situation overview key figures - reliefweb · 2016. 7. 19. · gbv sop for adamawa was finalized,...

4
million Contributions (million $) 143 million RECEIVED for projects listed in the response plan for projects not listed in the response plan 76.7 million (US$) 66.7 million (US$) 28% RESPONSE PLAN FUNDED Per cent funded by cluster 23% 12% 43% 11% 23% 0% 14% 49% 69% 34% Requirements by cluster (million $) 279 million REQUESTED (US$) CONSOLIDATED HUMANITARIAN FUNDING 2016 7 102.8 31.7 27.7 24.7 21.2 18.9 16.6 15.7 15.5 4.5 CCCM Nutrition Coordination Education Early Recovery WASH Health Emergency Shelter & NFI Protection Food Security SITUATION OVERVIEW The Nigerian Government and humanitarian partners jointly declared a food and nutrition emergency in Borno State. This followed reports of worsening food insecurity, severe malnutrition and deaths in Bama and other sites hosting more than 355,000 IDPs, some recently released from Boko Haram captivity. A US$ 13 million CERF funding was approved for rapid response in the more than 15 locations, prioritising food, nutrition, and protection, while partners are finalising micro plans to reach more than 800,000 newly accessible IDPs with emergency assistance. The Nigerian Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has urged the Government and partners to prepare to receive more IDPs as military operations continue to open up more locations. 39.4 32.4 24.2 9.4 9.2 6.0 6.0 6.0 5.1 1.7 1.1 2.8 others Norway Various Sweden Switzerland Canada Japan United Kingdom Germany Central Emergency Response Fund European Commission United States resources available, sector not yet specified 7.7 million Note: 0.00 1.25 2.50 July'16 Dec'14 Update on: 18 July 2016 Feedback: [email protected] www.humanitarianresponse.info/operations/nigeria www.unocha.org/nigeria www.reliefweb.int/country/nga http://fts.unocha.org Sources: (1) HNO and SRP 2016, (2) HNO and SRP 2016, (3) Cadre Harmonisé Report as of March 2016, (4) HNO and SRP 2016, (5) DTM Round X, ALIMA, NEMA other Organization (6) HRP 2016 (7) OCHA FTS. NIGERIA: Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 18 July 2016) KEY FIGURES Nutrition 4 2.5 million 84% 16% Children under 5 years old Pregnant and Lactating Women Emergency Learning 6 People affected 1 people affected by the crisis. 2.4 14.8 million estimated number of people in need of humanitarian assistance. 7.0 million people targeted for humanitarian aid in 2016 malnourished children under 5 and pregnant and lactating women in need of assistance. 3.9 million teachers displaced. children have lost acess to learning due to conflict. children displaced. estimated children in need of access to school. 5.4 4.8 8.3 7.0 7.3 Jun '16 Feb '16 Dec'15 2014 2013 Internally Displaced Persons 5 Protection 2 3.0 million people in urgent need of food assistance of 7.3 million food insecure in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe in June to August 2016. 2.4 million displaced people Food Security 3 5.5 million 1.0 million 19,000 600,000 800,000 estimated number of people in need of protection services contributing to a safe and secure environment. Including Child Protection Gender-Based Violence # of people 2.7 million 1.5 million Funded million $ Unmet million $ 23.2 3.9 2.8 4.9 0.0 2.3 10.7 1.5 79.6 27.8 12.0 15.7 21.9 16.3 18.9 14.3 7.7 8.0 4.8 3.0 Humanitarian Response Plan coverage areas Gombe Adamawa Yobe Borno 0.39

Upload: others

Post on 26-Nov-2020

3 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: SITUATION OVERVIEW KEY FIGURES - ReliefWeb · 2016. 7. 19. · GBV SOP for Adamawa was finalized, endorsed and adopted. ... direct food distributions or cash transfer programs (CTPs)

million

Contributions (million $)

143 millionRECEIVED

for projects listed in the response plan

for projects not listedin the response plan

76.7 million (US$)

66.7 million (US$)

28%RESPONSE PLAN FUNDED

Per cent funded by cluster

23%

12%

43%

11%

23%

0%

14%

49%

69%

34%

Requirements by cluster (million $)

279 millionREQUESTED (US$)

CONSOLIDATED HUMANITARIAN FUNDING 20167

102.8

31.7

27.7

24.7

21.2

18.9

16.6

15.7

15.5

4.5CCCM

Nutrition

Coordination

Education

Early Recovery

WASH

Health

Emergency Shelter & NFI

Protection

Food Security

SITUATION OVERVIEWThe Nigerian Government and humanitarian partners jointly declared a food and nutrition emergency in Borno State. This followed reports of worsening food insecurity, severe malnutrition and deaths in Bama and other sites hosting more than 355,000 IDPs, some recently released from Boko Haram captivity. A US$ 13 million CERF funding was approved for rapid response in the more than 15 locations, prioritising food, nutrition, and protection, while partners are finalising micro plans to reach more than 800,000 newly accessible IDPs with emergency assistance. The Nigerian Emergency Management Agency (NEMA) has urged the Government and partners to prepare to receive more IDPs as military operations continue to open up more locations.

39.4

32.4

24.2

9.4

9.2

6.0

6.0

6.0

5.1

1.7

1.1

2.8others

Norway

Various

Sweden

Switzerland

Canada

Japan

United Kingdom

Germany

Central Emergency Response Fund

European Commission

United States

resources available, sector not yet specified7.7 millionNote:

0.00

1.25

2.50

July'16Dec'14

Update on: 18 July 2016 Feedback: [email protected] www.humanitarianresponse.info/operations/nigeria www.unocha.org/nigeria www.reliefweb.int/country/nga http://fts.unocha.org Sources: (1) HNO and SRP 2016, (2) HNO and SRP 2016, (3) Cadre Harmonisé Report as of March 2016, (4) HNO and SRP 2016, (5) DTM Round X, ALIMA, NEMAother Organization (6) HRP 2016 (7) OCHA FTS.

NIGERIA: Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 18 July 2016)

KEY FIGURES

Nutrition4

2.5 million

84%

16% Children under 5 years old

Pregnant and Lactating Women

Emergency Learning6

People affected1

people affected by the crisis.

2.4

14.8 million

estimated number of people in need of humanitarian assistance.

7.0 million

people targeted for humanitarian aid in 2016

malnourished children under 5 and pregnant and lactating women in need of assistance.

3.9 million

teachers displaced.

children have lostacess to learningdue to conflict.

children displaced.

estimated children in need of access toschool.

5.4 4.8

8.37.0 7.3

Jun '16Feb '16Dec'1520142013

Internally Displaced Persons5

Protection2

3.0 millionpeople in urgent need of food assistanceof 7.3 million food insecure in Adamawa, Borno and Yobe in June to August 2016.

2.4 milliondisplaced people

Food Security3

5.5 million

1.0 million

19,000

600,000 800,000

estimated number of people in need ofprotection services contributing to a safe andsecure environment.

IncludingChild Protection

Gender-Based Violence

# of people2.7 million

1.5 million

Fundedmillion $

Unmetmillion $

23.2

3.9

2.8

4.9

0.0

2.3

10.7

1.5

79.6

27.8

12.0 15.7

21.9

16.3

18.9

14.3

7.7 8.0

4.8

3.0

Humanitarian Response Plancoverage areas

Gombe

Adamawa

YobeBorno

0.39

Page 2: SITUATION OVERVIEW KEY FIGURES - ReliefWeb · 2016. 7. 19. · GBV SOP for Adamawa was finalized, endorsed and adopted. ... direct food distributions or cash transfer programs (CTPs)

The Federal Government of Nigeria through the Minister of Health has declared a nutrition emergency in Borno State following alarming results from assessments conducted in numerous settlements in the newly accessible LGAs where proportion of SAM and GAM in populations were above 2% and 15% respectively.

In these newly accessible areas, an estimated 800,000 children under 5, and pregnant/breastfeeding women have been identified as being in need of immediate humanitarian assistance in the coming 3 months.

Additional resources to fund the 3 month integrated nutrition, food, health, WASH emergency response is estimated to be USD $108 million.

Under the leadership of the Federal Ministry of Health and State Partners, a rapid response team has been deployed to Borno state establish a multi-sectoral emergency nutrition response team at Borno state level, coordinate partner efforts, and lead in monitoring program performance.

New INGO’s with the interest to operate in the newly accessible areas have come in country and are facilitating the strengthening and scale-up of life-saving interventions beyond MMC, Jere, and Konduga LGA.

INGOs partners implementing in Borno state are re-strategizing the emergency response, through scaling up the coverage of nutrition interventions and increasing the profile of the nutrition problem in country in an attempt to advocate for further funding.

Further nutrition assessment are planned and being undertaken in areas like Konduga Kaga and Biu and screening activities are ongoing in the newly liberated areas to inform programmatic interventions.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: : [email protected]

NUTRITION

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

● ●

43%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

00 girls 00 boys

0.7Mdisplacedpeople

0.6Min hostcommunities

0.2Minaccessibleareas

107,660in hostcommunities

00inaccessibleareas

536,950displacedpeople

00 women 00 men

00 elderly women 00 elderly men.

1.5 millionpeople targeted

644,610 people reached

3.9 million people in need

FOOD SECURITY

7%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

24,186 girls 23,237 boys

0.4Mdisplacedpeople

1.2Min hostcommunities

0.4Minaccessibleareas

106,729in hostcommunities

3,013inaccessibleareas

33,325displacedpeople

95,644 pregnantand lactating women

2.0 millionpeople targeted

143,067people reached

2.5 million people in need

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

●●

● Civilians in many areas particularly in Borno state face severe protection risks and abuses. As the counter-insurgency measures intensify, civilians in the newly accessible areas are being identified by humanitarian actors. Many of them experience trauma face mine risks, abduction, loss of family contact and lack of access to services. Much of the areas have been subject to extensive infrastructural damage and remain largely inaccessible to humanitarian actors.

Security challenges present a challenge to humanitarian access and expansion of protection activities. Many of the activities by protection partners still focused on camps. Mine risk education should scaled up and targeted to address the particular vulnerability of children in projected return movements. There is a further need to promote family reunification for unaccompanied and separated children who face profuse protection risks.

There is a need to strengthen identification and provision of psychosocial support civilians who are recently been reached by humanitarians. There is also a need to expand psychosocial and reintegration programmes to marginalized groups such as conflict affected children and women and girls who have been subject to sexual and gender based violence and often face stigma and cultural barriers to reporting incidents of abuse.

Protection: 260,734 reached, including 138,504 vulnerable individuals profiled, 50,661 vulnerable individuals provided with targeted protection-based material assistance; 59,369 reached with awareness raising and community-based initiatives; 6,650 individuals referred to appropriate specialized services; capacity of 2,494 individuals built through protection trainings; and 878 reached with psychosocial support.

Child Protection: 158,553 children reached, including 140,813 with provided with psychosocial support through child friendly spaces/child clubs; 3,397 UASC (including 103 unaccompanied reunified and 384 identified); 1,455 UASC placed in alternative care arrangements and benefited from follow-up. 3,018 children at risk and survivors supported through inter-agency case management system.

Sexual and Gender-Based Violence: 186,976 reached, including 117,256 of vulnerable persons provided with psychosocial counseling support; 58,115 Individuals reached through sensitization on GBV and SEA, 1,132 vulnerable women and girls gained skills for livelihoods; and 9,683 women and girls received dignity kits. GBV SOP for Adamawa was finalized, endorsed and adopted.

The onset of the lean season has seen a large increase of people in urgent need of food assistance. Borno and Yobe states are currently classified as being at crisis food insecurity levels, where at least 3.02 million people are in IPC Phase 3 levels of food insecurity, with an further 333,293 people in an emergency (Phase 4) food security situation.

The arrival of the planting/lean season has increased the number of people in need by a fifth, and there is an urgent need for support for livelihood restoration and alternative livelihood interventions. With large drop in land under staple food cultivation in the past years, and over 1.6 million IDPs in the northeast region, of which 90% are living in host communities, there is a great for need access to land and agricultural inputs in the form of seeds and fertilizer and other NFIs.

Preliminary reports from newly accessible areas indicate that the food security situation is at critical levels. Humanitarian actors should be ready to respond immediately with in-kind food distributions and nutritional support.

In addition to direct food assistance, there is a pronounced need for resilience and livelihood intervention schemes during the planting season. Food Security sector partners are ramping up efforts to provide agricultural inputs such as seed and fertilizers to vulnerable populations.

There is great concern that the food security situation in previously inaccessible areas is at critical levels, and humanitarian food security actors should be prepared to respond urgently as required. In-kind food distributions will most likely be the best modality, since reports indicate that many areas do not have functioning markets.

There is continued need for food assistance in the form of direct food distributions or cash transfer programs (CTPs) to the people who are currently in an insecurity emergency in Borno and Yobe. The latest survey of sector partners indicate over 2.1 million people will be targeted for food assistance and livelihood restoration support from the planting season until the end of the year.

38%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

187,662 girls 148,192 boys

0.6Mdisplacedpeople

0.6Min hostcommunities

0.5Minaccessibleareas

387,515in hostcommunities

42,628inaccessibleareas

118,659displacedpeople

170,002 women 92,295 men

5,258 elderly women 2,854 elderly men.

1.6 millionpeople targeted

606,263people reached

5.5 million people in need

PROTECTION

Deliver coordinated and integrated life-saving assistance to people affected by emergencies.

Track and analyze risk and vulnerability, integrating findings into humanitarian anddevelopment programming.

Support vulnerable populations to better cope with shocks by responding earlier to warning signals, by reducing post-crisis recovery times and by building capacity of national actors.

STRATEGIC OBJECTIVES

Update on: 18 July 2016 Feedback: [email protected] www.humanitarianresponse.info/operations/nigeria www.unocha.org/nigeria www.reliefweb.int/country/nga Sources: Protection, Food Security and Nutrition sector working groups.

NIGERIA: Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 18 July 2016)

Page 3: SITUATION OVERVIEW KEY FIGURES - ReliefWeb · 2016. 7. 19. · GBV SOP for Adamawa was finalized, endorsed and adopted. ... direct food distributions or cash transfer programs (CTPs)

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

62%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

72,285 girls 63,184 boys

0.4Mdisplacedpeople

0.0Min hostcommunities

0.0Minaccessibleareas

0.0Min hostcommunities

0.0Minaccessibleareas

247,945displacedpeople

50,587 women 43,916 men

8,406 elderly women 8,679 elderly men

0.4 millionpeople targeted

247,945people reached

0.6 million people in need

CAMP COORDINATION AND CAMP MANAGEMENT

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

65%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

169,464 girls 150,220 boys

0.9Mdisplacedpeople

0.0Min hostcommunities

0.0Minaccessibleareas

0.0Min hostcommunities

0.0Minaccessibleareas

0.0Mdisplacedpeople

118,595 women 102,957 men

19,767 elderly women 20,347 elderly men

0.9 millionpeople targeted

581,350people reached

1.6 million people in need

EMERGENCY SHELTER AND NON FOOD ITEMS

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

● ●

● ●

29%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

84,468 girls

88,889 boys

0.5Mdisplacedpeople

0.1Min hostcommunities

0.02Minaccessibleareas

22,551in hostcommunities

00inaccessibleareas

150,806dsplacedpeople

0.6 millionpeople targeted

173,357people reached

1.0 million people in need

EDUCATION

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

71%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

545, 448 girls 404,006 boys

0.8Mdisplacedpeople

1.8Min hostcommunities

0.0Minaccessibleareas

991,375in hostcommunities

319,999inaccessibleareas

531,696 displacedpeople

462,290 women 331,810 men

55,406 44,120

2.6 millionpeople targeted

1,843,070people reached

3.7 million people in need

elderly men elderly women

HEALTH

NIGERIA: Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 18 July 2016)

Update on: 18 July 2016 Feedback: [email protected] www.humanitarianresponse.info/operations/nigeria www.unocha.org/nigeria www.reliefweb.int/country/nga Sources: Health, Education, Emergency Shelter and NFI, and Camp Coordination and Camp Management sector working groups.

Immediate profiling for age-related educational needs for children 3-17years in the Borno newly liberated LGAs towards education sector response preparation is critical to enable adequate planning for enrolment into Formal or Non-formal education.

Destruction of school infrastructure has restricted educational access in the 3 SoE due to overcrowdiness of most host community schools overstretching facilities beyond acceptable child-friendly schooling standards. Immediate construction of temporary structures/ school tents for Return and newly liberated areas is critical.

Availability of teachers/facilitators trained to address PSS/SEL, Life skills and school emergency response preparedness towards enshrining protection and safety among Leaners is required.

Leveraging of existing relationship with Protection sector to access newly liberated areas is planned. However funding is currently unavailable to support much needed profiling exercise.

Procurement of school tents is ongoing however adequacy is constrained by funds, EiE Sector response in Borno state is constrained by fund-related limitation of sector partner operational presence on ground (< 5).

Continued advocacy to SUBEBs who possess the teacher recruitment mandate is being done. Through advocacy to army authorities, trained military teachers displaying expertise in classroom delivery are compliant to EIEWG request for non-carriage of guns in camp classrooms.

Conditions in the majority of formal and informal IDP camps are marked by sub-standard or dilapidated shelter, overcrowding, inadequate drainage and insufficient basic services. These conditions are likely to worsen even further during the upcoming rainy season

The need for context-specific NFIs remains high according to the latest DTM report, with blankets/mats and hygiene kits most needed

With 86% of IDPs living in host communities (as per DTM round 10), there is a strong need to scale up the response beyond camps and camp-like settings

36,008 individuals were reached by sector partners through shelter construction or repairs

545,342 individuals were reached through direct NFI or vouchers distributions to allow for more flexibility in the prioritization of the purchased items.

77% of the response was focused in host communities

There is a need to expand and strengthen the capacity for tracking and profiling IDPs

The monitoring and reporting of services to IDPs remains very challenging with high turnover in Government authorities managing camps and the CCCM sector not funded

With ongoing relocations from schools to alternative sites, there is a need to properly sensitize and engage with IDPs to ensure that relocations are voluntary and respectful of the dignity of the individuals

The 10th round of Displacement Tracking Matrix assessments has been published and 255,096 individuals have been biometrically registered

Mobile teams of site facilitators are dispatched in the field to monitor and report gaps or overlaps in assistance.

Sensitizations and “go and see” visits are organized to allow IDPs to make informed choices about relocations

Limited access to integrated lifesaving PHC services including routine immunisation, maternal and child health services for the displaced population in the newly liberated areas of Borno state. In many of the camps there are no health care services or buildings that can be used as clinics while in other sites the health facilities are not functional.

There is a need to develop and implement a contingency plan for the possible outbreak of diseases during the rainy season which is just starting as experienced last year to reduce the number of avoidable mortalities and morbidities in the event of an outbreak.

More funding is urgently required to implement interventions in the newly liberated areas. The health sector which is already underfunded as per the funding overview of the Humanitarian Response plan. The need exceeds the available financial resources

Health sector working group at the national and subnational levels have worked with Borno state government to develop a micro plan to respond to the emerging needs in the newly liberated areas in the state. This micro planning and implementation is led by the Borno state government, chaired by the honorable commissioner of health.

Health sector partners in Borno state including the state and local health authorities have developed a contingency plan to respond to untoward events during the rainy season with clear delineation of thresholds and distribution of responsibilities according to different agencies’ and organisations’ comparative advantage.

National and state health authorities have pledged to commit more resources to the response but more funds are required to meet the increasing health needs. Health sector partners have also improved advocacy for more funding.

Page 4: SITUATION OVERVIEW KEY FIGURES - ReliefWeb · 2016. 7. 19. · GBV SOP for Adamawa was finalized, endorsed and adopted. ... direct food distributions or cash transfer programs (CTPs)

The main WaSH priority is to target settlements in remote LGAs of Borno State. Gaps are huge (800.000 vulnerable people) and only UNICEF and ICRC are currently working in few LGAs outside Maiduguri.

Following an assessment done in June 2016 in the host’s communities of Maiduguri, it was estimated that only 13% of the water needs and 4% of the sanitation needs have been covered (to date). Those figures should reach a more acceptable 23% for water (such 292.000 IDPs) and 9% for sanitation (112.000 IDPs) by the end of the year. The WaSH sector has identified priority wards to focus on main gaps.

Returnees of Adamawa and Yobe state are poorly supported due to lack of funds. Access to water is however key to encourage sustainable returns in those semi-arid LGAs and it was estimated that 75% of the WaSH infrastructures were destroyed by the conflict (RPBA, 2016).

Nigeria has been the most affected country in West Africa with regards to cholera. As we are in the rainy season, the risk of outbreak is high and the capacity of the WaSH sector very limited in case of outbreak in the settlements outside Maiduguri.

WaSH humanitarian response has been focusing in the accessible camps of Maiduguri, Adamawa and Yobe State. Standards have been reached in Yobe and Adamawa, but challenges remain in Maidugrui’s camps as population keep increasing.

Based on the latest 5W, since the beginning of 2016, the WaSH sector has built 88 boreholes with hand pumps (plus 289 boreholes rehabilitated), 21 boreholes with solar or motorized energy (plus an extra 35 rehabilitated), 2.059 emergency latrines (plus an extra 692 latrines being dislodged) and 276 showers. IDPs have received 25.067 WaSH kits.

Mine clearance and risk education for people returning to areas that have risks of unexploded ordinance.

Improving the handling of solid waste to reduce public health risks and management of debris to clear buildings and make them safe.

Shelter assistance within communities stabilized from conflict, that are accessible to humanitarian actors and which bear the highest concentration of IDPs.

Economic livelihoods assessment in N-E Nigeria has completed. It was conducted in North East Nigeria with explicit focus on the affected populations- people returning to their homes (returnees) and IDPs settled with host communities in the four most affected states of Adamawa, Borno and Yobe as well as Gombe.

Assessments have been completed in debris and waste management and in early recovery and non -agricultural livelihoods. Technical assistance provided for early recovery and livelihoods capacity building and state coordination.

Planning is underway for emergency livelihoods through the work of debris and waste management; demining; and recovery shelter in select areas. Partners have identified activities and proposals are being finalized for funding.

It is anticipated that the Recovery and Peacebuilding Assessment for the North will be released in April, will provide further analysis for strategic planning on early recovery sector across the response.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

17%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

140,485 girls128,700 boys

1.2Mdisplacedpeople

1.3Min hostcommunities

0.3Minaccessibleareas

0in hostcommunities

10,054inaccessibleareas

461,376displacedpeople

88,628 women 79,671 men

16,028 elderly women 17,915 elderly men

2.8 millionpeople targeted

471,427 people reached

6.2 million people in need

WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE

● ●

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

EARLY RECOVERY AND LIVELIHOODS

NIGERIA: Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 18 July 2016)

Update on: 18 July 2016 Feedback: [email protected] www.humanitarianresponse.info/operations/nigeria www.unocha.org/nigeria www.reliefweb.int/country/nga Sources: Water Sanitation and Hygiene and Early Recovery and Livelihoods working groups.

0%of targeted people reached

reached by sex & age

00 girls 00 boys

1.7Mdisplacedpeople

0.5Min hostcommunities

0.0Minaccessibleareas

00in hostcommunities

00inaccessibleareas

00displacedpeople

00 women 00 men

00 elderly women 00 elderly men.

2.2 millionpeople targeted

00 millionpeople reached

7.0 million people in need