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GAZA STRIP
IRAQ
TURKEY
SAUDI ARABIAEGYPT
JORDAN
SYRIAN ARAB REPUBLIC
IRAN (ISLAMIC REPUBLIC OF)
ISRAEL
KUWAIT
CYPRUSLEBANON
WEST BANK
Cairo
Amman
Beirut
BaghdadDamascus
Jerusalem
Gaza
Duhok
Erbil
Zahle
Mafraq
Hebron
Ashdod
Qobayat
Lattakia
Al Basrah
Sulaymaniyah
Homs
Hatay
Mersin
Aleppo
Tartous
GaziantepSanliurfa
Al Qamishli
Deir Az Zawr
UNHCR
45°0'0"E40°0'0"E35°0'0"E
35°0
'0"N
30°0
'0"N
Nov
embe
r 20
20S
yria
Cri
sis
- R
egio
nal
Refu
gees
and
ID
Ps
Date Created: 25 November 2020 Contact: [email protected]: www.wfp.orgPrepared by: RBC, VAM-GIS
Map Reference: SYR_RegDashboardMap_20201125b
(
SAVINGLIVES
CHANGING LIVES
Data sources: WFP SDI, UNHCR
The designations employed and the presentation ofmaterial in the map(s) do not imply the expression ofany opinion on the part of WFP concerning the legal orconstitutional status of any country, territory, city or sea,or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers orboundaries.
© World Food Programme 2020
Symbols in this map represent variouslocations where humanitarian assistenceis provided. Colors represent differentgroups in need of assistance. Data source:UNHCR. Symbols and colors followingUNHCR standards.UNCHR locations in Lebanon are partiallyrepresented at this scale.
Accomodation
Camp
Center
Dispersed
Location
Settlement
Urban Location
Asylum IDP
Refugee Returnee
´
0 100 20050 Miles
0 150 30075 Km
Country Office
Field Office
Regional Bureau
Sub OfficeOnly one category is fully illustrated:Other features are represented usign same symbol but different color.Only active locations are displayed by location type.Credits: UNHCR
c Operational Sea Port
Groups and reference colors:
WFP
/Hus
sam
Al S
alehSAVING
LIVES CHANGING LIVES
These icons represent all WFP activities planned and implemented in each country in response to the Syrian refugee crisis. To adapt to COVID-19, WFP introduced adjustments to distribution modalities. Figures above may include host community members and non-Syrian refugees. UNHCR locations are partially represented at this scale. Map updated as of November 2020*Figures are under verification and subject to change.
Unconditional Resource Transfers
Asset Creation and Livelihoods
Malnutrition Prevention
5.57 m registered Syrian refugees in countries of asylum (UNHCR, November 2020)
250,555 spontaneous refugee returns to Syria since 2016 (UNHCR, July 2020)
108,018*people assisted by WFP
513,666 people assisted by WFP
53,167people assisted by WFP
October 2020
324,890*people assisted by WFP
Country Office
Regional Bureau
Field Office
Sub Office
IDP
Refugee
Asylum
Sea Port
Settlement
Returnee
National Capital
Accomodation
Dispersed
Camp
Location
Urban Location
Center
School Feeding
1,011,520 people assisted by WFP
Take-Home Rations
OngoingPartially ongoing
Suspended
| Food Security Analysis
In NumbersNet Funding Requirements: (November 2020 - April 2021)
Jordan: US$ 66.0 m
Egypt: US$ 33.3 m
Iraq: US$ 0 m
Lebanon: US$ 51.9 m
Regional Syrian Refugee Crisis Overview
Turkey: US$ 34.9 m
Highlights• 2 million Syrian and non-Syrian refugees and
host communities have been assisted by WFP in October 2020 with cash-based transfers (CBTs), take-home rations in lieu of school meals, and livelihoods programmes.
• Livelihood programmes that have been on-hold in the region are gradually resuming, where safety precautions allow.
US$186.1 million
ContactsWFP Regional Bureau CairoOperational Information Management Unit Telephone: +202 2528 1730Email: [email protected]
WFP ResponseWFP continued to adjust its programmes to meet the most urgent needs of the population. General food assistance continued with COVID-19 mitigation measures in place. After several months of suspension, livelihoods activities have started to resume through ‘food assistance-for-training’ and ‘food assistance-for-assets’ activities for vulnerable host communities and Syrian refugees in the five countries. The sizable learning from WFP’s humanitarian experience and innovation in building effective targeting and delivery mechanisms, particularly for CBTs assistance within the sub-region, has been leveraged in support of national social protection systems.
For more information you can visit WFP.org country pages: Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey.
Donors
Lebanon: WFP assisted a total of 1,011,520 beneficiaries through cash-based transfer modalities amounting to USD 26.4 million and through distribution of family food parcels as part of the COVID-19 and economic crisis response. The people assisted were 169,799 vulnerable Lebanese, 820,277 Syrian refugees and 21,444 refugees of other nationalities.
Jordan: To address increasing vulnerabilities due to COVID-19, WFP expanded its coverage in October to include an additional 350 refugees under its food assistance programme, now reaching around 15,350 refugees (5,400 households). In Za’atari and Azraq camps, WFP has so far provided in-kind food assistance to over 1,400 households in quarantine with the increasing number of COVID-19 cases.
Unconditional Resource Transfers Egypt: WFP extended the redemption period of general food assistance in the form of cash-based transfers for about 108,000 refugees. The assisted refugees come from nine different countries in the Middle East and North Africa.
Iraq: WFP targeted 242,174 IDPs and 69,156 refugees; and 46,044 returnees and people from vulnerable communities through Food for Assets (FFA), Urban Livelihoods and EMPACT programmes, with cash and food assistance in 12 governorates.
Turkey: WFP continues to support refugees in six camps, through a monthly e-voucher payment of TRY 100 (USD 14) per person. The assistance reached 53,167 people in October.
Situation UpdatesAt the end of October, the sub-region registered 1.1 million COVID-19 cases. Jordan saw an 83 percent increase in COVID-19 cases in October, reaching a total of 69,306 cases, while Lebanon saw an increase of 50 percent, reaching 79,529 cases. The spread of the COVID-19 pandemic in refugee and IDP camps has continued, leading to movement restrictions and further disruption of the livelihoods of the vulnerable populations living in the crowded camps.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee announced on 9 October that it had decided to award the 2020 Nobel Peace Prize to WFP for its “efforts to combat hunger” and its “contribution to bettering conditions for peace in conflict-affected areas.” The committee highlighted that providing assistance to increase food security goes beyond than just ending hunger, but also contributes to promoting stability and peace, adding that “the world is in danger of experiencing a hunger crisis of inconceivable proportions if the World Food Programme and other food assistance organisations do not receive the financial support they have requested.” This prize is also a recognition of the hard efforts of all the employees striving to end hunger worldwide, among them Ban, who used to be a beneficiary of WFP food assistance herself. Ban joined WFP in 2015 as a field monitor in Iraq and she is now involved in programmes supporting Syrian refugees, IDPs, returnees and host communities. She has been selected as one of eight WFP staff that will make up the delegation representing WFP which will officially receive the Nobel Peace Prize in December. Photo: Ban, who works in the Iraq Country Office as a field monitor with children assisted by WFP.
WFP wins Nobel Peace Prize
School Feeding
Lebanon: The school feeding programme is set to kick-off around mid-November with family parcel distributions until the end of the year and until students go back to being physically present in schools. 19 new schools (12,000 new students) were added to the school snacks program for the 2020-2021 school year.
Jordan: WFP continued its school feeding activities in early October before schools closed due to a full lockdown. WFP distributed date bars and healthy meals to around 24,000 students attending formal schools in camps and communities.
Asset Creation and LivelihoodsTurkey: Under the cash-for-training component of the Mutfakta Umut Var (MUV)/Kitchen of Hope project, 95 participants from the first training cohort completed on-the-job training. Of those, 23 participants started formal employment at the restaurants or soup kitchens.
Jordan: WFP continued to work with the Ministry of Agriculture on forestry and seedling activities targeting more than 200 beneficiaries (70 percent Jordanian, 30 percent Syrian refugee) who will receive monthly cash assistance to help them meet their food needs.
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