Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
1
Inter agency coordination MEETING 23 march 2017
1. Welcome remarks 2. Situation update 3. Consultation with high-level mission from UNHCR HQ Geneva (Director of the Africa Bureau, Director of Emergency Security and Supply) 4. Revision of 2017 planning figures / RRP 5. AOB
2
Influx by country of origin in JAN - FEB 2017
Total South Sudan 124,182 DR Congo 6,342 Burundi 1,446 Somalia 859 Other 427 Grand Total 133,256
4
South Sudan influx trend
Monthly Trend JAN 2016 – MARCH 2017 39,204 Average per Month 38,613 Average per Month 65% Children below < 18 45% Male 85% Women and Children 55% Female Source : Office of the Prime Minister, Refugee Department and UNHCR Field Offices Figures since July based on manual registration and headcounts. Confirmed figure will be available after bio-metric registration 3% Elderly
5
South Sudan influx trend
Daily Trend 22 February March 2017 Daily Average arrivals 2,004 ind. 65% Children below < 18 45% Male 85% Women and Children 55% Female Source : Office of the Prime Minister, Refugee Department and UNHCR Field Offices Figures since July based on manual registration and headcounts. Confirmed figure will be available after bio-metric registration 3% Elderly
6
Refugee settlement population (20 MARCH 2017) bidibidi, Rhino, Palorinya, IMVEPI
Bidibidi Settlement 272,206 refugees Rhino Settlement 86,770 refugees Palorinya Settlement 146,367 refugees Imvepi Settlement 40,864 refugees
7
Operational status Imvepi settlement currently receiving refugees
New approach was tested, but led to congestion of transit facilities Decongestion took place over the last week; standard procedures now being applied again 90,000 reasonable carrying capacity Lamwo settlement will be opened during the first half of April; settlement opening letter to be issued shortly “hybrid approach” to be piloted with dedicated jhost community support from the start 30-50,000 current reasonable carrying capacity Palorinya (Moyo district) still receiving arrivals from Elegu and Lamwo district (this flow will be redirected to Lamwo settlement once open)
8
Priorities and gaps Imvepi: Strengthen and accelerate response at settlement level outside the RC – current response too slow and inadequate Responders assigned to Lamwo to prioritise rapid efforts to open reception at the site Emergency response, communal structures (schools, health centres, child-friendly spaces, ECDs, community centres) – all partners to always use a semi-permanent approach at least; no plastic sheet roofing on communal structures Infrastructure support for the seven settlement areas opened since July 2016 to replace plastic sheet structures – gap analysis ongoing
9
Response support Inter-agency base camp support is being mobilised for Imvepi and Lamwo, possible IHP support (tbc) Uganda Refugee Response Coordination Portal under development – visual analysis; sector support; response information “one-stop shop” for all refugee responses in Uganda
10
2017 influx planning figures
11
Thank you
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.