Iraq Humanitarian Dashboard May 2017

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IRAQ: Humanitarian Dashboard (May 2017) OVERVIEW

The humanitarian crisis in Iraq remains complex with multiple, unpredictable and volatile dynamics impacting civilians. The pace of displacement, and return, is one of the fastest on recent record. Since military operations began in Mosul in October 2016, about 780,000 people have been displaced from their homes, including over 600,000 people who have been forced to flee from the western neighbourhoods of Mosul city alone. More than 322,000 people are currently sheltering in emergency sites and camps around Mosul while an estimated 288,000 people are staying with families, friends or being hosted by local communities. Humanitarian partners are working to expand camps and ensure people receive emergency supplies and are assisted as they move and settle in safer areas. Humanitarian partners continue to mobilize funding: as of 18 June, the 2017 Humanitarian response Plan (HRP) for Iraq, requesting US$985 million, has received US$414.4 million, amounting to a funding coverage of 42.1 per cent. In May, Mosul humanitarian operations continued to focus on the people in West Mosul, mustering/screening points, camps and out-of-camp settings. Protection of civilians in the old city remained the main concern. There has been an increasing number of people displaced from Western Anbar. There are concerns about discriminatory treatment of families of persons suspected of being affiliated or sympathetic to certain armed groups. Partners also focused on contingency activities for people in need in Hawiga.

KEY FIGURES

PEOPLE IN NEED (PIN)1

FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS

11M in need

US$985M requested

total

56% REACHED

total

by age

Food Sec. Shelter-NFI WASH Health Protection Education MPCA EL 20.0 18.7 CCCM RRM 18.0 CCS 16.1 Logistics 11.9 ETC 2.7

Elderly 5% Children

Adults 45%

REACHED VS TARGETED2

50%

Source: 2017 HRP

69.9

109.6 106.8

139.2

175.3

235.0

PEOPLE REACHED

PEOPLE TARGETED

61.4

6.2M

3.5M Source: ActivityInfo

Source: 2017 HRP

FUNDING

US$414.1M funding received

42% coverage

total

CCS Health Protection Emergency Livelihoods Shelter - NFI WASH Education MPCA Food Security Logistics CCCM 2.3 RRM 0 ETC 0

funding

Funded (%)

Gap (%)

75 51.3

25

2017 HRP funding

48.7

44.9

55.1

37.1

62.9

24.4

75.6

23.6

76.4

22.8

77.2

19

58%

81

16.8

83.2

9.7

90.3

9.5

90.5

42% funded

42%

Received Unmet

97.7 100

20

Source: FTS - 18 June 2017

40

60

80

Source: FTS - 18 June 2017

100

DONOR CONTRIBUTIONS

US$414.1M total funding received $90.2M $77.4M $58.8M

$52.5M

$49.2M

$39.9M

USA

Germany

Source: FTS - 18 June 2017

European Commission

Japan

Canada

$15.3M

$11.7M

$10M

$8.9M

United Kingdom

Sweden

Central Emergency Response Fund

France

Others

RESPONSE

124 partners reached 3.5M people in 227 geographical locations

People reached

Partner interventions People reached per governorate 1.5M-2.9M 1.2M-1.4M 0.8M-1.1M 0.2M-0.7M 0.1M

124 partners

Number of partners 21-73 2-20 1

Partner area coverage

106

Out of camp

Reporting agencies

100

Camp

one partner can be working in camp and out of camp settings Source: ActivityInfo

Source: ActivityInfo

Source: ActivityInfo

1. People in need is a subset of total affected population identified by the clusters in the Humanitarian Needs Overview (HNO). 2. The target population is calculated based on strict prioritisation that addresses multi-sector or multiple needs, focusing on vulnerability rather than status. Creation date: 18 June 2017 Source: Clusters Feedback: ocha.iraq@un.org www.unocha.org/iraq www.reliefweb.int https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords


FOOD SECURITY

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017) Contact Information: info.iraq@fscluster.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Millions of people in Iraq are food insecure, and rely heavily on assistance. As soon as they are accessible, Food Security Cluster partners prioritise the most vulnerable food-insecure families for the provision of emergency food and agricultural assistance. Other priority activities include facilitating access to food and restoring agricultural assets in priority locations. The cluster seeks to strengthen food-related social protection mechanisms and key agricultural production systems. Needs 1. Populations along the displacement route need immediate access to life-saving food assistance and continuation of support in camps and other formal sites. 2. Emergency livestock support and animal health services in newly accessible areas, focusing on the protection of productive assets and prevention of zoonotic and animal pathogenic diseases. 3. Increase in complementary livelihood assistance focusing on income generation activities, Cash for Work (CFW) or domestic production. Response 1. The cluster reached 559,697 people with in-kind food assistance for the Mosul response in May. 2. Elsewhere in Iraq’s 18 Governorates, the Cluster provided in-kind food assistance to 1,017,762 people. 3. Food assistance through cash-based-transfers was provided to a total of 327,818 individuals in five Governorates (Dahuk, Erbil, Ninewa, Salah Al-Din and Sulaymaniyah). 4. 519 individuals received livelihoods training and technical services. 5. Following assessments in the Kirkuk, Ninewa and Salah al-Din Governorates, plans have been developed to enhance livelihoods for crisis-affected communities in these areas.

FUNDING Required Received

$235 m $39.4 m

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted People reached

PEOPLE

Number of people reached 742K-1.2M 286K-741K 1-285K

reached*

3.2 m 2.8 m 3.7 m

People reached from January to May 2017

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

Reporting Agencies May 2017

Progress Gap Response

May 2017 *For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

PARTNERS 18

Number of partners 5-13 2-4 1 0

partners

May 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN MAY 2017

May 2017

1.9

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

1,577,459 328,337 0

The cumulative figure includes possible double-counting across types of assistance and caseloads, due to fluid population movement as a result of a constantly changing environment. It also includes WFP Immediate Response Rations distributed through Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM) partners.


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017 )

HEALTH

Contact Information: khanmu@who.int, kolleri@InternationalMedicalCorps.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview More than 9.7 million people living in hard-to-reach areas are in critical need of essential healthcare services, while displacements continue from conflict-affected locations. Needs 1. Mass casualty management, trauma/non-trauma emergency referrals, life-saving and non-communicable diseases (NCD) medicines/supplies and health personnel deployment to sites of operation. 2. Identification and containment of potential communicable disease outbreaks. EDUCATION SHELTER/NFI FOOD SECURITY Response The Cluster supported newly-accessible areas with static and mobile medical people services, while supporting public health centrespeople (PHC) people needbeing monitored in an attempt to fill gaps in referral in need services. in need services in camps; ambulancesinare

3.5M

3.9M

x,xxx,xxx

FUNDING

targeted

1,677,483

PEOPLE

targeted (In Need/Target/Reached)

xxx,xxx

assisted $109.6 m

Required % assisted (of targeted population) $56.2 m Received

3.2M

x,xxx,xxx

PEOPLE

Number of people targeted reached

reached*

89K-482K 680-88K 1-679 0

297,876

xxx,xxx

assisted

9.7 m People in need % assisted 6.2 m People targeted People reached (of targeted 3.1 mpopulation)

assisted

% assisted (of targeted population)

People reached from January to May 2017

HEALTH

CCCM*

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 9.7M people in need TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE 6,234,439

Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk % assisted Diyala (of targeted population) Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk MPCA** Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

Reporting Agencies May 2017

*For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

Response

targeted

734,896 assisted

PROTECTION

Gap 1.3M

targeted

PARTNERS

people in need

5.2M

6-11 1-5 0

% assisted (of targeted population)

May 2017

people in need

xxx,xxx assisted

6.3M

2,000,000

targeted

May 2017

% assisted (of targeted population)

xxx,xxx assisted

people in need

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE

IN MAY 2017 x,xxx,xxx

targeted

assisted

Number of partners

WASH

x,xxx,xxx xxx,xxx

3,350,000

xx%

assisted

people in need

targeted 12-22

xxx,xxx % assisted (of targeted population)

8.7M

33 partners

EL&SC***

2.2M

% assisted (of targeted population)

May 2017

Progress

3.1

million people

targeted

First line Second line cluster %Full assisted

(of targeted population)

348,579 1,000,000 1,853,306 assisted 915,671


WASH*

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017) Contact Information: zmdurrani@unicef.org, asif.mahmood@iq.missions-acf.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The Cluster continues to provide services to the populations in camps, off-camps, transit and mustering points. Limited accessibility in some parts of Western Mosul, availability of clean drinking water, limited funding and high numbers of displaced persons continues to be the main challenges. Needs 1. Sufficient water supplies to meet increased demand due to seasonal variations and use of air water coolers, water treatment supplies, sufficient capacity of water treatment units and installation/rehabilitation of water sources. 2. Humanitarian actors need to support care and maintenance of IDP camps. 3. The cluster needs to preposition supplies for Cholera prevention/response. Response Safe drinking water provided to 101,796 people and 897,186 people through tankering and municipal/public water networks respectively. The cluster reached 76,369 people with hygiene messaging on diarrhea, scabies and cholera. It also distributed WASH NFI kits to 44,971 people. * Water, Sanitation and Hygiene

FUNDING Required Received

$109.6 m $32.9 m

PEOPLE

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted People reached

Number of people reached 95K-1M 1.4K-94K 1-1.3K 0

reached*

6.3 m 3.5 m 3.1 m

People reached from January to May 2017

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

Reporting Agencies May 2017

Progress Gap Response

May 2017 *For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

PARTNERS 47 partners

Number of partners 10-33 3-9 1-2 0

May 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN MAY 2017

3.1

May 2017

million people

KEY INDICATORS

Reached

First line Second line Full cluster

923,474 593,406 280,335

Gap

Target

# of men, women, boys and girls with access to continued, improved, equitable, safe, sufficient and appropriate water supply

44%

56%

2,211,605

# of men, women, boys and girls with access to continued, improved, more equitable, safe, sufficient and appropriate sanitation facilities and living in a hygienic environment

11%

89%

1,294,783

25%

75%

1,294,783

# of men, women, boys and girls with access to continued, more equitable, sufficient and appropriate core hygiene items and improved hygiene practice

People reached from January to May 2017


SHELTER/NFI*

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017) Contact Information: nicolini@unhcr.org, coord.iraq@sheltercluster.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The cluster has prioritised the provision of first and second line responses to displaced people in and out of camps. The cluster is also continuing the promotion of cash and vouchers as a preferred modality for NFIs and basic shelter repair. Sustainable and appropriate activities to ensure shelters are cool in summer are ongoing. Needs 1. Cluster partners have started their summer response in both camps and out of camps settings. Limited funds force organizations to prioritize; this makes proper coordination of paramount importance. Coordination facilitates effective targeting; it avoids overlapping and enables interventions in hard to reach areas. 2. The needs of people that have settled inside and outside of camp settings for shading areas and summerisation assistance have increased exponentially. People fleeing west Mosul are arriving in camps with little items and need clothing, shoes and adequate shelter. Response 1. 121,404 individuals were assisted with NFI kits including shelter interventions. 2. In first line response, 118,122 individuals were assisted with NFI kits including shelter interventions, across the country. 3. 14,724 individuals benefited from shelter upgrade and basic shelters repair interventions including critical life-saving non-food items replenishment in second line response. 4. 3,324 individuals where assisted with durable shelter repair options in the full cluster response. * Shelter and Non-Food Items

FUNDING Required Received

$175.3 m $42.8 m

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached) People in need People targeted People reached

PEOPLE

Number of people reached 19K-105K 181-18K 1-180 0

reached*

3.9 m 2.3 m 1.1 m

People reached from January to May 2017

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

Reporting Agencies May 2017

May 2017

Progress Gap Response

*For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

PARTNERS 22

Number of partners 5-14 4 1-3 0

partners

May 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN MAY 2017

May 2017

0.1

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

118,122 14,724 3,324


PROTECTION

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017) Contact Information: koek@unhcr.org, co-coordinator.protection@drciraq.dk

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview There are concerns about increasing discriminatory treatment of families of persons suspected of being affiliated or sympathetic to certain armed groups. There is lack of some basic services resulting in negative coping mechanisms and increased CP and GBV. Needs 1. There are significant needs for child protection services and gender-based violence (GBV) case management services for children and women, and specialized assistance for persons with specific needs (elderly at risk, and persons with disabilities) 2. There is a need for people to be physically safe, to be able to move freely, to exercise their right of return and to be protected from involunEDUCATION SHELTER/NFI FOOD SECURITY tary forced return. 3. Humanitarian principles needpeople to be consistently applied. people people Response in need in need in need 1. Mobile protection teams have been deployed in various governorates, including Ninewa as part of Mosul response. 2. A total of 223,396 children and women have received child and GBV protection services and assistance. targeted legal assistance on land tenure. targeted targeted 3. A total of 256 families received 4. A total of 430,894 m² of land cleared of ERW contamination.

3.5M

3.9M

x,xxx,xxx

1,677,483

x,xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

297,876

xxx,xxx

FUNDING

% assisted (of targeted population) Required Received

PEOPLE % assisted

assisted

$106.8 m

HEALTH

$47.9 m

9.7M

people in need

3.9 m People in need People targeted CCCM* 2.3 m 0.9 m People reached

1.3M

May 2017

Progress

assisted

x,xxx,xxx

*For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

Response

xxx,xxx assisted

PARTNERS 58

xx%

partners

% assisted (of targeted population)

people in need

3,350,000 targeted

xxx,xxx

Number of partners

assisted12-38 10-11 5-8 2-4 1

WASH

5.2M

x,xxx,xxx

6.3M

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

targeted

targeted

xxx,xxx

assisted

8.7M

May 2017

EL&SC*** people in need

115K-405K 701-114K 1-700

reached* (of targeted population)

people in need

Gap targeted

% assisted (of targeted population)

Number of people assisted reached

PEOPLE % assisted

PROTECTION

People reached from January to May 2017

734,896

2.2M

Reporting Agencies

assisted

(In Need/Target/Reached) (of targeted population)

6,234,439 PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 targeted TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon % assisted Baghdad (of targeted population) Basrah Dahuk Diyala MPCA** Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din % assisted Sulaymaniyah (of targeted population) Thi-Qar Wassit

3.2M

people in need

2,000,000 targeted

May 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE xxx,xxx 1,000,000 JANUARY TO MAY 2017 % assisted (of targeted population) May 2017

assisted

0.9

million people

% assisted (of targeted population)

First line Second line Full cluster

assisted

467,774 357,611 40,206


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017)

EDUCATION

Contact Information: kanoble@unicef.org, abdirisak.aden@savethechildren.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview IDPs are returning to areas that are newly accessible. Some schools in these newly accessible areas have reopened, for example in Western Mosul over 50 schools reopened. There is growing concern over children missing school or not having enough learning time and lacking learning materials. Needs 1. Rehabilitation of schools and textbooks especially for the new curriculum to enable schools and teachers offer quality emergency education. 2. Advocacy against delays in payment of teacher salaries and use of learning spaces as shelter by displaced families. EDUCATION SHELTER/NFI SECURITY 3. Risk education for schools in newly accessible areas. Students and teachers should be provided withFOOD knowledge about explosive hazards. people people people 4. Catch-up classes and remedial education over the coming summer months to in ensure and in need need children are properly prepared for the exams in need 2017 academic year. Response x,xxx,xxx 1,677,483 x,xxx,xxx 1. 54,000 boys and girls (3-17 years) benefitted from formal classrooms rehabilitated. targeted targeted targeted 2. Over 45,000 boys and girls were re-integrated into formal education through non-formal programmes (including accelerated learning programmes or other catch-up classes). 3. Psychosocial support was provided to over 10,000 students and teachers. xxx,xxx xxx,xxx 4. Emergency learning supplies were distributed to over 22,000 school-aged297,876 IDP children.

3.5M

% assisted (of targeted population)

3.9M

assisted

Received

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached)

$15.9 m

People in need People targeted People reached

1.3M

3.7 m 1.45 m 0.8 m

6,234,439People reached from January to May 2017

% assisted (of targeted population)

Anbar Babylon Baghdad MPCA** Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf % Ninewa assisted (of targeted population) Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

targeted

Progress Gap

% assisted (of targeted population)

8.7M

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

targeted

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS 734,896 BY GOVERNORATE assisted

assisted Response

PARTNERS

% assisted (of targeted population)

xxx,xxx % assisted (of targeted population)

assisted

May 2017

42%

People reached from January to May 2017

Gap Target 44% 900,000 58% 250,000

people in need

targeted May 2017

1,000,000

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE assisted % assisted IN MAY 2017 (of targeted population)

0.1

Reached 56%

Number of partners 11-18 8-10 4-7 1-3 0

2,000,000

targeted

xxx,xxx

# of children (3-17 years, boys/girls) receiving textbooks, teaching and learning materials, and school supplies # of children (5-17 years, g/b) enrolled in non-formal education programmes

assisted

6.3M

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

targeted

KEY INDICATORS

xxx,xxx

WASH

x,xxx,xxx

assisted

xx%

79 partners

5.2M

people in need

targeted

*For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

xxx,xxx

people in need

3,350,000 May 2017

EL&SC***

2.2M

Number of people reached 166K-335K 14K-165K 1-13K 0

reached* PROTECTION

CCCM* m 9.7M$69.9people in need

assisted

% assisted (of targeted population)

PEOPLE

HEALTH Required

assisted

% assisted (of targeted population)

FUNDING

3.2M

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

35,745 47,331 50,524


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017)

CCCM*

Contact Information: mpereira@iom.int

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Displacement continues and 806,469 people are assessed by the cluster partners to be in the formal sites and 409,200 people in informal sites. Needs 1. Camp living conditions continue to be monitored monthly through active camp management structures. The top four priorities are to ensure seasonally appropriate accommodation, food, medical care, and employment opportunities. 2. A total of 41 RRASP assessments were conducted identifying needs of more than 427 families. Response EDUCATION SHELTER/NFI FOOD SECURITY 1. The camp capacity continues to exist in more than 10 camps across the Mosul operation area. 2. The cluster rolled out the national in camps and more than 66% of camps provided data. people monthly monitoring report of living conditions people people need in need Water availability limitationsininneed camps over the next months are a concern andincoordination with WASH, Shelter/NFI and Health clusters is ongoing to mitigate disease vectors and assure dignified living conditions. 3. More than 30,000 awareness brochures on scabies is prepared and awareness actions are implemented in the camps via thex,xxx,xxx Hygiene x,xxx,xxx 1,677,483 Promotion Working Group. A similar campaign to raise awareness on snake and scorpion risk is being prepared. targeted targeted targeted

3.5M

3.9M

3.2M

* Camp Coordination and Camp Management

FUNDING xxx,xxx % assisted (of targeted population) Required $18.7 m Received

assisted

$1.8 m

HEALTH

PEOPLE

297,876 (In Need/Target/Reached)

1.3M

Progress

TARGETS 6,234,439 BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon Baghdad % assisted Basrah (of targetedDahuk population) Diyala Erbil MPCA** Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah % assisted Thi-Qar (of targeted population) Wassit

assisted

x,xxx,xxx xxx,xxx

% assisted (of targeted population)

people in need

8.7M

targeted

7 partners

Number of partners 3-4 2 1 0

xxx,xxx

xx%

assisted

people in need

3,350,000

PARTNERS

assisted

% assisted (of targeted population)

EL&SC***

2.2M

PROTECTION

people *For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit in need https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

targeted Response

734,896

reached*

May 2017

Gap

targeted

Number of people reached 141K-320K 2K-140K assisted 1-1K

xxx,xxx

% assisted (of targeted population)

People reached from January to May 2017 CCCM*

people 9.7M need PROGRESS inAGAINST 2017

Reporting Agencies

assisted

% assisted (of targeted population) 2.7 m People in need 0.9 m People targeted 1.3 m People reached*

PEOPLE

WASH

5.2M

people in need

6.3M

May 2017

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

x,xxx,xxx 2,000,000 PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE

xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

targeted

assisted

targeted

% assisted (of targeted population) May 2017

assisted

FROM JANUARY TO MAY 2017

1.3

million people

First line Second line %Full assisted cluster

(of targeted population)

KEY INDICATOR(S) # of people provided with daily services in camps managed by CCCM partners

targeted

01,000,000 0assisted 1,299,192

Reached

People reached from January to May 2017

Target 153% 450,000


EMERGENCY LIVELIHOODS

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017) Contact Information: gozde.avci@undp.org, livelihoods.cash.coordinator@drciraq.dk

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview IDPs displaced for protracted periods, and the communities which host them are most affected by livelihoods needs. Over 5.2 million people need livelihoods assistance across Iraq based on the cluster analysis. Host community individuals – specifically those that are less educated or working within the informal sector – are especially vulnerable to livelihoods losses due to the crisis. Cluster partners continue to respond to needs in areas of high tension by providing short- to mid-term income generating opportunities targeting displaced and returnee communities. In Hammam al Alil, the IDPs in camp and off camp have contributed to market revitalization, given that this has been the most active market outside West Mosul, and people used to come out of Mosul to purchase their needs from Hammam al Alil and return. Currently, main goods and services here are available. Due to security limitations, irrigation for the arable lands in the area near the Tigris river is not allowed. Needs 1. Trainings to reduce the gap between labour market demands and skills among displaced persons in Dohuk and Erbil. Vocational trainings are also needed in Duhok. 2. Host community and IDPs in Shirqat need livelihoods opportunities. 3. Income Generation opportunities for people in Eastern Mosul, Nimrud and Gwer. 4. In Hammam al Alil, lack of cash transfer service to provide Hewala means the closest is Areej and Qayyara. Response 1. A total of 2,780 beneficiaries were reached in May 2017: 43% in Duhok, 9% in Ninawa, 16% in Erbil, 22% in Baghdad and 10% in Diyala. Among them, 302 individuals accessing temporary employment opportunities or cash for work, 1,636 gaining professional skills or attending business development training courses, 55 businesses accessing asset recovery or replacement/grants, 147 people found sustainable employment, and 640 small businesses with small-grants/micro-finance.

FUNDING Required Received

$20 m $7.4 m

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached) People in need People targeted 0.159 m People reached 0.012m

PEOPLE

Number of people reached 552-1.5K 51-552 1-50 0

reached*

5.2 m

People reached from January to May 2017

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

Reporting Agencies May 2017

Progress Gap Response

May 2017 *For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

PARTNERS 7

partners

Number of partners 3-4 2 1 0

May 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN MAY 2017 May 2017

0.003 million people

First line Second line Full cluster

0 0 2,780


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (APRIL 2017)

MPCA*

Contact Information: savagea@unhcr.org, gelkhoury@mercycorps.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Multi-Purpose Cash Assistance (MPCA) partners are working to ensure that newly displaced vulnerable households from Ninewah, Anbar and Salah al Din have the ability to meet their basic needs. Partners distribute one-off emergency cash assistance to vulnerable displaced families, and up to three months of assistance to highly vulnerable displaced, host community, returnee and stayee households. Household use this cash assistance to meet a range of urgent, basic needs. Needs 1. Vulnerable households displaced as a consequence of military operations to retake Mosul, as well as those displaced from Hawiga and West Anbar require urgent life-saving assistance to meet their basic needs while residing outside of camps. 2. Vulnerable households without the legal documents required to access government social safety net systems, such as the Public Distribution System (PDS) card, require the assistance of legal actors in order to replace missing documents. Cash Working Group (CWG) actors refer households to legal actors across Iraq. Response 1. A total of 1,407 households (8,442 individuals) received 560,140,000 IQD (550,000 USD) in multi-purpose cash assistance across Iraq in May 2017.

* Muli-purpose Cash Assistance

Required Received

$ 61.4 m $11.6 m

PARTNERS

PEOPLE

FUNDING

4

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted People reached

partners

2.2 m 0.4 m 0.03 m

People reached from January to May 2017

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

Progress Gap Response May 2017

Reporting Agencies May 2017

May 2017

Number of partners 2 1 0


RRM*

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017) Contact Information: mgemezuluo@unicef.org, aalyaseen@unicef.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview 806,000 people including 443,404 children have been displaced from Mosul over the last six months. Western Mosul has contributed more than 78% of the total displacement since the second phase began on February 19th, 2017. Western Mosul operation has been characterized by massive displacements which have in turn meant, a number of mustering points and screening sites been established. Security concerns have resulted in limited access by humanitarian actors. Needs 1. Assistance for new waves of displacement transiting from Baaj and Telafar to Hammam al Alil. 2. RRM assistance also needed for IDPs transiting through Hammam al Alil screening site, and to Khazer, Hassansham, Haji Ali camps, Qayyarah Airstrip emergency site. 3. There need for urgent supply of adequate safe water at mustering points or checkpoints to prevent dehydration. Response RRM partners distributed 79, 128 emergency packages benefitting 418, 180 people including 230, 000 children (117, 300 girls and 112,470 boys). Compared to April, there has been a decrease of 31% of displaced people receiving RRM. The majority of the displaced people (94 percent) reached with RRM kits were in Ninewa (393,510 people) followed by Erbil (11, 920 people), Salah al-Din (6, 399 people), Anbar (4,577 people), Kirkuk (861 people), and Baghdad (913 people). With multiple movements, people fleeing the conflict may be reached by the RRM consortium more than once during the course of their displacement, including at mustering points, then at a screening site with an initial package, and then with the full package once they arrive at an emergency camp or when they arrive in host communities. A total of 1,752,005 people (including 963,603 children) have been reached since January. * Rapid Response Mechanism

FUNDING Required $ 61.4 m Received $ 0.4 m

PEOPLE

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted 0.4 m People reached 1.6 m

reached

2.2 m

Number of partners 24K-377K 789-23K 1-788 0

People reached from January to May 2017

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

Progress

Gap Response

May 2017

PARTNERS 6 Total partners

May 2017

May 2017

Reporting Agencies May 2017

Number of partners 3-4 2 1 0


LOGISTICS

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017) Contact Information: julie.vanderwiel@wfp.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The Logistics Cluster facilitates access to sufficient and reliable logistics services to the humanitarian community. The Cluster also maintains a crucial coordination and information management role to maximise the use of available resources in-country, providing support and advocating for customs clearance and government liaison. Needs 1. Humanitarian actors lack sufficient storage capacity for prepositioning contingency stocks in areas close to emergency sites. 2. There is a continued need for logistics coordination and information due to the unpredictable operational scenario and the movement of IDPs throughout several governorates under different authorities. Response 1. Common storage is available in 17 locations, with 3 new hubs set up and made available in May. 2. The Cluster is currently loaning 15 Mobile Storage Units (MSUs) to 8 different organizations to expand their own storage capacities in key operational areas. 3. At least 5 coordination meetings held in Baghdad, Erbil and Dahuk and 22 information management documents published on the Iraq Logistics Cluster website in May. This brings the total to 80 information management products (including in Arabic and/or Kurdish) since the beginning of 2017.

FUNDING

COMMON STORAGE

ORGANIZATIONS

capacity (in M²)

(Targeted/supported)

Ninewa

Required

$11.9 m

Received

$1.15 m

2 Partners in appeal 75 Organizations supported 48 INGOs, 13 NNGOs, 8 UN agencies 6 Government agencies

11,080

Erbil Salah Al-Din Dahuk Baghdad

6,300 3,400 2,773 2,000

MAY 2017 UPDATE 25,553m2 Common storage available 4,326m3 ⁄ 1,197mt Cargo received in May 2017 61m3 ⁄ 11mt Cargo transported in May 2017 on behalf of 13 organizations

ETC *

Contact Information: edisher.giorgadze@wfp.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The Emergency Telecommunications Cluster (ETC) helps to establish vital telecommunications services for humanitarian partners in key operational locations. Needs 1. Humanitarians require training on security telecommunications and internet connectivity services in emergency sites/camps to facilitate their work as part of the Mosul response. 2. Communities in refugee and IDP camps and other emergency sites require access to vital communications services. Response 1. Life-saving communications services including security telecommunications and internet connectivity have been provided in ten sites. 2. Equipment has been pre-positioned and pre-configured to enable immediate deployment to new emergency locations. * Emergency Telecommunications Cluster

FUNDING Required $2.7 m Received $1.47 m

ORGANIZATIONS (Targeted)

146 Organizations targeted 1Partner in appeal


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (MAY 2017)

CCS*

Contact Information: strangio@un.org, ncciraq@ncciraq.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The humanitarian situation continues to be volatile, with mass displacement of civilians resulting from ongoing military operations. At the same time, in retaken areas, IDPs have been returning. Needs 1. Humanitarian partners require up-to-date data on displacement and returns. 2. Effective national and sub-national coordination fora enabling a rapid life-saving response. 3. Connect people in need with service providers to further promote the accountability to affected population. Response 1. CCS members effectively shared real-time data on displacement, needs, gaps and security alerts, enabling the works of humanitarian partners. 2. Different coordination fora such as the HCT and ICCG facilitated a coordinated humanitarian response.

* Coordination and Common Services

Calls received through the call centre

FUNDING Required

Governorate 530 not speciďŹ ed

$16.1 m

Received

$12.1 m

Total calls per governorate 3,200

KEY INDICATORS MAY 2017 Number of IM Products

20

Number of calls to the IICC

7,416

% closed cases

100%

530

125% 185% 100%

Source of calls Out-of-camp

Camp

Gap Archieved

PROGRESS MAY 2017

1 1

Humanitarian Bulletin

Reports (weekly, bi-weekly, monthly)

Snapshot

29

Datasets created

Reporting Agencies

1 6 55

Factsheet

Maps produced

OCHA REACH UNOPS INSO IMMAP IOM-DTM

1 11

Governorate profile Dashboards

124

Daily Security Alerts


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