IRAQ HUMANITARIAN DASHBOARD - August 2018

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IRAQ HUMANITARIAN DASHBOARD (AUGUST 2018) YEAR-TO-DATE TARGETED VS REACHED1

8.7M

JAN TO AUG- TARGETED VS REACHED2

PEOPLE IN NEED

3.4M

2M

PEOPLE TARGETED

Source: HRP 2018

1.4 M

PEOPLE REACHED

3.4M

PEOPLE NOT REACHED

NEEDS SEVERITY

58%

PEOPLE TARGETED

Source: ActivityInfo January to August 2018

SO3 SO4

PEOPLE REACHED

58%

Service provision - Health 5

REACHED

96%

Highest in-kind assistance - WASH

Response Gap

Diyala

Wassit

Babylon Qadissiya

Najaf

+

Targeted population Basrah

Muthanna

627,000

1,116,000

207,000

440,000 34,000

Source: ActivityInfo January to August 2018

Source: HRP 2018

Appealing partner by type

Partners

60

Source: ActivityInfo January to August 2018

6

65

Response by SO

No. of partner by SO

Reporting partner by type 4

INGO NNGO UN

102

SO1. Supporting highly vulnerable displaced families living in camps and sub-standard accommodation.

SO1 SO2 SO3 SO4

114 Partners

By the end of August, humanitarian partners in Iraq reached 2 million people with some form of humanitarian assistance, that is 58 per cent of the 3.4 million people targeted under the 2018 Humanitarian Response Plan.

Targeted population

46,000

29

Exceeded

Key messages

Missan Thi-Qar

Severity

Gap

SO4. Supporting highly vulnerable people inadequately covered under the social protection floor.

Baghdad Kerbala

1,019,664

SO3. Reaching as many newly displaced and currently accessible families as possible.

Salah al-Din

Anbar

298,939 230,328

SO2. Supporting highly vulnerable displaced families who are willing to return to their homes, but are unable to do so without assistance.

Sulaymaniyah Kirkuk

976

542,600

2018 HRP Strategic objectives

REACHED

Erbil

192,652

Response

OVERALL RESPONSE AND GAPS

Dahuk

13

235,341

SO2

PEOPLE TARGETED

-

1,221,623

SO1

3.4M

Ninewa

RESPONSE VS GAP BY STRATEGIC OBJECTIVE3

44

89

108

373701

51720

114

12

2M

Partners

85

People

716653

1223798

While the HRP initially projected that IDPs would return in large numbers to their areas of origin, this has not transpired. Several factors such as insecurity, limited provision of government services and livelihood opportunities as well as slow progress in the clearance of explosive hazards have been hampering the return of displaced people. Durable solutions beyond return to area of origin are now being explored.

Creation date: 15 Sep 2018 Source: Clusters, fts.unocha.org Feedback: ocha.iraq@un.org, www.unocha.org/iraq, www.reliefweb.int 1. The target population is calculated based on strict prioritisation that addresses multi-sector or multiple needs, focusing on vulnerability rather than status. 2. The Health Cluster figures for people reached were used to reflect the overall number of people reached and they do not have sub-annual targets but compute people reached as of July 2018 according to cluster specific criteria. 3. People reached under SO2 exceed target probably due to misreporting by partners. 4. Number of partners reporting on HRP response in the ActivityInfo platform. 5. Health and Protection are considered service clusters while in-kind assistance clusters are WASH, Shelter-NFIs and Food Security. The CCS, Logistics and ETC do not report activities directly targeting people. 6. Some UN agencies and their direct implementing partners report toward HRP targets, which might reflect a higher number of reporting partners.


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