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In a cramped basement in Syria's Saida Zeinab neighbourhood, Iraqi
and Syrian teacher volunteers give free catch-up classes to Iraqi school
children in hopes they will be able to join Syrian students at the
start of the school year. / UNHCR / M. Bernard / August 2007 |
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Press release
9 May 2008
UNHCR faces funding shortfall for Iraq operation
GENEVA -- Faced with a looming funding shortfall, the UN refugee agency warned
today, Friday 9 May, that it could soon be forced to reduce and in some
cases to halt a number of assistance programs for hundreds of thousands
of Iraqi refugees unless donor governments provide additional support.
Agency officials told a donor meeting at UNHCR headquarters in Geneva
that they lack $127 million required for assistance programs for uprooted
people in and around Iraq through the end of the year.
"We will not be able to help hundreds of thousands of the most vulnerable
Iraqi refugees and internally displaced if we do not receive funding for
the remainder of 2008," said UN High Commissioner for Refugees António
Guterres. “Without this support, the humanitarian crisis we have
faced over the past two years may grow even larger.”
In January, UNHCR appealed for $261 million for its operations on behalf
of some of the 4.7 million people uprooted by the conflict in Iraq. It
has so far received $134 million, but urgently requires the remainder to
ensure the continuation of direct assistance programs for many of Iraq’s
internally displaced people (IDPs) as well as those who have fled elsewhere
in the region, including to Syria, Jordan, Iran, Egypt, Lebanon and Turkey.
The agency also cares for some 41,000 non-Iraqi refugees in Iraq, including
Palestinians, Iranians, Turks and others.
Most of the refugees outside Iraq are in Syria and Jordan and are living
in urban areas such as Damascus and Amman. The most vulnerable of these
benefit from medical, food and direct financial assistance. Last month
in Syria, over 128,000 refugees received food assistance and close to 40,000
received subsidized health care. Many of them are running out of money
and finding it increasingly difficult to survive amid a dramatic increase
in food prices across the region.
In addition to direct cash assistance to some of the most vulnerable refugees,
UNHCR is supporting efforts by governments in the region that are struggling
to cope with the huge numbers of Iraqis who have strained local resources
and infrastructure, including schools and health systems.
UNHCR has registered more than 280,000 Iraqis in neighboring states; given
health assistance to some 250,000 people and provided educational support
in Syria, Jordan and other countries that has enabled some 72,000 refugee
children to attend school. This year, the agency has set a target of getting
another 70,000 Iraqi refugee children into school, but with the shortfall
in funding, many Iraqi children might miss out on education. In Egypt and
Lebanon, where most Iraqi refugee children are enrolled in private schools,
more than 4,000 children will not receive the education grants that UNHCR
offered last year to enable them to continue their education.
Health programs for Iraqis could be drastically reduced and the provision
of some specialised medical interventions might come to a complete halt.
By August, UNHCR will not be able to cover all basic health needs of Iraqis,
and many serious and chronically ill Iraqis will not be able to receive
their monthly medication. Since January, 150,000 Iraqis in Syria and close
to19,000 in Jordan received basic health care assistance. With health facilities
severely compromised in many parts of Iraq and many doctors no longer available,
a growing number of ailing Iraqis are becoming refugees as they leave home
in search of medical care elsewhere.
Distribution programs in Syria and Jordan, the lifeline of 150,000 refugees
who received food aid in 2007-2008, could be reduced, forcing many Iraqis
into further destitution and raising the likelihood of higher malnutrition
rates and increased child labor.
Omar, a 69-year-old refugee from Baghdad, said he will die a “slow
death” if assistance is stopped. He and his family have depended
on food and medical assistance since they fled to Syria in 2006, and are
paying rent from remittances from Iraq that he says are “our only
way to survive.”
The funding crisis comes as fuel, food and rent costs have risen dramatically.
In November, 5 percent of Iraqi refugees interviewed in a UNHCR-commissioned
survey by IPSOS Market Research said that they live on less than US$100
a month. By March, that number had risen to 20 percent.
UNHCR media contacts: Hanne Mathisen, UNHCR Regional Office for the Baltic
and Nordic Countries, mobile: +46 (0) 70 899 0169 or
e-mail mathisen@unhcr.org |
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