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Mosul response critically underfunded, UNHCR warns

Briefing notes

Mosul response critically underfunded, UNHCR warns

As fighting rages in the west of Iraq's second largest city, the UN Refugee Agency urgently needs US$126 million to meet the critical needs of those displaced.
2 June 2017 Also available in:
Iraq. People who have reamined in parts of liberated Mosul
People who have remained living in liberated parts of Eastern Mosul gather at an aid distribution organised by one of UNHCR's partners Muslim Aid, on 20 December 2016.

GENEVA – To meet the critical needs of vulnerable children, women and men displaced by fighting in Mosul - and of those returning to their war-damaged homes - UNHCR said today that it urgently needs US$126 million in funding through the end of the year.

Iraqi authorities say that more than three quarters of a million Iraqis have been forced to flee Mosul, the country’s second largest city, since military operations started in October. 

Heavy fighting is continuing, and UNHCR is expecting more large movements of people from the west of the city where the clashes are currently concentrated, spokesman Andrej Mahecic told a news briefing in Geneva.

 “A shortage of funds threatens to undermine our humanitarian response at this critical time,” Mahecic told reporters at the Palais des Nations.

“The vast majority of the internally displaced are families with children and babies – groups that are especially vulnerable and would be most affected by aid shortages should international support wither,” he added.

UNHCR has so far established 12 camps in support of the overall efforts by the Iraqi authorities to provide shelter to currently 316,000 internally displaced Iraqis in areas near Mosul.

 “A shortage of funds threatens to undermine our humanitarian response at this critical time.”

Nearly half of the urgently requested funds – US$60 million - is needed to assist more than 100,000 newly displaced Iraqi families with emergency shelter in the camps, legal assistance to replace lost and missing documents and protect children. Funds would also be used to help prevent sexual and gender based violence, and provide displaced families with blankets, mattresses and other core relief items.

A further US$24 million is needed to assist and support Iraqi families returning to their homes. It is estimated that 125,000 internally displaced people have returned to their homes, many in east Mosul and on the outskirts of the city.

Most of the returnees are living in damaged buildings and need shelter assistance as well as cash support. In areas of return, UNHCR and partners will provide material assistance, including emergency shelter and sealing-off kits to help returnees living in unfinished buildings, as well as essential protection services, including psycho-social support, replacement of missing and lost documents and protection monitoring.

Lastly, US$42 million is required for on time procurement of shelter and aid materials for next winter. To cope with eventual drops in temperatures, UNHCR plans to assist 135,000 displaced and returnee families with a range of core winter items including blankets, fuel, jerry cans and heating stoves.

This includes the provision of one-time cash assistance of US$150 per family to 100,000 displaced residents, as well as returnees, to help them buy fuel to get through the winter.

Since 2014, Iraq has suffered massive internal displacement. It is estimated that up to three million Iraqis are still internally displaced and another quarter of a million live as refugees in the neighbouring countries.

Overall UNHCR protection and assistance programmes in Iraq amount to US$578 million in 2017. These are currently 21 per cent funded which is a cause for concern halfway through the year.

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