Iraq Emergency

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For many, this is not their first crisis.

Since the beginning of 2014, millions of Iraqis have been displaced from their homes. While millions of others remain in their homes, living in fear and trapped in regions controlled by violent extremists.

Violent attacks have created new waves of displacement—creating an emergency call for even more resources in the area. With the conflict currently underway in the city of Mosul, UNHCR is preparing for the worst in Iraq. Hundreds of thousands of families in and around Mosul are fleeing the offensive taking place to recapture Iraq’s second city.  Terrified, homeless, and in need of food and water, families are fleeing with nothing but the clothes on their backs. Many may even be forced into war torn Syria as refugees.

UNHCR is on the ground responding to new arrivals. UNHCR plans to have a total of 11 camps fully accessible the coming weeks, in addition to the two camps already completed in Debaga to account for the influx of people fleeing Mosul. Rapid response efforts are underway, including the distribution of critical-relief items like blankets, clean drinking water, hygiene kits, sleeping mats and other basic items for survival. Tents and other vital supplies are being pre-positioned to aid swift distribution.

Help Iraqi Refugees Now

UN High Commissioner for Refugees at Al-Khadra refugee camp, Iraq

million Iraqis displaced since 2014

thousand Iraqis have fled to neighbouring countries

displaced Iraqi were provided with shelter support

children received psychosocial support

How You Can Help

UNHCR is funded almost entirely by donations from individuals, corporations, and governments. When you support UNHCR’s projects such as the Iraq Emergency Project, you are contributing directly to providing emergency relief to the Iraqis who need it most.

Your donations will help UNHCR provide safe shelter as well as basic survival items such as food, clean drinking water, and medical supplies to the hundreds of thousands of Iraqis driven out of their homes by conflict.

Our Mosul response plan budget is $196 million. If all activities are funded, UNHCR can provide shelter support for over 700,000 people. However we have less than half the funds needed to respond to this emergency. Please help us to ensure these vulnerable families survive.

“There are real fears that the offensive to retake Mosul could produce a humanitarian catastrophe resulting in one of the largest man-made displacement crises in recent years.” – William Spindler, UNHCR Spokesperson

Help us save lives as the Iraq refugee crisis deteriorates

Thousands of Iraqi families are forced to flee their homes every day. With your support, we can give them life-saving care.

Donate to Iraqi Refugees

The Iraq Emergency

After years of mounting sectarian violence, outbreaks of armed conflict in the Anbar Governorate in January 2014 led to a new widespread displacement of people throughout the country.

In the past three years, this conflict has left millions of Iraqis homeless and in desperate need of food and shelter. Coalition forces are now making significant advances to retake territory from insurgents, and with each territory that is liberated, there will be thousands more civilians who need shelter as they are forced to leave their homes.

“The protection of civilians is the most important element of this operation from our perspective.”
– United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi

Helping Iraqi Refugees

UNHCR, the UN refugee agency, is the lead organization providing humanitarian relief for refugees in Iraq. Our agency’s relief efforts include a range of activities from providing emergency shelter and food supplies, to overseeing long-term solutions such as legal assistance for refugee families and psychosocial counseling for children affected by violence.

Since the beginning of the conflict in Iraq, UNHCR has been on the ground providing support to people who have been forced to leave their homes, their possessions, and sometimes even their family members behind. With your help, we can ensure that the families affected by this conflict maintain a sense of hope and dignity, even in the face of the worst conditions.

“There is no better moment than this to be safe in this tent, surrounded by my wife and children.” – Majid, 69 year-old Iraqi grandfather living in Zelikan camp.

In Iraq in 2015, UNHCR:

  • Provided shelter for over 500,000 internally displaced people (IDPs).
  • Provided critical relief items to 220,000 Iraqi IDP families, as well as 7,000 Syrian refugee families.
  • Provided multi-purpose cash assistance to 26,000 families.
  • Provided legal assistance to 96,000 displaced people.

While the situation on the ground is dangerous and complex, we can and must help Iraqis in need today by providing them with emergency supplies, a safe place to stay, and the tools they need to ensure a bright future.

Child Refugees

As refugees, children are often the most vulnerable to hardship and trauma, and this is especially true for children fleeing the Mosul conflict. Some children arriving at UNHCR camps are arriving unaccompanied, and don’t know whether or not their parents are still alive.

These children are arriving after years of living under an oppressive regime where few resources were available and every aspect of life was controlled by force. Access to education in Mosul is rare–children from Mosul district are 30 per cent less likely to have access to education compared to other Iraqi children–and there are even reports of children inside Mosul being beaten or having the wrong haircut or wearing the wrong clothes. At the same time, children from Mosul are also twice as likely to be involved in child marriage compared to other displaced children.

“These children are losing their childhood to displacement. We must ensure that they don’t lose their adulthood because of a lack of education” – Jozef Merkx, UNHCR coordinator in the Kurdistan autonomous region.

Help Us Care for The Children of Iraq

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Internally Displaced People (IDPs) in Iraq

As of 2015, Iraq is home to the third largest population of internally displaced people (IDPs) in the world, with 3.3 million people forced from from their homes since January 2014. This is in addition to the more than 1 million people who fled their homes during the 2006-2008 conflict and have not yet been able to return home.

By 2016, UNHCR estimates that Iraq’s population of concern will reach 4.1 million people, including IDPs, refugees and asylum seekers from Syria and other neighbouring countries, stateless people, and refugee returnees.  

Help UNHCR provide lifesaving shelter and support for IDPs in Iraq.

Donate to Iraqi Refugees Now

Gender Based Violence in Iraq

Displaced populations face an increased risk gender based violence, and this risk is especially present among those fleeing from occupied territories in Iraq and Syria where women and girls have virtually no protection against sexual violence and discrimination. In particular, displaced Iraqis face increased levels of sexual harassment, forced marriage, intimate partner violence, and honour killings.

UNHCR runs outreach programs to give Iraqi refugees who have experienced gender based violence safe spaces to talk about their experiences and find help. By empowering women and girls, working constructively with men and boys, and actively promoting non-discrimination, UNHCR is working to help all Iraqi refugees fully enjoy their rights to safety and dignity.

Read more about the UNHCR’s plans to combat sexual and gender based violence (SGBV) in Iraq.

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