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7th November 2012 www.ShelterPakistan.org
SC Agenda – 7th November 2012Opening & Introductions Minutes of the meeting 3rd October, including action points Developments in last weeks
Update – Situation OverviewUpdate from NDMAUpdates from the districts Information Management
2012 Emergency ResponseOngoing / Planned Distributions
2011 Recovery (time permitting)Update on Commitments for ER ProgrammesUpdate on Funding statusShelter activities timeline
Funding Overview (CERF, ERF, Rapid and HOP) TSSUFirst Phase ResultsCCCM TrainingOperational Guidelines and Proposed solutions for IDPs living in Schools AOB TWIG – Follow on detailed session for Technical Discussion
Update from NDMA
18th July 2012
JACOBABAD
Update from Sindh• SC holding regular weekly coordination meetings in the
northern Sindh• DADU: new flooding. Relief Department estimates that
25,000 people affected and is working in 22 villages. Two NGOs are currently doing assessments.
• Winterized support is urgent “What we see in our clinics is an increase of lower and upper respiratory tract infections and a decrease of malaria cases.” MSF
18th July 2012
Update from Balochistan
• Funding urgently required to support further distributions
• Winterization support is urgent
18th July 2012
NOVEMBER
Winter TemperaturesDECEMBER
JANUARY
Winter TemperaturesFEBRUARY
Emergency Update
18th July 2012
7th November 2012 www.ShelterPakistan.org
SC Emergency Summary by Province
Pakistan Flood Shelter Cluster http://www.shelterpakistan.org 'Information Management'
Emergency Shelter and NFIs Coverage and Gap by Provinces for queries, please email:
SCPakistan.IM@gmail.com
7-Nov-12
Emergency Shelter Distributed Emergency Shelter Pipeline
ProvincesNumber of AFFECTED districts*
Houses Destroyed
or Damaged*
Tents Tarpaulins
Shelters Provided
(One tent or two
Tarpaulins)
Coverage (Shelters Provided /
Need)
Tents Distributed
by Government
Tents TarpaulinsShelters
(One tent or two
Tarpaulins)
Projected Coverage (Shelters Provided /
Need)
Remaining Need
Balochistan 4 68,814 1,000 6,000 4,000 6% 34,910 - - - 6% 64,814
Sindh 8 209,936 1,570 54,445 28,793 14% 78,838 100 4,372 2,286 15% 178,858
Punjab 3 107,423 1,227 18,900 10,677 10% 31,132 - - - 10% 96,746
TOTALS 15 386,172 3,797 79,345 43,470 11% 144,880 100 4,372 2,286 12% 340,417
Current pipeline eligibility: 7-Nov-12 to 18-Dec-12 Cluster target:
270,321
or 70% 224,565
7th November 2012 www.ShelterPakistan.org
SC Update – DistributionsTotal distributions (Sindh and Balochistan & Punjab) so far
Item Description
Total Distributio
ns
New Distribution
sOrganizations
Shelters – Government 144,880 94,486 NDMA, PDMA,
Relief Dept.Shelters – Organizations 43,470 38,949 IOM, HANDS,
Acted, CRSBlankets – Government 37,567 16,550 NDMA, PDMA
Blankets – Organizations 88,777 88,777 IOM, Acted, PRCS
Kitchen Sets – Government 1,311 0 PRCS
Kitchen Sets – Organizations 9,743 7,634 NRC, Acted, IOM
7th November 2012 www.ShelterPakistan.org
Agencies Tents Tarpaulins Blankets Kitchen Sets
Jerry Cans Buckets Bedding
MatsPlastic Mats
Agency for Technical Cooperation and Development 5,518 8,277 2,759 5,518 2,759
Health and Nutrition Development Society 550 17,300 8,000 800
International Organization for Migration 1,000 43,995 70,000 1,500 12,000 27,000
National Disaster Management Authority 47,410 1,040
Norwegian Refugee Council 2,109 2,109 2,109 4,218 4,218
Pakistan Red Crescent Society 3,184 5,605 10,510 1,311 5,000
Provincial Disaster Management Authority 72,123 26,017 5,300
Relief Department 19,555
Save the Children 960 475 475 950 975 450
UNHCR 1,620
Welthungerhilfe 5,800 8,700 2,900 5,800 2,900
Grand Total 145,442 79,178 124,544 11,054 32,202 3,059 17,193 38,127
Distribution Summary
7th November 2012
7th November 2012 www.ShelterPakistan.org
Agency Summary – Emergency• Difference in number of HH served till October 02, 2012 and November 07, 12
(Total HH Served: 188,350)
PDMANDMA
Relief D
epartment
IOM
HANDSPRCS
WHHACTED
UNHCR0
10,00020,00030,00040,00050,00060,00070,00080,00090,000
100,000
From 3-Oct-2012 to 7-Nov-20122Till 2-Oct-2012
7th November 2012 www.ShelterPakistan.org
Emergency – Remaining Needs
Jacobab
ad
Kashmore
Jaffara
bad
Qambar
Shah
dadko
t
Rajanpur
Nasirab
ad
Rahim
Yar Khan
Shika
rpur
Dera Ghazi
KhanSu
kkur
Ghotki -
10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000 60,000 70,000 80,000 90,000
100,000
Remaining NeedsEmergency Shelter PipelineEmergency Shelter Dis-tributed
7th Nov 2012www.ShelterPakistan.org
Funding MechanismsPAKISTAN FLOOD 2012 . EMERGENCY FUNDING REQUESTED FOR SHELTER SECTOR (October 2012)
UN+IO INGO NGO TotalERF No proposals submitted - 4 48 52
No proposals approved - 3 8 11No shelters - 5,990 14,350 20,340No NFI - 4,290 10,150 14,440Funds requested (USD) - 630,836 1,890,433 2,521,269
HOP No proposals submitted 3 5 37 45No proposals approved 3 4 16 23No shelters 62,000 73,800 55,101 190,901No NFI 50,000 77,900 28,301 156,201Coordination 1 - - 1Funds requested (USD) 12,102,158 13,699,016 7,387,273 33,188,447
CERF No proposals submitted 3 - - 3No proposals approved 3 - - 3No shelters 8,850 - - 8,850No NFI 7,565 - - 7,565Coordination 1 - - 1Funds requested (USD) 1,778,942 - - 1,778,942
GRAND TOTAL No proposals submitted 6 9 85 100No proposals approved 6 7 24 37Coordination 2 - - -Funds requested (USD) n/a* n/a* n/a* n/a*
* n/a - the tota l of funds requested is not the sum of a l l funding mechanisms; the HOP should include al l the proposals for shelter sector
7th November 2012
TSSU Findings• 201 temporary settlements hosting 33,269 individuals have been assessed in
Jacobabad, Kashmore and Shikarpur. ( aprox 5,300 families)
MIRA TSSU
IDP People in TS
Jacobabad 168,906 23,994
Kashmore 37,063 5,458
Shikarpur 3,817
205,969 33,269
7th November 2012
TSSU Findings
18th July 2012
.
Based on the field observations many families have left the temporary settlements. · Water has receded or is only about 1 feet deep in many areas allowing people to circulate and go back to their place of origin
· During this harvesting season people want to rescue what remains of their crops
· Little humanitarian assistance in camp-like settings discouraged prolonged displacement. · Evictions from temporary settlements and public buildings forced people to go back
TSSU Findings
18th July 2012
ASSITANCE:
• IN TEMPORARY SETTLEMENTS Stranded IDPS
• IN RETURN AREAS/ VILLAGES IDP that can return IDP that have retuned IDP still displaced Host Communities
Type 1 ASSISTANCE IN TS
Type 2
Type 3 SUPPORT IMMEDIATE RETURN
Type 4 OTHER
ASSISTANCE IN TS AND SUPPORT RETURN WHEN WATER RECEDES
Lack resources to tackle the recovery process (reconstruction and/or livelihoods)Households with access (without major physical constrains to return)Have the resources to tackle the recovery process (reconstruction and/or livelihoods).
Households without access (face major physical constraints to return)Lack resources to tackle the recovery process (reconstruction and/or livelihoods)Households without access (face major physical constraints to return)Have the resources to tackle the recovery process (reconstruction and/or livelihoods).Households with access (without major physical constrains to return)
TSSU Findings
18th July 2012
TSSU Findings
18th July 2012
• Settlements lack proper structure with 78% being spontaneous settlements
• IDP evicted for schools
• Disruption of schooling vs adequate solution for IDP
• Relocation where?
• Discussion involving authorities and humanitarian partners
• Shelter, Education and Protection Clusters working on Guidelines. Education Department engaged.
TSSU
MIRA
TSSU Findings
People are living in the water
7th November 2012
Challenges: identification of location, needs and assistance delivery
Next TSSU Assessment
Beneficiary Feedback MechanismsProvince District Tehsil Union
CouncilVillage
Sindh Dadu Johi Darg Wala Abdul Latif Qureshi
Sindh Kashmore Kashmore Jogran Bux Abdul Kareem Domki
Sindh Umer Kot Kunri Sher Khan Sher Rind
Sindh Kashmore Kandh Kot Badani Haji Jamal Khan Chachar
7th November 2012