IRAQ: Humanitarian Snapshot (as of 30 June 2018) OVERVIEW OF NEEDS2
OVERVIEW The return of displaced families to their areas of origin in Iraq continues whereby the rate of return countrywide is slowing down. Since the beginning of 2018, 684,000 Iraqis have returned home while approximately 2 million Iraqis remain displaced as of 30 June. During June, there were 75,000 returnees of whom 64 per cent (47,000 people) returned to Ninewa governorate. This rate of return is in line with the overall 2018 trend by governorate, where returns to Ninewa represent 72 per cent (489,000) of all returnees, followed with significantly smaller numbers by Salah al-Din with 12 per cent and Anbar with 7 per cent. Compared with the number of returnees in May, the number of displaced people who returned home in June decreased by approximately 44,000 which represents 37 per cent reduction. The highest reduction in returns was in Ninewa governorate with 52 per cent (52,000 people) followed by Diyala with 75 per cent (1,000 people).
TURKEY
2018 RETURNEES
DAHUK
(1 January to 30 June 2018)
NINEWA
XXX 2018 returnees by governorate
ERBIL
4K
489K
KIRKUK
SYRIA
SALAH AL-DIN
84K
RETURNS TREND BY GOVERNORATE1
IRAN
MISSAN
THI-QAR
Kirkuk
0.3M
Baghdad Erbil Dahuk
0.08M 0.04M
Diyala
0.2M
May-Dec 17
Jan-18
Feb-18
Mar-18
Apr-18
May-18
Jun-18
780
Ninewa monthly returns (Jan to Jun 2018) 84K
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
MUTHANNA 47K
SAUDI ARABIA KUWAIT
May
IDPs who live outside camps
1.4m
Highly vulnerable people in host communities
3.8m
Returnees for 2018
0.7m
55% funding received
45% funding gap
US$467M total funding to Iraq as of 5 July 2018 BASRAH
99K 38K
2.0m
total funding required funding received as of 5 July 2018
NAJAF
107K
Internally displaced persons (IDPs)
US$569M US$312M
JORDAN
114K
3.4m
OVERVIEW OF FUNDING3
WASSIT KERBALA BABYLON
QADISSIYA
0.5M
People targeted for assistance
2K
Ninewa Salah al-Din
8.7m
BAGHDAD
51K
1.4M 1.2M
DIYALA
4K
ANBAR
Anbar
SULAYMANIYAH
49K
People in need
Jun
HRP
Outside HRP
67%
33%
The Humanitarian Response Plan has received US$313 million in donor contributions, out of the requested $569 million. While the response plan has received 55 per cent of its target, funding levels across clusters vary. Special attention is therefore required to avoid gaps in the planned humanitarian response across clusters and governorates.
DISPLACEMENT AND RETURNS TREND1 3.83 3.90 3.42 3.33 3.31 3.32 3.37 3.34 3.64 3.71 3.35 3.30 3.26 3.28 3.18 3.18 3.21 3.20 3.19 3.23 3.31 3.34 3.51 3.23 3.17 3.17 3.09 3.03 3.35 3.04 3.10 3.00 3.02 3.06 3.07 3.02 2.88 3.22 2.83 2.68 2.54 2.76 Internally displaced people 2.47 2.62 2.32 2.30 2.62 2.20 2.11 (millions) 2.12 2.22 2.05 2.00 2.00 2.17 1.90 2.07 Returnees 1.95 1.71 1.75 1.74 1.81 (millions) 1.55 1.64 1.46 1.37 1.07 1.05 1.23 0.95 0.86 0.80 0.85 0.66 0.73 0.75 0.55 0.55 0.48 0.50 0.38 0.44 0.36 0.40 0.42 0.45 0.47 0.12 0.17 0.22 0.30 0.09 0.14
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply ofďŹ cial endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. The data for this map has a limited number of sources. The data is not independently veriďŹ ed and is subject to error or omission, deliberate or otherwise by various sources. Feedback: iraqinfo@un.org, iraq.humanitarianresponse.info, www.reliefweb.int Creation date: 5 July 2018. Sources: 1. IOM Displacement Tracking Matrix 30 June 2018 2. Iraq HRP Feb. 2018 3. This presents the overall funding linked to the requirements of the response plans/appeals, the HRP funding is a subset of overall funding to the affected country; source: Financial Tracking System (FTS) as of 5 July 2018