Iraq Humanitarian Dashboard August 2017

Page 1

IRAQ: Humanitarian Dashboard (August 2017) OVERVIEW

Populations in recently newly accessible areas in Mosul and Telafar remain in need of a wide range of humanitarian assistance as retaken areas continue to register returns. As of August, 151 humanitarian partners reached 6 million people in 898 geographical locations across Iraq, representing 97 per cent of the targeted population. The bulk of humanitarian assistance was provided in Ninewa governorate, as the humanitarian community worked to address the needs of the people affected by the Mosul and Telafar operations in camps, out-of-camp settings and newly accessible areas. Clusters continue to implement summerization activities, while preparations are already underway for the coming winter season. Humanitarian partners are preparing to respond to the upcoming military operations in Hawiga and western Anbar with life-saving assistance. By the end of August, US$ 548 million1 of the $985 million requested in the 2017 Humanitarian Response Plan was received, representing 56 per cent of the total funds required. Up to 97 per cent of the targeted population were reached with some form of assistance, with the highest total attained by the Health Cluster2. This was achieved despite underfunding of some clusters. These figures include people reached with assistance outside the appeal.

KEY FIGURES

PEOPLE IN NEED 3

FINANCIAL REQUIREMENTS

11M in need

US$985M requested

total

by age

97% REACHED

total

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

5%

Children

48%

47%

TARGETED 4 VS REACHED

Adults Elderly

Source: 2017 HRP

109.6 106.8

69.9

139.2

235.0

175.3

PEOPLE REACHED

61.4

6.0M 6.2M

Source: 2017 HRP

FUNDING

US$548M funding received

PEOPLE TARGETED

Source: ActivityInfo August 2017

56% coverage

total

funding

Funding by Cluster (in US$ millions)

2017 HRP funding

126.5

125.0 117.1 108.5

58.2

44%

83.8

80.8

58.4

55.1

51.7

25.8

46.2

18.8

16.9 1.2

WASH

Health

Protection

funded

Received

56%

Unmet

47.1

23.7 14.3

Food Security Shelter - NFI

56%

Education

MPCA

16.6 1.8

EL

CCCM

15.6 1.4

RRM

9.4

0.5

CCS

2.5

Logistics

0.3

2.4

ETC

Source: FTS - 12 September 2017 Not specified

DONOR CONTRIBUTIONS

US$548M total funding received 163.6M

91.3M

87.3M 58.3M

59.6M

39.9M 15.3M

USA

Germany

Source: FTS - 12 September 2017

European Commission

Japan

Canada

UK

RESPONSE

Partner interventions People reached per governorate 810K-3.2M 430K-809K 101K-429K 1-100K

151 partners

Number of partners 21-100 4-20 3

10.0M

8.7M

Central Emergency Response Fund

Belgium

Others

Reporting agencies

1515 partners reached 6.0M people in 898 geographical locations

People reached

14.0M

Sweden

Partner area coverage

131

112

Out-of-camp

Camp

one partner can be working in-camp and out-of-camp settings

Source: ActivityInfo Jan - August 2017

Source: ActivityInfo Jan - August 2017

Source: ActivityInfo Jan - August 2017

1. There is no obligation of donors to report funding on FTS and while projects are funded, they are not necessarily reported. This results in FTS not always fully accurately reflecting funds received by agencies. Cluster level funding may change when funding not yet allocated to any cluster is assigned to the the relevant cluster. 2. The health cluster figures for people reached were used to reflect the overall number of people reached. 3. People in need is a subset of total affected population identified by the clusters in the Humanitarian Needs Overview (HNO) . 4. The target population is calculated based on strict prioritisation that addresses multi-sector or multiple needs, focusing on vulnerability rather than status. 5. Number of partners reporting on HRP response in the ActivityInfo platfrom. Creation date: 12 September 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 (AUGUST 2017) Contact Information: info.iraq@fscluster.org, ryan.freeman@wfp.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The Food Security Cluster response has continued to largely focus on Mosul and Telafar with food and cash support. Over 500,000 people benefitted from such assistance in August. Emergency responses are still the priority response for the cluster, as military operations are on-going or planned. It is envisioned that the focus of assistance will start shifting towards rebuilding livelihoods and cash based transfers as the situation allows. Needs 1. While emergency food assistance is necessary, particularly for those in camp settings, cluster partners are using cash/voucher transfers where the markets allow. 2. An interagency assessment in Sinjar show that there is need for livelihoods programming as soon as possible. Response 1. The FAO emergency animal health campaign to vaccinate almost 1 million sheep, goats, cattle and buffalo and to provide 1,500 tonnes of high-nutrient feed for 60,000 animals in the newly accessible areas of Ninewa governorate continues to make good progress. The campaign is executed in partnership with the Ministry of Agriculture to protect and enhance the assets of 210,000 people who rely on rearing livestock for food and income. 2. WFP and partners continued with assistance to affected populations in Ninewa, and are currently preparing for the emergency response in Hawiga and West Anbar. Family food rations reached some 720,000 people in the month of August.

FUNDING Required Received

$235 m $108.5 m

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted People reached

PEOPLE

Number of people reached 1.2M-2.3M 10K-1.1M 1-9K

reached*

3.2 m 2.8 m 2.9 m

People reached from January to July 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 August 2017

Progress Gap Response

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

PARTNERS 17 partners

Number of partners 15 3 1 0

August 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN JUNE 2017 *No data reported for July/August 2017

2.3

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

1,979,675 296,740 0

*No data reported for August 2017 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.


SHELTER/NFI*

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017) Contact Information: coord.iraq@sheltercluster.org, coord2.iraq@sheltercluster.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Summer support for both shelter and NFI continues in and out of camp settings. At the same time the cluster began preparing for the response to the upcoming winter season and is in the process of revising relevant technical guidelines. The cluster is also finalizing guidelines on durable solutions applied to conflict-damaged houses. Harmonized categorization of damage levels, their definition and the scope of repairs with the minimum repair standards have been completed and will be shared with the Cluster Strategic Advisory Group for review and approval. Ground level coordination commenced with a focus on Bashiqa, Bartella and Qaraqosh and some other villages. Hawiga Response Plan was also revised. Needs 1. People in camps and out of camps settings continue to require summer NFIs, adequate shelter andFOOD fuel forSECURITY generators. EDUCATION SHELTER/NFI 2. There is a significant gap of mattresses identified in camps in Ninewa governorate. Significant gaps for winterization including winter NFI people people people and kerosene were identified in Centre South and Kirkuk governorates. in need in need in need 3. Shelter in camps for the anticipated West Anbar and Hawiga response is needed, including repair and maintenance of existing shelter.

3.5M

3.9M

3.2M

Response x,xxx,xxx 1,677,483 x,xxx,xxx 1. The coverage for NFI kits stands at 69 per cent of the target and shelter stands at 29 per cent of the cluster target. Of the overall target of targeted targeted targeted 2.3 million people, 1,601,640 were assisted with NFI kits, 678,402 of whom also benefited from shelter interventions. 2. For the month of August, 101,790 individuals were assisted with shelter interventions including 92,088 individuals who benefited from non-food item kits. In first line response, 90,342 individuals were assisted with NFI kits including 67,200 people with shelter interventions xxx,xxx 297,876 xxx,xxx across the country. A further 34,590 individuals benefited from shelter upgrade and basic shelters repair interventions including 1,746 assisted assisted people assisted with critical life-saving non-food item replenishment in second line response. No durable shelter repair optionsassisted were report% assisted % assisted % assisted ed in the full cluster response. (of targeted population) (of targeted population) (of targeted population) 3. Cluster partners completed their post distribution monitoring surveys in camps and out of camps settings, reaching out more than 5,600 vulnerable households.

* Shelter and Non-Food Items HEALTH

FUNDINGpeople

9.7M

Required Received

CCCM*

1.3M

people (In Need/Target/Reachedin) need

in need

6,234,439 $175.3 m

targeted $58.2 m

PROTECTION

PEOPLE

People in need People targeted People reached

PEOPLE reached*

8.7M

x,xxx,xxx

3.9 m 2.3 m 1.6 m

3,350,000

targeted

targeted

People reached from January to August 2017

734,896 xxx,xxx Progress PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 assisted assisted Gap % assisted % assisted TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE (of targeted population) (of targeted population)Response

Number of people reached people 21K-35K 6K-20K in need 1-5K 0

August 2017

xx%

xxx,xxx assisted

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

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

EL&SC***

2.2M

Reporting Agencies August 2017

people in need

5.2M

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

x,xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

targeted

assisted

% assisted (of targeted population)

PARTNERS 27

WASH partners

6.3M

% assisted (of targeted population)

in need

2,000,000

targeted

assisted

Number of partners 5-30 4 1-3 0 people

targeted

1,000,000

August 2017

% assisted (of targeted population)

assisted

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN AUGUST 2017

August 2017

0.09

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

92,088 1,746 0


WASH*

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017) Contact Information: pplukwiya@unicef.org, bbongomin@unicef.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview WASH cluster partners continued to provide WASH services to IDPs in camps and non-camp locations throughout the country. Specific focus has remained on IDPs displaced as result of Mosul and Telafar operations where emergency water trucking, latrine installations and hygiene kits were distributed. This included quick fixing/rehabilitation of damaged water infrastructure in Mosul that resulted in restoration of some water supply networks. Nevertheless, limitations such as access/insecurity continued to hinder partners’ ability to respond in certain areas of Mosul, West Anbar and Telafar. Needs 1. Fuel to operate water facilities and chlorine gas for water treatment are some of the key issues affecting the provision of sufficient safe water resources to the IDPs. Limited sustainable solutions are impacting the water supply facilities. EDUCATION SHELTER/NFI 2. There is urgent need for more financial resources to sustain WASH services and care and maintenance of facilitiesFOOD across SECURITY all IDP camps. Lack of funding is forcing partners to scale down or exit completely from supporting IDPs in the camps amidst high needs. people people people 3. Additional influx of IDPs from newly accessible areas e.g. from Telafar into camps has created high demands on water and sanitation and need for more in need in need in need financial resources to continue sustaining WASH services. Response 1. A total of 1,857 families from newly accessible areas of Telafar received emergency WASH services such as water through water trucking, sanitation targeted targeted facilities and hygiene kits. targeted

3.5M

3.9M

x,xxx,xxx

3.2M

1,677,483

x,xxx,xxx

2. About 3.2 million IDPs in camps, out of camp locations and emergency sites across Iraq were reached with WASH services. This includes services provided through maintenance and upgrading of water and sanitation facilities. 3. A total of 332,320 people displaced from Mosul and living in camps, emergency and transit sites have accessed water, sanitation and hygiene facilities and benefiting from 77,907 WASHassisted facilities (latrines, showers, tanks, taps, garbage bins, drainage, assisted etc). assisted 4. About m³ water per day is trucked to 170,600 people in%western to 110,300 people in eastern % 1,706 assisted assisted Mosul while about 1,103 m³water per day is trucked % assisted Mosul. A total of 18,329 m³of water was provided to 277,265I IDPspopulation) across camps in Salah al-Din, Anbar and Baghdad through temporary and sustain(of targeted population) (of targeted (of targeted population) able-trucking, water wells and municipal network. 5. The cluster continued to carry out hygiene promotion activities focusing on diarrhoea prevention and scabies across all camps and non-camp locations. Partners are using the early warning and disease response dashboard to identify hotspots for intensive hygiene promotion.

xxx,xxx

297,876

HEALTH * Water, Sanitation and Hygiene

CCCM*

9.7M in need FUNDING 6,234,439 targeted $139.2 m

Required

$58.4 m

PROTECTION

1.3M PEOPLE

people

Received

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted People reached

% assisted (of targeted population)

assisted

6.3 m 3.5 m 3.4 m

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

2.2M

July 2017

reached*

8.7M

assisted

Progress % assisted (of targeted population) Gap

Response

5.2M

people

Number of people in need reached 121K-2.3M 11K-120K 1-10K 0

3,350,000 targeted

xxx,xxx

xx% July 2017

% assisted (of targeted population)

xxx,xxx assisted

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

PARTNERS WASH

EL&SC*** people in need

PEOPLE

targeted

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE

MPCA**

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

734,896 People reached from January to July 2017

Reporting Agencies

xxx,xxx

people in need

45 partners

6.3M

Number of partners 6-27 people 2-5 in10need

x,xxx,xxx

x,xxx,xxx

2,000,000

xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

1,000,000

targeted

assisted

targeted

% assisted (of targeted population)

targeted

assisted

% assisted (of targeted population)

August 2017

assisted

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN JULY 2017 *No data reported for August 2017

*No data reported for August 2017

3.4

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

2,100,059 915,672 414,025


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017 )

HEALTH

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

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Affected populations are in need of a comprehensive package of primary health care services, through static and mobile clinics, referrals of complicated cases and trauma management, particularly in mustering and screening sites as well as within camps. Needs 1. Mass casualty management; trauma/non-trauma emergency referrals and referrals of cold cases; emergency immunization; reproductive health and ante-natal/post-natal care services; steady supply of life-saving and essential medicines for non-communicable diseases; and urgent health personnel deployment to sites of operations. 2. Identification and containment of potential communicable disease outbreaks. 3. Medicines and medical supplies, particularly medicines for chronic illnesses. Response 1. Partners continued to provide critical life-saving services to highly vulnerable people through provision of 507,161 consultations in ten governorates, 30,054 vaccinations to children under-five and 59,749 reproductive health consultations. 2. A taskforce was activated at governorate level in Kirkuk and Ninewa. It is planned to have Cholera Treatment Units in all the camps while Cholera Treatment Centers are expected to be within one-hour driving distance from these units.

FUNDING Required Received

$109.6 m $83.8 m

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted People reached

PEOPLE

Number of people reached 73K-356K 22K-72K 1-21K 0

reached*

9.7 m 6.2 m 6.0 m

People reached from January to August 2017 July2017

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

August 2017

Progress Gap Response

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

PARTNERS Number of partners 9-20 2-8 1 0

29 partners

August 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN AUGUST 2017

August 2017

0.5

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

51,002 336,613 122,405


PROTECTION

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017) Contact Information: koek@unhcr.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS

Overview There was an increase in displacement from eastern Anbar and parts of Salah Al Din. Secondary displacements reported among families from Mosul and Telafar due to economic hardships and inability to return to areas of origin. Protection partners continue with preparedness for anticipated operations in Hawiga. Needs 1. There is need to scale up legal assistance to help IDPs access civil documentation. The lack of documentation prevents families accessing property, receiving aid, mobility and accessing camps. 2. Gender-based-violence (GBV) continues to be of concern across Iraq. 3. There is need to step up protection monitoring in Anbar and Salah Al Din in response to the anticipated operations in western Anbar and Hawiga. Additional protection monitoring activities are required in West Mosul. 4. Critical gap continues in child protection case management services in Anbar and Baghdad. There are several child protection actors who can expand in those areas, pending funding availability. 5. Livelihood support for vulnerable groups, including those currently undergoing training on life skills in the camps, cash assistance for some GBV survivors, dignity kits, hygiene kits and water tanks are needed. 6. Significantly lower number of parents were reached than targeted with parenting programmes, leaving a gap. Child Protection sub-Cluster members are reviewing the recommended programmes and approaches.

Response

1. Protection partners worked on the Hawiga Protection Response Plan in Kirkuk and Salah Al Din and produced a detailed operational plan. 2. Humanitarian Needs Overview and Humanitarian Response Plan workshops were hosted at governorate level in Baghdad/Anbar, Kirkuk, Dahuk, Sulaymaniyah and Ninewa, highlighting critical protection needs and planned responses, including child protection and GBV needs. 3. General protection partners conduct protection assessment and monitoring activities, rights-based advocacy with authorities and military actors, provide legal counselling and assistance, and basic psycho social support. 4. Unaccompanied and Separated Children Taskforce was established under the case management working group. This Taskforce has been reviewing the guidelines and registration forms based on the lessons learned from Mosul operation. 5. Child protection mainstreaming training for camp managers was conducted in Dahuk and Central South governorates. 6. Continuous engagement of both males and youth in community/camp mobilization against GBV and use of available services are required. This includes the provision of multiple Psycho Social Support services, medical assistance and GBV prevention information. 7. Mine action partners conducted mine risk education and clearance activities across the country. Victim assistance and non-technical surveys were also conducted in various locations.

FUNDING Required Received

$106.8 m $55.1 m

PEOPLE People in need People targeted People reached

(In Need/Target/Reached) 3.9 m 2.3 m 1.7 m

PEOPLE

Number of people reached 115K-405K 9K-114K 1-8K

reached*

People reached from January to July 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 July 2017

Progress Gap Response

July 2017 *No data reported for August 2017 *For actual figures of people reached by governorate visit https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/en/operations/iraq/2017-dashbords

PARTNERS

63

partners

Number of partners 12-65 10-11 5-8 2-4 1

July 2017 *No data reported for August 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE JULY 2017 *No data reported for August 2017

0.3

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

160,684 104,994 8,787


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017)

EDUCATION

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

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview A back-to-school campaign was initiated by partners, including the use of mobile teams and information through print and social media. The campaign is aimed at encouraging communities to send children back to nearby schools. Cluster members also provided technical support to the Ministry of Education of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq to track implementation of education activities in the region. In August, partners rolled out capacity building initiatives including six workshops for over 130 staff from cluster organizations. This initiative is expected to broaden education-in-emergency responses and ensure that affected communities have access to quality education services. Needs EDUCATION SHELTER/NFI FOOD SECURITY 1. Damage assessment for most schools in Telafar and in the newly accessible areas in western Mosul is required to ensure that these people people people schools are rehabilitated before the next academic year (2017-2018). in need of Mosul (newly accessible areas) are in needinofneed in need 2. Schools in west, east and outside school materials (furniture, text books and stationary). 3. Lack of funding remains a major operational constraint for partners who are unable to adequately respond in newly accessible areas of x,xxx,xxx 1,677,483 x,xxx,xxx western Mosul and western Anbar. targeted targeted targeted Response 1. In August, 57,132 boys and girls (3-17 years) benefitted from established learning spaces across Iraq. 2. Emergency learning supplies were distributed to over 12,314 school-aged IDP children. 3. Over 300 teachers/facilitators were trained on education-in-emergency. 297,876 xxx,xxx xxx,xxx 4. Over 1,000 boys and girls were re-integrated into formal education through non-formal programmes (including accelerated learning assisted assisted assisted programmes % assistedor other catch-up classes). % assisted % assisted

3.5M

3.9M

(of targeted population)

HEALTH

(of targeted population)

FUNDING

9.7M

Received

people in need

$23.7 mtargeted

(of targeted population)

CCCM*

PEOPLE

1.3M

(In Need/Target/Reached) people in need

People in need $69.9 m 6,234,439 People targeted

Required

3.2M

People reached

PROTECTION PEOPLE

reached*

8.7M

x,xxx,xxx

3.7 m 1.45 m 0.9 m

Number of people reached 101K-432K 16K-100K people 1-15K in0 need

3,350,000

targeted

targeted

People reached from January to August 2017

734,896 xxx,xxx Progress assisted assisted PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 % assisted % assisted Gap TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE (of targeted population) (of targeted population)

August 2017

xx%

xxx,xxx assisted

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

Response

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

Reporting Agencies August 2017

people in need

5.2M

x,xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

targeted

6.3M

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

assisted

PARTNERS 19 partnersWASH

EL&SC***

2.2M

% assisted (of targeted population)

% assisted (of targeted population)

targeted

1,000,000

August 2017

assisted

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

0.1

million people August 2017

people in need

2,000,000

targeted

assisted

Number of partners 8-11 3-7 2 0

First line Second line Full cluster

4,178 111,530 50


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017)

MPCA*

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

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Multi-Purpose Cash Assistance (MPCA) partners are working to ensure that vulnerable households from Ninewa, Anbar, Kirkuk and Salah Al Din have the ability to meet their basic needs. They distribute one-off emergency cash assistance to newly displaced vulnerable displaced families. Highly vulnerable displaced, host community, returnee and households who remained throughout the conflict also receive up to three months of assistance. Households use this cash assistance to meet a range of urgent basic needs. Needs 1. Vulnerable households displaced because of military operations in 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. EDUCATION FOOD SECURITYThese documents 2. Vulnerable households without legal documents SHELTER/NFI require the assistance of legal actors to replace missing documents. will enable them access government Distribution System. Cash Working Group actorspeople refer people social safety net systems, such as the Public people households to legal actors across Iraq. in need in need in need Response A total of 4,192 households (25,152 individuals) received 1,743,271,841 Iraqi Dinar ($1,494,682) in multi-purpose cash assistance across x,xxx,xxx 1,677,483 x,xxx,xxx Iraq in August 2017. targeted targeted targeted

3.5M

3.9M

xxx,xxx

* Muli-purpose Cash Assistance

assisted

HEALTH Required Received

$61.4 m

9.7M

$14.3 m

297,876 assisted

% assisted PEOPLE (of targeted population)

FUNDING

% assisted (of targeted population)

People in needCCCM* People targeted 0.4 m people People reached 0.03 m in need

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS 734,896 BY GOVERNORATE Anbar

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

assisted

5 partners

people in need

8.7M

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

Progress

people in need

3,350,000

targeted

targeted August 2017

Gap

xxx,xxx

Response assisted

5.2M

xx%

% assisted (of targeted population)

Reporting Agencies

EL&SC***

2.2M

Number of partners 3 1 0

PROTECTION

1.3M

% assisted (of targeted population)

assisted

PARTNERS % assisted

2.2 m

People reached from January to July 2017 *No data reported for August 2017

targeted

xxx,xxx

(of targeted population)

(In Need/Target/Reached)

6,234,439

% assisted Babylon (of targeted population)

3.2M

people in need

August 2017

xxx,xxx assisted

WASH

6.3M

people in need

x,xxx,xxx

x,xxx,xxx

2,000,000

xxx,xxx

xxx,xxx

1,000,000

targeted

assisted

targeted

% assisted (of targeted population)

assisted

*No data reported for August 2017

targeted

% assisted (of targeted population)

assisted


EMERGENCY LIVELIHOODS

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

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Some returns in recently accessible areas are delayed by the (perceived) lack of livelihood opportunities. Aside from the aid and support offered by NGOs, there are still very few opportunities to earn an income in and around Mosul and the Ninewa plains for the IDPs and returnees. Needs 1. There is need for longer-term economic opportunities for IDPs in out of camp settings and camps like Hajj Ali emergency site beyond the current Cash-for-Work projects in the camp. 2. Medium to long term and consistent employment are needed among IDPs and refugees across the KRI participating in Cash-for-Work activities. 3. Microfinancing training, loans and grants are required for women to start their own businesses. Response 1. A total of 19,029 people were reached in August with a following breakdown; 8 per cent in Dahuk, 77 per cent in Ninewa, 5.8 per cent in Erbil, 7.3 per cent in Kirkuk, 0.3 per cent in Anbar, 0.4 per cent in Salah al-Din, 0.3 per cent Diyala, and 0.9 per cent in Sulaymaniyah. These include (a) 15,478 people accessing temporary employment opportunities or cash-for-work, (b) 1,733 people gaining professional skills or attending business development training, (c) 113 people provided with employment (d) 827 small businesses supported with small-grants/micro-finance and (e) 58 businesses accessing asset recovery or replacement/grants. 2. Cluster partners are responding to livelihoods needs by offering cash-for-work to clean war debris and ruble, and light rehabilitation of medical, public and private properties. Business training and grants to open small shops are provided in Ninewa. Vocational training is provided throughout Erbil and Dahuk governorates, including in IDP camps.

FUNDING Required Received

$20 m $1.2 m

PEOPLE

(In Need/Target/Reached) People in need People targeted 0.159 m People reached 0.05 m

PEOPLE

Number of people reached 1.6-14K 101-1.5K 1-100 0

reached*

5.2 m

People reached from January to August 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 August 2017

Progress Gap Response

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

PARTNERS 18

partners

Number of partners 6-12 2-5 1 0

August 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN JULY 2017

August 2017

0.01

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

6.824 3,317 0


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017)

CCCM*

Contact Information: mpereira@iom.int

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview Situation in camps is stable, and overall occupancy fluctuation is considered moderate. Families have begun to return to their places of origin, particularly in East Mosul. Obstacles to return are being monitored and followed with relevant partners Needs 1. The major needs reported in camps were food, employment, summarization, medical care and water. 2. There continues to be specific challenges to access services, namely health in some camps. 3. Following the distribution of air-coolers to assist people facing elevated temperatures, efforts continue to provide water trucking. Despite an increase in water supply it is still not enough to cover the needs in all camps.The temperature continues to be a key concern to populations in camps Response 1. Evaluation of camp capacity and needs continues in Anbar 2. In line with the global Camp Coordination and Camp Management (CCCM) strategies and considering the national context diversity, the cluster rolled out an exit survey in all Mosul camps. The aim of the survey is to collect information on IDPs intentions to depart from camps, but also to identify and refer to the duty bearer protection and other concerns. * Camp Coordination and Camp Management

FUNDING Required Received

$18.7 m $1.8 m

PEOPLE

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

2.7 m

PROGRESS AGAINST 2017 TARGETS BY GOVERNORATE

Jan to July 2017 *No data reported for August 2017

Progress Gap Response

Reporting Agencies August 2017

reached*

Number of people reached 216K-312K 45K-215K 1-44K

0.9 m 1.3 m

People reached from January to August 2017

Anbar Babylon Baghdad Basrah Dahuk Diyala Erbil Kerbala Kirkuk Missan Muthanna Najaf Ninewa Qadissiya Salah al-Din Sulaymaniyah Thi-Qar Wassit

PEOPLE

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

PARTNERS 6 partners

August 2017

*No data reported for August 2017

Number of partners 3 2 1 0


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017)

RRM*

Contact Information: aalyaseen@unicef.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The Rapid Response Mechanism (RRM) is responding to the emergency needs of displaced populations coming from Salah al-Din and western Ninewa and Anbar governorates. The consortium ensures that displaced populations have adequate emergency supplies for survival such as food, water and hygiene materials while they are on the move. Needs Due to ongoing displacements from Telafar, Hawiga and western Anbar, displaced populations continue to require life-saving and dignity-preserving RRM emergency packages at camp and out of camp locations. Response RRM partners distributed 38,263 emergency kits to 177,100 people, of which 97,371 were children (48,759 boys and 48,612 girls). Around 81 per cent of the distributions took place in Mosul, Hamdaniya and Telafar districts to cater for the new wave of displacements coming from Telafar city and the surrounding villages. Overall distributions have increased by 9 per cent, while the distributions in western Anbar have almost doubled during the month of August, when compared to July. During the current year RRM partners have distributed around 420,399 emergency kits to 2,205,302 people, including over 1.2 million children. * Rapid Response Mechanism

PEOPLE

FUNDING Required Received

$18.0 m $1.4 m

(In Need/Target/Reached)

People in need People targeted People reached

PEOPLE reached

Number of people reached 23K-143K 6K-22K 1-5K 0

2.2 m 1.35m 2.2 m

People reached from January to August 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 August 2017

Progress Gap Response

August 2017

PARTNERS 5 Total partners

Number of partners 3 2 1 0

August 2017

PEOPLE REACHED BY RESPONSE LINE IN AUGUST 2017 August 2017

0.2

million people

First line Second line Full cluster

177,100 0


LOGISTICS

MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017) Contact Information: cameron.kiss@wfp.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The Logistics Cluster facilitates access to sufficient and reliable services to the humanitarian community. It 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 and contingency stocks in areas close to emergency sites and newly accessible locations in Mosul. 2. There is a continuing need for logistics coordination and information sharing 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; between October 2016 and August 2017, the cluster facilitated access to common storage for 42 humanitarian organizations. 2. The cluster is currently loaning 12 Mobile Storage Units (MSUs) to seven different organizations to expand their own storage capacities in key operational areas. 3. Two Warehouse and Commodity Management training sessions were held in August, bringing the total participants trained to 161 from 58 organizations. 4. In August, six coordination meetings were held in Baghdad, Erbil and Dahuk; and 16 information management documents were published on the Iraq Logistics Cluster website.

FUNDING

COMMON STORAGE

ORGANIZATIONS

capacity (in M²)

(Targeted/supported)

Ninewa

Required

$11.8 m

Received

$1.15 m

2 Partners in appeal 94 Organizations supported through

6,300

Salah Al-Din Dahuk Baghdad

services, training and coordination.

56 INGOs, 20 NNGOs, 9 UN agencies 9 Government agencies

11,080

Erbil 3,400 2,760 2,000

JULY 2017 UPDATE 25,540m2 Common storage available in 17 key operational areas.

1,866m3 ⁄ 5,332mt Cargo received in August 2017. 58m3 ⁄ 20mt Cargo transported in August 2017 on behalf of 2 organizations.

ETC *

Contact Information: Prakash.muniandy@wfp.org

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The ETC continues to respond to the vital communications needs of humanitarian partners in its core sites in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and also in new sites established as part of the Mosul humanitarian response. Security concerns and access restraints to priority camps impacted the ETC’s plans. 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; as well as provision of such services. The ETC will deploy internet connectivity services in Qayyarah Jad’ah camps from 1 to 6 August. 2. Communities in IDP camps and other emergency sites require access to vital communications services. Assessments were carried out in Hammam al Alil camps 1 and 2; more are planned in the three camps in Hasansham in August. Response 1. The cluster provided lifesaving communications services including security telecommunications and internet connectivity in 11 sites. 2. Provision of coordination and information-sharing services. 3. The cluster pre-positioned and pre-configured equipment for immediate deployment in emergency sites. * Emergency Telecommunications Cluster

FUNDING Required Received

$2.7 m $2.4 m

ORGANIZATIONS (Targeted)

146 Organizations targeted 1Partner in appeal


MONTHLY DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2017)

CCS*

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

SITUATION ANALYSIS Overview The humanitarian situation continues to be volatile, with large displacement of civilians resulting from ongoing military operations. Displacement from the most recent operation in Telafar in the month of August and the return of internally displaced people to some newly accessible areas continued. 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 accountability to affected population. 4. Facilitate access and coordinate common needs assessments and analysis. Response 1. Cluster members effectively shared real-time data on displacement, needs, gaps and security alerts, enabling the work of humanitarian partners. 2. Different coordination fora such as the HCT and ICCG facilitated a coordinated humanitarian response. 3. Civil Military Coordination Unit facilitated humanitarian access to conflict affected areas through active engagement with the relevant military actors. 4. OCHA is leading the planning and preparedness for the humanitarian response resulting from the anticipated Hawiga operations. 5. Humanitarian partners started preparations for the 2018 Humanitarian Needs Overview and Humanitarian Response Plan.

* Coordination and Common Services

FUNDING Required

$16.1 m

Received

$15.6 m

Calls received through the call centre

744 Governorate

not speciďŹ ed/ call disconnected

KEY INDICATORS AUGUST 2017 Number of IM Products 28 (273%) Target

Number of calls to the IICC 8,662 (151%)

Archieved

% closed cases 99.5%

Total calls per governorate 3,800 400

PROGRESS AUGUST 2017

4 11 12

Snapshots

Datasets created Daily security alerts

Reporting Agencies

5 14 62

Factsheets

Reports (weekly, bi-weekly, monthly) Maps produced

OCHA REACH UNOPS INSO iMMAP IOM-DTM

1 4 1

Source of calls out-ofcamp

Governorate profile Dashboards

Humanitarian Bulletin

in-camp

6 1

Round tables

Orientation sessions


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