Post on 25-Jul-2020
review
Sudanese women from KassabCamp in Kutum, North Darfur
Photo © A. Gonzalez/UNAMiDsudan
1 Jan - 30 Sep 2016
2016HumanitarianResponsePlan
Published on 26 January 2017
An OverviewKey FiguresPeople in Need, Targeted, Beneficiaries and Funding per Sector, 20162016 Humanitarian response Plan Funding Received per Donor
SectorsEducation (eDU)Emergency Shelter/Non-Food Items (eS/NFis)Food Security and Livelihoods (FSL)Health (HeA)Logistics and Emergency Telecommunications (LET)Nutrition (NUT)Protection (PrO)Recovery, Return and Reintegration (rrr)Refugee Multi-Sector (rMS)Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (wASH)
AnnexesSudan Administrative MapNational NGO Presence in Sudan Presence of Aid Workers across Darfur Partners that have implemented/not implemented activities with HrP funding
3456
789
1011121314151617
18
tabl
e o
f co
nte
ntS
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 2
2016 HumanitaRian ReSPonSe Plan
The 2016 Humanitarian response Plan for Sudan brings together 80 humanitarian partners to help 4.6 million people in need of emergency relief aid. Together these partners, of which 35 are national and 45 are international, requested US$952 million to provide multi-sectoral assistance across the country in 2016. Among the 5.8 million people identified to be in the greatest need of humanitarian assistance are 2.2 million who are internally displaced, 4.6 million who are food insecure and 1.5 million children under age five who are acutely malnourished.
There are four strategic objectives in the 2016 HrP that guide the activities of sector projects:
1. Protect the lives and fundamental well-being of civilians affected by conflict or natural disasters2. Strengthen self-reliance and facilitate durable solutions, including through integration and voluntary return3. Ensure life-saving emergency relief is provided to the most vulnerable people affected by conflict and disaster4. Reduce food insecurity and malnutrition to below emergency levels
The strategic objectives aim to ensure coherence with needs assessment findings; emphasise cross-cutting issues, in particular humanitarian protection and resilience; enhance links between operational and strategic objectives; and facilitate multi-sector responses. Across the 10 sectors, 86 activity indicators were laid out in the HrP, providing the framework for response and monitoring efforts throughout the year.
This review covers the January to September 2016 period and indicates the humanitarian activities of partners across the country. The overview provides a summary of response efforts and helps identify gaps. Of the total 271 projects in the HrP, only 66 have received funding, leaving 205 projects (76 per cent of all projects) unfunded and thus not implemented as of end September 2016.
As of 30 September, the 2016 HrP had received $390.5 million in funding, amounting to 41 per cent of the requested requirement. Last year, the Sudan HrP was the fifth best-funded appeal globally. Humanitarian needs continue to grow regionally and globally, which considerably impacts the limited availability of funding for Sudan.
an o
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2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 3
key
fig
uRe
S 4.6 milliontaRgeted PeoPle
4.6 millionfood inSecuRe
1.5 millionacutely malnouRiSHed cHildRenbelow tHe age of 5
271total numbeR of PRoJectS
24% 76%
66Funded
205Unfunded
80HRP PaRtneRS
44% 56%
35National
45UN & International
53HRP PaRtneRS imPlemented activitieS
30% 70%
16National
37UN & International
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 4
Peo
Ple
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eed,
taR
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016
sectors PeoPle in need
PeoPle targeted
as % of PeoPle in
need
beneficiaries as % of targeted
funding requirements
funding % funded
education 1.6 m 0.4 m 25% 72,871 18.2% $44 m $16.8 m 38.2%
EmErgEncy shEltEr and non-Food ItEms 1.5 m 1.5 m 100% 433,165 29% $30 m $3.3 m 11%
food security and livelihoods 4.6 m 4.6 m 100% 3,100,000 67.4% $322 m $154.3 m 48%
health 3.9 m 3.4 m 87.2% 2,757,000 81% $66 m $15.5 m 23.5%
logistics and emergency telecommunications n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a $28 m $3.8 m 13.6%
nutrition 2.0 m 1.5 m 75% 666,339 44.4% $97 m $25.9 m 26.7%
Protection 3.3 m 2.5 m 75.8% 762,243 30.5% $47 m $4.3 m 9.1%
recovery, return and reintegration 2.3 m 0.3 m 13% 76,361 25.5% $27 m $5.1 m 19%
rEFugEE multI-sEctor 0.7 m 0.7 m 100% 348,000 50% $225 m $51.0 m 22.7%
Water sanitation and hygiene 5.4 m 3.5 m 63% 1,807,160 53.2% $79 m $8.7 m 13%
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$390.5 millionTOTAL FUNDING RECEIVED
Other (individuals &*
20.5
Korea, Republic of
0.03
Italy
0.84Netherlands
6.8
Ireland
3.9
Denmark
7.5
Switzerland
5.9Germany
21.2
Norway
2.4Sweden
11Canada
12.2
Japan
10.4
Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF)
24.6
EuropeanCommission
47.6
United Kingdom
28.8
United States
186.8
*Other:- Carry-over (donors not specified)- Alloca on of unearmarked funds by UN agencies- Various (details not yet provided)- Alloca on of unearmarked funds by NGOs- Private (individuals & organisa ons)
The Sudan Humanitarian Fund is a pooled fund fromjoint donor resources that provides funding to UN agencies
Funding to the SHF is already included in the above donor
41%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
2016
Hu
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ReS
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Se P
lan
fun
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g R
ecei
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PeR
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2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 6
Sect
oRS
A woman from El Sereif, North Darfur, carries out traditionalhousework from her tribe with cereals provided by WFP
Photo © A. Gonzalez/UNAMiD
Education emergencyShelter/Non-Food Items
Food Security& Livelihoods
Health Nutrition Protection Recovery,Return &
Reintegration
RefugeeMulti-Sector
water,Sanitation& Hygiene
Logistics &emergencyTelecom.
edu
cati
on
• goal 1: Increase access to inclusive and protective lifesaving education (formal and non-formal) for children and adolescents affected by emergencies.• goal 2: Improve the quality of education (formal and non-formal) to ensure continuity of relevant education during and after emergencies for the most
vulnerable preschool and primary school aged children and adolescents. • goal 3: Strengthen the response capacity of education actors to mitigate the impact of emergencies on education service delivery.
funding RequeSted/Received
38.2%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 10 20 30 40 50
$16.8M RECEIVED
$44M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
21 5 16 10 11 1.6 m 0.4 m 72,871location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (6, 2),Blue Nile (7, 1), Central Darfur (5, 1), East Darfur (4, 0),Kassala (1, 0), North Darfur (6, 0), Read Sea (1, 0), South Darfur (6, 1), South Kordofan (8, 0), West Darfur (7, 0), West Kordofan (2, 0), White Nile (2, 0)
Key achievements• 60,564 out of a targeted 180,000 children accessed protective learning spaces• 32,627 out of a targeted 175,000 children accessed gender specific WASH facilities in schools and learning spaces• 393,428 out of a targeted 428,000 children received fortified school meals • 72,871 out of a targeted 400,000 children received better education through improved teaching practices and access to learning materials• 21,429 out of a targeted 100,000 children received access to seating desks, benches and chairs• 1,513 out of a targeted 4,000 teachers were trained on core subjects and Education in Emergencies• 381 out of a targeted 4,500 education actors (PTAs, headmasters, govt officials) were trained on education and school management in emergencies• 36 out of a targeted 100 education actors participated in assessments and contributed towards education coordination in the field
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 8
emer
gen
cy s
hel
ter/
no
n-
foo
d it
ems • goal 1: To ensure timely shelter provision to newly displaced people.
• goal 2: To provide needs-based and timely emergency shelter and non-food items to people affected by conflict and disaster, returnees/ integrated IDPs and vulnerable protracted IDPs.
• goal 3: To expand the provision of environmentally-friendly and locally acceptable transitional shelter using regionally produced materials with simultaneous capacity building.
funding RequeSted/Received
11%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
$3.3M RECEIVED
$30M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
24 9 15 12 10 1.5 m 1.5 m 433,165location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (8, 1), Blue Nile (3, 0), Central Darfur (6, 0), East Darfur (4, 0), North Darfur (7, 3), South Darfur (11, 2), South Kordofan (4, 1), West Darfur (5, 2), West Kordofan (1, 0)
Key achievements• 86,199 families received ES/NFIs from the NFI CP and 434 families received ES/NFIs from Partner’s pipeline, with a grand total of 86,633 families receiving NFIs
Of these: • 47,653 out of 75,000 new IDP families received ES/NFIs • 6,425 out of a targeted 25,000 returnee and IDP families—who integrated into the community—received ES/NFIs• 6,883 out of a targeted 40,000 long-term vulnerable IDP families received new ES/NFIs • 6,795 flood-affected families received ES/NFIs• 44,592 families received emergency shelters (IES)• 279 families received transitional shelters • 1,350 out of a targeted 10,000 long-term IDP/returnees/integrated IDP families were trained on construction techniques (e.g. brick-making)
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 9
foo
d s
ecu
rity
&
live
lih
oo
ds • goal 1: Reduce food insecurity of vulnerable people affected by natural disasters and conflict (life-saving).
• goal 2: Restore and sustain food and livelihood security of vulnerable households (IDPs, residents/host communities) in affected areas. • goal 3: Build resilience of food and livelihoods insecure population and reduce vulnerability to climate change-induced disaster risks.
funding RequeSted/Received
47.9PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
$154.3M RECEIVED
$322M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
39 6 33 17 20 4.6 m 4.6 m Food: 2.3Agr. Based Livelihoods:
701,366
location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (14, 3), Abyei PCA Area (1, 0), Blue Nile (10, 2), Central Darfur (7, 2), East Darfur (5), Gedaref (1, 0), Kassala (6, 0), Khartoum (1, 1), North Darfur (9, 1), North Kordofan (4, 0), Red Sea (3, 0), Sennar (1, 0), South Darfur (9, 0), South Kordofan (11, 2), West Darfur (8, 1), West Kordofan (5, 1), White Nile (3, 1)
Key achievements• 1,673,670 out of a targeted 1,756,465 beneficiaries received food through General Food Distributions• 81,303 out of a targeted 340,000 families received agricultural tools and services• 544,090 families (exceeding the 267,000 target) received veterinary and livestock assistance• 727,535 out of a targeted 1,283,786 people received food for assets• 37,000 out of a targeted 46,600 families received training on agriculture and livestock and were give agriculture and livestock start-up kits • 110,623 families (exceeding the 50,000 targeted) accessed livestock services• 127,860 farmers (exceeding the 2,000 targeted) engaged in seed multiplication activities• 20,918 farmer and pastoralist families (exceeding the 10,000 targeted) received livestock, agriculture and natural resource trainings and supplies• 29,528 out of a targeted 2,000,000 tree seedlings were produced and planted• 3,032 out of a targeted 10,000 women were trained on producing and using fuel efficient stoves; using alternative energy sources; and how to be safe while collecting firewood.
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 10
hea
lth • goal 1: Provide primary health care services for vulnerable populations affected by conflict and natural disasters.
• goal 2: Strengthen the capacities to prepare, detect and respond promptly to public health risk or events at federal, state and locality level. • goal 3: Ensure Maternal and Child Health services for the reduction of maternal and child morbidity and mortality among vulnerable populations.
funding RequeSted/Received
23.5%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
$15.5M RECEIVED
$66M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
36 12 24 8 19 3.9 m 3.4 m 2,756,831location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (11, 3), Abyei PCA Area (2, 1), Blue Nile (5, 3), Central Darfur (6, 4), East Darfur (3, 3), Kassala (3, 2), Khartoum (2, 1), North Darfur (8, 3), North Kordofan (1), Red Sea (3, 2), South Darfur (8, 3), South Kordofan (8, 5), West Darfur (7, 3), West Kordofan (7, 5), White Nile (2, 2)
Key achievements• 2,815 health workers received health training• 2,623,605 out of a targeted 3,400,000 outpatient health consultations achieved• 92% out of a targeted 85% of weekly surveillance reporting from sentinel sites were completed in timely fashion• 91% of emergency events reported, investigated and responded to within 72 hours after initial reporting• 73 rapid response teams received training• 61% of health facilities provided Integrated Management of Childhood Illness services• 56% out of a targeted 75% of births assisted by a skilled birth attendant• 71% out of the targeted 85% coverage of measles vaccinations of children under 1 year achieved
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 11
log
isti
cs &
em
erg
ency
te
leco
mm
un
icat
ion
s • goal 1: Provide humanitarian air services to support the response of the humanitarian community, filling identified gaps in logistics capacity.• goal 2: Provide logistics and emergency telecommunication services and information to enhance coordination, predictability, timeliness and efficiency of
the logistics response.
funding RequeSted/Received
13.6%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
$3.8M RECEIVED
$28M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
2 1 1 2 n/a n/a n/alocation by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (1, 1), Central Darfur (1, 0), East Darfur (1, 0), North Darfur (1, 0), South Darfur (1, 0), South Kordofan (1, 0), West Darfur (1, 0) Key achievements• 20 HAC staff trained on logistics• 100% of logistics requests were processed• 100% of all medical or security air evacuation requests were achieved• 27,587 out of 40,200 humanitarian staff were provided with air transport to field locations• 84 out of a targeted 180 light cargo (medical supplies, high energy foods, IT equipment) were transported to required locations
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nu
trit
ion
• goal 1: Provision of quality lifesaving nutrition services for acutely malnourished children (boys and girls 6-59 months of age) and PLW among highly vulnerable communities.
• goal 2: Improve equitable access to integrated program interventions for the prevention of undernutrition among affected communities. • goal 3: Improve national capacity of the partners to ensure effective, efficient and coherent multi-sectoral response in emergency.
funding RequeSted/Received
26.7%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 20 40 60 80 100
$25.9M RECEIVED
$97M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
27 9 18 2 m 1.5 m 666,339location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (10, 1), Abyei PCA Area (1, 0), Blue Nile (5, 0), Central Darfur (6, 0), East Darfur (2, 0), Kassala (2, 0), North Darfur (7, 0), North Kordofan (2, 0), Red Sea (2, 0), South Darfur (6, 0), South Kordofan (4, 0), West Darfur (5, 0), West Kordofan (4, 0), White Nile (1, 0)
Key achievements• 1,094 health facilities have been providing treatment of acute malnutrition cases and preventive services • 153,235 out of a planned 250,000 children Under five (U5) had access to treatment for sever acute malnutrition (SAM)• 20,843 out of planned 25,000 children U5 with severe acute malnutrition with complications got access to treatment through inpatient facilities• 131,221 out of a planned 428,250 children U5 years and pregnant and lactating women (PLW) had access to treatment for moderate acute malnutrition (MAM)• 275,800 out of a planned 300,000 mothers and caretakers of children U5 years received infant and young child feeding (IYCF) counselling or participated in behavioral change activities in
emergencies• 353,034 out of planned 573,131 children 6-59 months received vitamin A supplementation in emergency affected areas
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Pro
tect
ion
• goal 1: Respond to emergency humanitarian protection needs of vulnerable people, in particular women and children, among communities newly affected by conflict or disasters.
• goal 2: Prevent and mitigate protection risks for people in areas affected by conflict or disasters. • goal 2: Enhance the protection capacity of governmental social protection institutions and humanitarian organisations.
funding RequeSted/Received
9.1%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 10 20 30 40 50
$4.3M RECEIVED
$47M REQUESTED
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 14
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
38 6 32 15 15 3.3m 2.5m 762,243location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (2, 0), Abyei PCA Area (2, 1), Blue Nile (20, 5), Central Darfur (14, 3), East Darfur (8, 3), Gedaref (1, 0), Kassala (4, 0), Khartoum (1, 1), North Darfur (16, 3), North Kordofan (3, 0), Red Sea (2, 0), South Darfur (12, 4), South Kordofan (25, 5), West Darfur (9, 3), West Kordofan (6, 3), White Nile (1, 1)
Key achievements targeted achieved• Number of girls, boys, women and men receiving individual or community-based psychosocial support and services GP: 140,000 people
CP: 358,000 people GBV: 1,000 people
GP: 14,374 (6,531 females, 7,843 males) CP: 77,833 (38,810 females, 39,023 males) GBV: 614 people
• Number of unaccompanied and separated childre who are identified, documented and provided with interim care or reunited
5,600 children 3,499 (1,735 females and 1,764 males)
• Number of square metres of landmine/ERW contaminated land cleared through mine action response 6,000,000 sqm 3,466,575 sqm
• Number of community-based protection structures identified/created and/or supported GP: 120 communities CP: 815 communities GBV: 22 communities
GP: 45 CP: 54 GBV: 28 (including 11 women centers)
• Number of extremely vulnerable women and girls of reproductive age provided with personal hygiene kits and sanitary items
85,000 women and girls 14,462 women and girls
• Number of people reached through protection awareness-raising interventions GP: 240,000 people CP: 201,880 people GBV: 30,000 people MA: 750,000 people
GP: 13,809 (8,941 females, 4,868 males) CP: 28,328 (14,708 females, 13,620 males) GBV: 3,584 people MA: 195,467 people
• Number of individuals among national/state protection institutions and humanitarian organisations supported through protection-related capacity building
GP: 4,000 individuals CP: 4,500 individuals GBV: 1,200 individuals MA: 83 individuals
GP: 288 (113 females, 175 males) CP: 4,405 (2,387 female, 2,018 male) GBV: 580 individuals MA: 149 individuals
reco
very
, ret
urn
&
rein
teg
rati
on
• goal 1: Increased engagement of IDP and returnee communities in timely and coordinated return and (re)integration interventions.• goal 2: Improved economic self-reliance and social reintegration of IDP and returnee communities in areas of return and (re)integration using a multisector
approach. • goal 3: Foundations for Durable Solutions are built.
funding RequeSted/Received
18.9%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 5 10 15 20 25 30
$5.1M RECEIVED
$27M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
30 7 23 26 27 2.3 m 0.3 m 76,361location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (1, 0), Blue Nile (4, 2), Central Darfur (6, 2), East Darfur (3, 1), North Darfur (11, 5), South Darfur (4, 2), South Kordofan (5, 1), West Darfur (8, 2)
Key achievements• 2 areas with active, inclusive community-based recovery, reintegration and return programs• 1 area of return and reintegration with improved and sustainable access to basic services and livelihoods through an integrated, multisector and community-led approach• 4 inclusive communities actively engaged in timely and coordinated return and (re)integration using a people-centred and integrated approach• 1 multi-sector return response piloted in Darfur, in cooperation with 6 Sectors and 7 implementing partners • 2 reconciliation efforts undertaken to promote a conducive environment for return and reintegration• 40 government and NGO staff trained on Early Recovery and Resilience in Darfur. • Over 500 IDPs and returnees received training and capacity-building to improve economic self-reliance and social reintegration.
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refu
gee
mu
ltI-s
Ecto
r • goal 1: Ensure equitable access of refugees, asylum seekers and refugee returnees to basic and essential services.• goal 2: Ensure effective protection of refugees, asylum seekers, refugee returnees and those with undetermined nationality status, with particular
attention to vulnerable group. • goal 2: Facilitate durable solutions including promoting self-reliance and livelihoods, resettlement and voluntary repatriation where possible.
funding RequeSted/Received
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
13 3 10 12 6 0.7 m 0.7 m 348,085location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (5, 1), Blue Nile (1, 0), Central Darfur (1, 0), East Darfur (2, 0), Gedaref (1, 0), Kassala (1, 0), Khartoum (2, 1), North Darfur (1, 1), North Kordofan (1, 0), South Darfur (2, 1), South Kordofan (3, 0), West Darfur (1, 1), West Kordofan (4, 0), White Nile (2, 1)
Key achievements• 48 out of a targeted 150 health care facilities provided gender sensitive health care• 80% of refugees, asylum seekers and South Sudanese were vaccinated against measles• Refugees, asylum seekers and South Sudanese accessed 14 litres of clean water per person per day out of a targeted 20 litres per person per day• One gender segregated latrine available for every 20 asylum seekers/refugees or South Sudanese • 1,419 asylum seekers, refugees and South Sudanese (exceeding the targeted 1,200) received hygiene training/monitoring by a hygiene promoter• 48,351 out of a targeted 62,650 refugee and South Sudanese children enrolled in learning spaces at sites od displacement or surrounding communities• 167,620 out of a targeted 193,000 asylum seekers, newly arrived refugees and South Sudanese assisted with ES/NFIs• Less than 5% of a targeted households have poor food consumption• 226,984 out of a targeted 193,000 asylum seekers, refugees and South Sudanese were individually registered • 65% of people with an undetermined nationality were identified• 810 out of a targeted 5,000 interventions in detention and border screening centres were accomplished• 100% of survivors of trafficking/kidnapping received assistance• 42,865 out of a targeted 190,069 asylum seekers, refugees, South Sudanese participated in self-reliance activities• 24,500 out of a targeted 50,850 host community families benefitted from host community targeted activities and refugee interventions• 457 out of a targeted 3,000 people applied for resettlement consideration
22.7%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 50 100 150 200 250
$51M RECEIVED
$225M REQUESTED
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 16
Wat
er, s
an
itat
ion
&
hyg
ien
e • goal 1: Provide and or sustain WASH services to 3,500,000 (1,925,000 female and 1,575,000 male including 1,029,000 boys and 1,071,000 girls) IDPs and underserved populations in Darfur, Kordofan, Blue Nile and eastern Sudan.
• goal 2: Support WASH needs for early recovery processes and durable solutions for 150,000 returnees (82,500 female and 67,500 male, of whom 44,100 boys and 45,900 girls).
• goal 3: Strengthen disaster risk management and preparedness in Sudan for 500,000 (122,990 boys; 128,010 girls; 127,000 women and 122,000 men) affected people to anticipate and respond to critical WASH needs interventions through core pipeline as well as sector coordination and capacity building of communities.
funding RequeSted/Received
13%PERCENTAGE OF FUNDINGRECEIVED
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
$8.7M RECEIVED
$79M REQUESTED
total Projects funded Projects unfunded Projects nat’l Partners internat’l Partners Pop in need targeted Pop Beneficiaries
39 10 29 14 20 5.4 m 3.4 m 1,807,160location by state (number of projects, funded)All Sudan (6, 0), Abyei PCA Area (2, 2), Blue Nile (9, 5), Central Darfur (14, 4), East Darfur (7, 2), Gedaref (2, 2), Kassala (8, 4), Khartoum (1, 1), North Darfur (13, 5), Red Sea (4, 2), Sennar (1, 0), South Darfur (14, 6), South Kordofan (11, 4), West Darfur (8, 3), West Kordofan (5, 4), White Nile (5, 4)
Key achievements• 406,232 out of a targeted 2,457,000 people accessed sufficient quantities of clean water (7.5-10 litres per person for new IDPs and 10 litres per person for long-term IDPs) • 353,863 out of a targeted 600,000 people accessed adequate sanitation services (50 people per latrine for new IDPs and 20-50 people per latrine for long-term IDPs). • 1,536,086 out of a targeted 3,350,000 IDPs and underserved populations reached with hygiene messages and sensitisation activities• 406,232 people (exceeding the targeted 125,000 people) accessed better/clean drinking water (10 litres per person) • 19,905 out of a targeted 100,000 people accessed adequate sanitation services (20 people per latrine) • 85,840 out of a targeted 150,000 people were reached with hygiene messages and sensitisation activities • 4,518 people (exceeding the targeted 1,000 people) were trained to support WASH services.
2016 HuMANITARIAN RESPONSE PLAN REvIEWochasudan_feedback@un.org www.unocha.org/sudan reliefweb.int 17
A woman works on the land inForo Baranga, west Darfur
Photo © A. Gonzalez/UNAMiD