NRC (WFP), ACTED (WFP)
Pshdar
Rania
Erbil
Ninewa
Kalar: 8 Partners
UNOPS*
Hamdaniya Mosul
DRC
MODM, QRCS
Choman Shaqlawa
DRC, UNHCR
Chamchamal
Daquq
Darbandihkan
Halabja
Chamchamal: 6 Partners
Kalar
Mosul: 46 Partners
UNOPS*
MUSLIM AID, MERCY HANDS, REACH, SAMARITAN’S PURSE, HA, IHAO
Tikrit
UNFPA, WHO, IMC, UNICEF, WAHA
Kifri
Salah al-Din
Khanaqin: 6 Partners
MOBILE TEAM, WAHA, TAJDID, IMC, WEO, SCI, WRO, PAO, PDO, REACH, IRC, INTERSOS/SEWAN, HARIKAR, HEARTLAND ALLIANCE, IOM
Khanaqin
INTERSOS
Tilkaif: 12 Partners
UNOPS*
Resafa: 2 Partners
UNOPS*
Daquq: 30 Partners
Tikrit:: 30 Partners SOROUH, MERCY CORPS, REACH INTERSOS, SAVE THE CHILDREN, ALMORTAQA MUSLIM AID, WFP, SCI, WFP, WHO, MSF, RI, IMC, IOM, UNFPA, UNICEF TAJDID, IMC, DRC, WEO, WAHA UNHCR, MERCY CORPS, SAVE THE CHILDREN UNICEF, RIRP, MODM, JANNAT AL FIRDAWS MERCY HANDS
107
Mahmoudiya
DoH Salah al-Din, INTERSOS, WHO RELIEF INTERNATIONAL, IOM
IOM
Map Symbols Boundary
Number of implementing partners per district No partner 1-5 reported 6 - 10
11 - 15 16 - 20 21 - 25 Above 25
UNOPS*
WFP, WEO, SCI, REACH MDM, DOH, WHO, MSF, MEDAIR, UNFPA, ZHYAN, DAMA ISLAMIC RELIEF, WRO, NPA/ISFL, DIGC, HARIKAR, IRC, INTERSOS/SEWAN UNHCR, NRC, MERCY CORPS, CRS NRC
Number of implementing partners by governorate per cluster (as of 07 December 2016)
UNICEF, DWOD, UIHA, ARCHENOVA
Erbil Ninewa Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Diyala Kirkuk Dahuk Baghdad
UNOPS*
Note: The map will be continuously updated as new information becomes available
* The UNOPS-implemented Iraq IDP information centre (call centre) is a humanitarian helpline through which affected populations can receive and give information, as well as lodge complaints. Any mobile user (Korek, Asiacell, Zain) can call for free on 80069999.
MERCY HANDS
UNICEF, SAVE THE CHILDREN, WORLD VISION, MERCY CORPS
UNOPS*
UN agencies and partners implementing activities in Mosul
Baladrooz
Baghdad
SVI (WFP), MUSLIM AID, SCI, WFP
IOM, WHO, UNFPA, PUI, MSF-CH, MEDAIR, MDM
Ba'quba
Adhamia Kadhimia Abu Resafa Ghraib Karkh Mada'in
Shirqat: 10 Partners
UNOPS*
Diyala Tarmia
WHO, DOH, MSF
UNOPS*
SCI
Muqdadiya
Fares
CDO, REACH MUSLIM AID, SCI, WFP
NPA
UNHCR
Balad
DoE Sulaymaniyah
UNOPS*
DoE SULAYMANIYAH CDO, PDO, TAJDID
Khalis
Thethar
Baiji: 10 Partners
MERCY HANDS
INTERSOS
UNICEF, PWJ, BCF, UPP MODM, QRCS
Tooz
Baiji
INTERSOS, TRIANGLE, SAVE THE CHILDREN, WARCHILD, WVI, ALMORTAQA, BCF DoE Sulaymaniyah, TBC
UNHCR, MODM, IOM, NRC, SAVE THE CHILDREN, QRCS UNICEF, BRHA, RNVDO, DWOD, UIHA, IOM, OXFAM, DRC, MODM
¯
DIGC, HARIKAR, AL-MESALLAH, DRC, IOM IMC, DOH, WRO, ZSVP, HEARTLAND ALLIANCE
MERCY CORPS, UNHCR, DRC
MODM, OXFAM, BCF, ERC, BRHA, UNICEF, KUWAIT, IOM, WVI, UNHCR NRC
Akre
Map Reference: Creation Date: Projection/Datum: Web Resources: E-mail: Nominal Scale at A3 paper size:
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
3W_Operational_Presence_Iraq 07/12/2016 Geographic/WGS 84 http://www.unocha.org/iraq ocha.iraq@un.org
110 Km
6 17 8 9 1 4 0 0
1 8 4 3 0 4 0 0
20 25 10 3 0 8 0 0
10 32 7 0 3 9 1 0
0 2 0 0 0 1 0 0
1 12 3 0 1 4 0 0
3 11 4 2 0 4 0 0
1 3 1 0 0 0 1 1
Map data source(s): All Admin. layers: OCHA-COD 3W data: CCCM CLUSTER Disclaimers: The designations employed and the presentation of material on this map do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
•
•
BACK From a regional perspective, 6 Central North Iraq hosts 66% of the IDPs (2,028,012 individuals), the Kurdistan 7 Region of Iraq (KRI) 30% (904,848), and South Iraq 4% (131,286). Between 10 November and 8 December 2016, the governorate with the highest increase in IDPs was Ninewa (10% or 32,508 individuals). This increase is due to the military operations that started on 17 October and aimed at retaking the city of Mosul and surrounding areas in Ninewa governorate. As of 8 December, 82,698 IDPs were identified as a result of the crisis in Ninewa governorate through the DTM Emergency Tracking (ET)8. Of these, 99% were hosted in Ninewa governorate itself.
1.0 NUMBER OF IDP FAMILIES BY DISTRICT OF DISPLACEMENT, DECEMBER 2016
Dahuk Erbil
Ninewa Sulaymaniyah Kirkuk
Salah al-Din
Diyala Anbar
Baghdad
RESPONSE TO THE IDP CRISIS IN IRAQ 2016
Kerbala
2
Wassit Babylon
Missan
Qadissiya
IDP families by location of displacement 1 10
Najaf
Thi-Qar
100 1,000 10,000
Muthanna
Basrah
100,000
6.
7. 8.
To facilitate analysis, this report divides Iraq in three regions: the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI) includes the Dahuk, Sulaymaniyah and Erbil governorates; the South includes the Basrah, Missan, Najaf, Thi-Qar, Qadissiya and Muthana governorates; the Central North includes Anbar, Babylon, Baghdad, Diyala, Kerbala, Kirkuk, Ninewa, Salah al-Din and Wassit governorates. The figure of the KRI does not include populations currently displaced in the districts of Akre, Al-Shikhan, Kitfi and Khanaqin. Activated on an ad hoc basis, the DTM Emergency Tracking (ET) provides early field reports at the beginning of a complex crisis, allowing IOM to gather, consolidate and disseminate baseline information on displacement and return figures at the onset of an emerging crisis. The ET aims to be a quick monitoring tool with real-time data turnover ranging from 24 to 72 hours following its activation. For further information about the DTM Emergency Tracking, please visit IOM Iraq DTM ET portal (http//:iraqdtm.iom.int).
their location of origin,11 indicating an increase of 9% (107,166) from the previous update.
BACK
•
Anbar is the governorate with the highest percentage of returns registered so far in the country, with 39% (494,826 individuals). In Anbar, the district of Ramadi alone hosts 19% of the total returnee population (245,058).
•
Salah al-Din has the second largest number of returnees (29% or 365,514 individuals). Returns are mostly concentrated in Tikrit district (13% or 170,256).
•
Main governorates of last displacement of the returnee population remain Anbar (28% or 362,436 individuals), Kirkuk (13% or 170,784), Erbil (12% or 156,654), and Diyala (12% or 146,682).
5.0 NUMBER OF RETURNEES BY GOVERNORATE OF RETURN AND SHELTER TYPE, DECEMBER 2016 Dahuk
Ninewa
Erbil Sulaymaniyah Kirkuk
Salah al-Din Diyala Baghdad
RESPONSE TO THE IDP CRISIS IN IRAQ 2016
Anbar
10
Kerbala Babylon
Wassit
Qadissiya
Najaf
Returnee families by location of return and shelter type
Missan Thi-Qar
Muthanna
Basrah
17,000
Habitual residence Other shelter arrangements
11. The Returnee Master List, which focuses on permanent return, does not capture “go-and-see” visits. Furthermore, the Returnee Master List is not designed to assess the conditions of the returnees’ houses. It provides an initial indication of whether the families moved back to the residence of origin (indicated as habitual residence) or had to settle in alternative shelter arrangements after returning to their sub-district of origin (corresponding to one of the ten categories of shelter types). Targeted shelter assessments should be carried out to assess the damages caused by the conflict.
BACK
MOSUL OPERATIONS DEVELOPMENTS
FOR INTERNAL USE
16 DEC 2016
7 JAN 2017
30 DEC 2016
CURRENT SITUATION
CURRENT SITUATION
CURRENT SITUATION
15 Neighbourhoods under ISF control 5 Neighbourhoods under ISF partial control
21 Neighbourhoods under ISF control 4 Neighbourhoods under ISF partial control
28 Neighbourhoods under ISF control 3 Neighbourhoods under ISF partial control Legend Village
ISF Control
Direct Fire Incident
Neighbourhood
ISF Partial Control
Indirect Fire Impact
ISF: Iraqi Security Forces
SV/BBIED Detonation
SV/BBIED: Suicide vehicle/Body-Borne Improvised Explosive Device
BACK
Iraq: Mosul corridor displacement overview
(as of 24 October 2016)
Military operations to retake Mosul city, which has been held by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) since 2014, began on 17 October. About 7,400 people have been displaced in the first days of the military operation. The majority of families have fled southwards towards Qayyarah, within Tilkeif district, to Zelikan camp in the north-east, and to Debaga camp in the south-east. In addition, about 900 people have reportedly crossed into Syria, where they are being housed in Al Hol camp in Hassakeh. Displacement and return patterns remain fluid as the conflict moves towards Mosul city.
Kafrok 2,100
Bashiqa
Zelikan 204 Bartalah
Tilkaif
Mosul
Al Hol camp (Syria) appox. 200km
Al Hamdaniyah
Hamam al Alil
Ibrahim Al Khalil Gwer
Al Adla
1,800
Debaga
3,084
31,734
Al Jadaa Tinah
Dibs
KIRKUK Maktab Khalid CP
Tulul Baq Al Mojamma'at
NINEWA
Al Fathah CP
Al Rashad
20km Laylan Nazrawa Yahyawa
20,628
Daquq Touz CP
Baiji
Touz Khou rmato
Al Hajjaj
Sulaiman Bag Amirli
SALAH AL-DIN Al Alam
120 K
IDPs in Salah al-Din and Kirkuk governorates since 16 June: 100,626
73,008
100 K
80 K
60 K
Displacement
Samarra
Screening site
Al Adheam
450
xx IDPs post 24 March 2016
IDPs in Makhmur district in Erbil since 24 March: 31,734
Tikrit Al Door 372
Legend
Armed clash Checkpoint IDP site Returnees
Balad
River Main road
20 K
Displacement route
IDPs since the start of Mosul military operation 17 October: : 7,428 0 29-Mar
1,140 Taza khurmatu
Al Riyadh Fertiliz er plant
Kirkuk
Maryam Beg CP
Hawiga
5,028
People who have been and remain displaced along the Mosul corridor in 2016
Taqtaq
Makhmur
Shirqat
Hatra
Erbil
Qu shtappa Big Debaga Stadium
ERBIL
The fluidity of population movements in the Mosul corridor is happening against the backdrop of voluntary, spontaneous and forced movements of return. IOM has recorded almost 3,000 displaced families – over 17,000 people – returning to Baiji, Shirqat and Tikrit in Salah al-Din. Many returnees are finding their communities destroyed by the armed conflict, and continue to require humanitarian assistance.
40 K
240
Al Hawd
Qayyarah
140,000 people currently displaced along the Mosul corridor since 24 March Tikrit in Salah al-Din is hosting 70,000 of the newly-displaced people along the Mosul corridor. Many displaced people have also headed to Debaga camp in Erbil, where the population has increased from 3,700 people in March 2016 to over 32,000 by 19 October. Over 58,000 people have passed through the camp since March, although at least 12,000 have left through sponsorship mechanisms, largely to Kirkuk. A further 28,000 people are currently being housed in Makhmur screening site. The majority of new arrivals in Makhmur and Debaga camp in recent months have come from Hawiga in Kirkuk, where some 33,000 people have been displaced since the intensification of military operations in early August. The continuous arrival of newly-displaced families is causing overcrowding in Debaga in particular, and is placing a strain on available services and partners’ capacity to respond to the humanitarian needs across sectors.
Ainkawa
Namrod
Shura
These latest displacements from Mosul are part of a wider pattern of displacement along the Mosul corridor that started at the end of March 2016 and intensified in mid-June. This year, about 140,000 people have been, and remain, displaced along the Mosul corridor.
Shaqlawa
Baharka
28-Apr
28-May
27-Jun
27-Jul
Al Khalis
Displacement route post 17 October 2016
26-Aug
25-Sep
Ba`aqubah
25-Oct
Disclaimer: This document is subject to availability of data at the time of circulation. The context is evolving and the information is subject to constant change. Top line figures are not fully mutually exclusive. The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. Creation date: 24 October 2016; Sources: IOM/DTM, CCCM; Feedback: iraq.humanitarianresponse.info, iraqinfo@un.org;
Heet
ANBAR
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MOSUL : Humanitarian access and emergency response to newly-retaken areas (as of 27 November 2016) MISSIONS TO NEWLY RETAKEN AREAS
Since 17 October, 21 access missions have reached newly-retaken areas close to the front lines to assess needs and prospects for subsequent distribution. Access missions pave the way for concurrent or follow-up emergency response missions to provide immediate relief to displaced people and residents of newly-retaken areas. The Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM)provides assistance to displaced people. Multi-sectoral emergency response packages are designed for residents who have chosen to stay in their homes. Both contain emergency ready-to-eat food rations, water and basic hygiene items. Supplementary food distributions provide longer-term food assistance to people in need.
Telafar
Shikhan Tilkaif
Tal Askuf
ZONE 2
Kafrij
Tilkef
ZONE 3
21
Access missions
10
RRM distributions
5
Multi-sectoral distributions
59
Mosul
Al Fadhliyah Baybukht
Hay Al Zahra Hay Al Tahrir Bartella Gogchali
Ninewa
Food distributions
Bashiqa
ZONE 1
Hamdaniya
Karemless Qaraqosh Kharabat
Mosul
ASSISTANCE PROVIDED OUT OF CAMPS
Hamam al Alil Bweyr
Salahiya
Salamiya Namrod
ZONE 4
Emergency response missions close to the front lines have reached tens of thousands of displaced people and vulnerable residents. Over just two days in the Namrod area, the UN and partners reached 60,000 people in 23 villages with emergency food, water and basic hygiene. Follow-up food distributions are taking place to supplement emergency rations with 30-day food packages. The Government is also providing emergency assistance to vulnerable communities in retaken areas.
Ar Rasif Ibrahim Khalil Shura
Erbil Hatra
23,831
people reached with RRM package
124,800
people reached with multi-sectoral distributions
130,000
people reached with 30-day food rations
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations.
Creation date: 27 Nov 2016 Sources: Clusters, Partners, CCCM
Feedback: iraqinfo@un.org
www.unocha.org
Al Hawd Romana School
Qayyarah Distribution mission Access & distribution mission Access mission
Makuk Sultan Abdulah Qaryat Azhalaila Sert Khabata
Makhmur
Qaryat Azhalaila
ISIL Control (24 November 2016) ISIL Control (17 October 2016)
www.reliefweb.int
20 Km
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IRAQ: Mosul Operational Planning - Camps and Emergency Sites (8 January 2017) Zone
Gov. Emergency Camps Nin.
1
2
4
Hasansham U3
Lead Agency
Occupied
UNHCR
1,936
Plots Available
Planned
FULL
-
Nin.
Khazer M1
MOMD
6,517
483
-
Nin.
Hasansham M2 (Khazer M2)
MOMD
5,000
FULL
1,000
Sul.
Surdesh
MOMD
-
400
-
Nin.
Chamakor
UNHCR
-
1,008
1,392
Nin.
Hasansham U2
UNHCR
-
Under construction
1,500
Nin.
Bartella
N.GOV**
-
Under construction
3,500
Nin.
Qaymawa (former Zelikan)
UNHCR
1,029
FULL
-
Nin.
Amalla
UNHCR
-
3,032
-
Nin.
Nargizlia 1
MOMD
620
1,944
-
Nin.
Zelikan (new)
MOMD
-
Under construction
4,360
Nin.
Nargizlia 2
MOMD
-
Under construction
4,080
Nin.
Piran (Nargizlia 3)
IKL*
-
To be assessed
1,000
Nin.
Qayyarah Jad'ah
MOMD
4,000
FULL
3,500
MOMD
750
FULL
1,750
As Salamyiah
N.GOV**
-
Under construction
3,500
Nin.
Hamam Al Alil
MOMD
-
Under construction
4,000
Sal.
Al Sh'hamah
MOMD
-
Under construction
2,500
Sal.
Al-Alam 2 (MoMD)
Nin.
**Ninewa Goverment
Shikhan
Telafar Tilkaif
Zelikan (new)
ZONE 2 Tilkef
Piran (Nargizlia 3) Qaymawa (former Zelikan)
Mosul
Amalla
Nargizlia 1 Nargizlia 2
Hasansham U3
Hasansham U2
Ninewa
Hamam Al Alil
Hamdaniya
4
Qayyarah Airstrip
Sal.
Basateen Al Sheuokh
Nin.
Haj Ali
FULL
4,680
UNDP
-
Under construction
2,500
IOM
-
Under construction
2,100
Nin=Ninewa; Sul=Sulaymaniyah; Sal=Salah al-Din
Chamakor
ZONE 1 Surdesh
Mosul
150km
ZONE 4
Erbil
*Islamic Kurdish League
2,320
IOM
Khazer M1
As Salamyiah
Emergency Sites Nin.
Hasansham M2 (former Kazer M2)
Bartella
36km
Makhmur
Hatra Full Ready to receive
Qayyarah Airstrip Qayyarah Jad’ah
Haj Ali
Suitable/Constr.
Occupied:
22,172 Plots
(125,602 People )
Available:
6,867 Plots
(41,202 People)
41,362 Plots
(248,172 People)
Under Construction Or Planned:
1
For planning purposes one plot = one family of 6 individuals. This relationship may vary depending on familiy size and preferences. Creation date: 8 Jan 2017 Sources: OCHA, GoI, CCCM cluster, 1IOM DTM Info: johnston@unhcr.org
To be assessed No access 20 Km
Basateen
Salah Al Sheuokh al-Din Shirqat
Al-Alam 2 (MoDM) Al Sh’hamah
80km
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. The information reflected in this infographic is constantly changing and captures information available at the moment of production.
BACK IRAQ: People currently displaced by Mosul military operations
Derig Tilkef
Red Valley village
(as of 03 January 2017)
Qaymawa (Zelikan) camp
Al-Maghfera Village
840 2,100
1,830
Baybokht
48 To
Mamilian camp (Akre)
5,598
Bashiqa
Mosul
11,550
Bartellla
Hasansham U3 Hasansham U2
60
30,030
Al Hamdaniyah
Within Telafar
Hamam al `Alil
From Muhalabiya
Khazer M1
32,892
Namrod
600
Ninewa 420
Shura
1,500
Sayyid Hamad village
Ibrahim Alkhalil village Gwer 900
Um Kdor 1,440
10,806
Qayyarah Jad’ah
Legend
IDP site Displacement
732
21,540
462
Qayyarah Centre
4,578
Qayyarah Airstrip
294
Al Qadissiya (Tikrit) Tal-Al Sibaat Village (Al-Alam) Markaz Tikrit
228
Bzeibiz camp (Fallujah)
216 120
Ameriyat al Falluja camp Kilo 18 (Ramadi)
444
To Baghdad
78
Makhmur
Al Haj ‘Ali
From Altal (Hatra)
10km
Main road
Debaga Reception Center
Displacement to other locations
114
xx IDPs post 17 October 2016 Displacement route post 17 October 2016 River
Daratu (BanslawaKasnazan)
Al-Adla village
Al-Hood 810
12 To
Erbil
People currently displaced by Mosul military operations since 17 October 2016 Displacement by type of shelter
88% Camps/Emergency Sites
Private arrangements
11% 1% In critical shelter conditions*
*IDPs currently living in unfinished/abandoned buildings, school buildings, religious buildings and other informal settlements
Displacement by location
Displacement over time Thousands
120,000 100,000 80,000
140
129,642
120 100 80
60,000
60
40,000
40
20,000
Daratu
Dano Village
Mamilian Camp
Tikrit
Baghdad
Bzeibiz camp
Ameriyat al Falluja
Debaga Camp
Sayyid Hamad village
Al Haj 'Ali
Kubaiba village
Derig
Al-Hood Village
Ibrahim Alkhalil Village
Um Kdor
Al-Adla Village
Baybokht
AL-Maghfera Village
Qayyarah…
Qayyarah Airstrip
Qaymawa(Zelikan)
Qayyarah…
Hasansham U3
Khazer M1
Hasansham M2
20
-
0
19-Oct-16 21-Oct-16 23-Oct-16 25-Oct-16 27-Oct-16 29-Oct-16 31-Oct-16 2-Nov-16 4-Nov-16 6-Nov-16 8-Nov-16 10-Nov-16 12-Nov-16 14-Nov-16 16-Nov-16 18-Nov-16 20-Nov-16 22-Nov-16 24-Nov-16 26-Nov-16 28-Nov-16 30-Nov-16 2-Dec-16 4-Dec-16 6-Dec-16 8-Dec-16 10-Dec-16 12-Dec-16 14-Dec-16 16-Dec-16 18-Dec-16 20-Dec-16 22-Dec-16 24-Dec-16 26-Dec-16 28-Dec-16 30-Dec-16 1-Jan-17 3-Jan-17
140,000
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations Creation date: 03 Jan. 2017 Sources: OCHA, CCCM and IOM DTM Feedback: iraqinfo@un.org iraq@humanitarianresponse.info www.reliefweb.int
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Iraq: Mosul Humanitarian Response
Situation Report No. 15 (2 January - 8 January 2017)
This report is produced by OCHA Iraq in collaboration with humanitarian partners. Due to the rapidly changing situation, it is possible that the numbers and locations listed in this report may no longer be current at the time of reading. The next report will be issued on or around 16 January 2017.
Highlights •
135,500 people are currently displaced as a result of conflict in Mosul city that began on 17 October 2017, an increase of nearly 10,000 people in the last week. Some 15,700 returnees and hundreds of thousands of highly vulnerable residents in newly-accessible areas also require humanitarian assistance.
•
Trauma casualties remain extremely high, particularly near frontline areas. In the last week, 683 people were referred from eastern Mosul city to hospitals in Erbil and Dahuk. In the previous week, some 817 trauma cases required referral to hospitals, with most of these injuries occurring just after fighting intensified at the end of December.
•
On 8 January, an NGO opened a 50 bed field hospital in Bartalah yesterday, to provide triage, surgery and secondary care. This is the nearest hospital to frontline areas and will relieve some of the pressure placed on Erbil’s emergency hospitals.
•
This week distributions by humanitarian partners in eastern Mosul city reached 50,000 people with ready-to-eat food, water and hygiene items.
475,000
People received emergency response packages of food, water and hygiene items (since 17 October)
419,000
People received food to last one month (since 17 October)
136,000
People currently displaced by fighting in Mosul city (since 17 October)
299,000
Medical consultations have been provided (since 17 October)
112,000
People currently displaced to camps and emergency sites
7,700
plots are available now for new arrivals in camps and emergency sites
Situation Overview On 29 December, military operations in Mosul City intensified causing, over the following five days, a corresponding increase in the scale of newly displaced people in eastern Mosul city. On 2 January, some 4,000 people were displaced in one day from eastern Mosul city; one of the largest daily movements of people since the beginning of the crisis. Since 3 January, displacement numbers have returned to an average of approximately 1,000 people per day. Newly displaced people are largely moving to the south and east, where camps run by government and humanitarian partners are taking in the new arrivals and further humanitarian assistance is provided. People are also seeking shelter with friends and family members in neighborhoods further east of frontline areas, such as Gogchaly.
www.unocha.org The mission of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) is to mobilize and coordinate effective and principled humanitarian action in partnership with national and international actors. Coordination Saves Lives