1 / 14

Humanitarian Update

Humanitarian Update. 14 June 2011 http://www.pakresponse.info/. http://www.pakresponse.info/. Humanitarian Update. SWA, NWA and Khyber Agencies: About 600 families displaced from NWA to Bannu , Lakki Marwat and D.I. Khan. 989 families returned to SWA

rbragg
Download Presentation

Humanitarian Update

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Humanitarian Update 14 June 2011 http://www.pakresponse.info/

  2. http://www.pakresponse.info/

  3. Humanitarian Update • SWA, NWA and Khyber Agencies: • About 600 families displaced from NWA to Bannu, LakkiMarwat and D.I. Khan. • 989 families returned to SWA • Continued displacement from Bara Tehsil, Khyber Agency

  4. Humanitarian Update • Mohmand / Bajaur Agencies: • Currently 2,687 families are residing in Nahqi camp (Mohmand Agency); 2,350 families returned to their place of origin. • Return to Safi Tehsil (Mohmand Agency) has been postponed due to security concerns till June 15, 2011.

  5. Humanitarian Update • Jalozai Camp: • A total of 8,678 families have returned from the camp (mainly to Bajaur). • Currently, 2,744 families from Bara (Khyber Agency), 1,000 families from Mohmand and 2,072 families from Bajaur Agencies are residing in camp.

  6. Monsoon Contingency Plan

  7. Scenarios

  8. CCCM and Shelter / NFI CCCM • IOM lead for CCCM in Pakistan. • 28% of displaced people in camps. 1.150 – 3.300 camps (30 fam./community shelter – 65 fam. /tent camp) • In 2011 60% of the camps planned to be managed (compare 45% Sindh 2010) • Based on last years scenario in Sindh, the vast majority 45 % of all camps will be managed by government, 8 % by hum. sector = 50 – 160 camps, • Humanitarian Camp management capacity is in Pakistan is relatively small (1.500 persons identified). Training required • Pro active involvement of mass coms • Relatively late startup government, Intensive coordination required on district level. Shelter / NFI • IOM and UNHCR broad experience in Shelter and Non food Items (NFI) coordination from floods 2010, • CP assumes 50% of affected population displaced * NFI’s per person -/- stocks. (140.000 – 430.000 families) • 200 relief organizations in country (50.000 staff), 80 organizations gave input, • Humanitarian NFI’s identified in country for approximately 130.000 families (7 pers). Not all funded. More outside (regional stocks and suppliers) • Special attention for lighting and poles. • District coordination planned in early stage, more training + support required, • IM tools are SRF ready.

  9. Contingency Plan Snapshot: Emergency Food Aid • Scenario on affected population: Worst case 5.9 million; medium but most likely 2.07 million • Available food stock (in different projects) estimated around 40,000 mt: good for one month relief assistance to only 2.1 million people • Standby agreements with transporters in place • Local warehousing capacity increased to 130,000 mt • Pre-qualification of NGOs in place • Emergency rapid assessment mechanism being finalized led by WFP and NDMA • Integration among four survival clusters being ensured. • DRR activities such as dykes, watershed management being done thru current ER programme i.e. C/FFW

  10. Health CP (UNFPA, UNICEF, WHO + 67 partners) • Provincial health emergency preparedness and response capacity built • Capacity building – chest infections (ARI) / Cholera treatment centers, EmOC, Antenatal Care • Trained rapid response team for case management of cholera • Disease early warning system and nutrition surveillance and with partners • health and environmental health services, essential medicines and supplies • support overburdened and under-resourced health facilities targeted • standardized package of essential emergency health care through counterparts

  11. WASH Contingency Plan • Inclusive process, active inputs from UN Agencies, Line Departments and NGOs in Islamabad and all provinces • Case load of 450,000 affected population for rapid response over 30 days – Low on prepositioned materials stock and HR support • Ongoing preparedness exercise -- Delineate best positioned actors, build capacity to respond rapidly and effectively, LTAs to rapidly deploy materials and relief workers

  12. CONTACT DETAILS FOR THE CLUSTERS LEADS

More Related