Nigeria

 

Operation: Opération: Nigeria

Location

{"longitude":9,"latitude":9,"zoom_level":0}

Latest update of camps and office locations 21  Nov  2016. By clicking on the icons on the map, additional information is displayed.

Key Figures

2018 planning figures
100,000 refugee returnees will be  individually registered 
20,000 IDPs with specific needs will receive material support 
7,000 IDPs will receive cash grants
1,200 refugee returnees will receive production kits or inputs for agriculture/livestock/fisheries activities
30 community-based committees/groups  have been established and will continue to operate in 2018 on SGBV prevention and response
20 briefings and meetings with donor countries will be conducted
2016 end-year results
241,700 vulnerable people (47,300 households) received core relief items in the six states affected by insurgency and communal violence
143,800 Nigerian refugee returnees from Niger, Chad and Cameroon were registered
49,100 individuals received emergency shelter
25,800 survivors of SGBV were provided with comprehensive specialized services, including psychosocial support to promote their wellbeing
164 Cameroonian refugees were repatriated, leading to the closure of the rural refugee operation, and 27 individuals were resettled to various countries

People of Concern Personnes relevant de la compétence du HCR

2016 2,911,012

 

[["Refugees",1367],["Asylum-seekers",467],["IDPs",2219272],["Returned IDPs",689906]]
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Nigeria

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2016 {"categories":[2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018],"budget":[null,null,null,40.906967547,78.92604775,76.299999981],"expenditure":[null,null,null,21.96523424,null,null]} {"categories":[2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018],"p1":[null,null,null,1.82155943,4.99739722,6.104000011],"p2":[null,null,null,null,null,null],"p3":[null,null,null,2.831582997,30.23548234,22.89000044],"p4":[null,null,null,36.25382512,43.69316819,47.30599953]} {"categories":[2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018],"p1":[null,null,null,1.18809322,null,null],"p2":[null,null,null,null,null,null],"p3":[null,null,null,1.5415473,null,null],"p4":[null,null,null,19.23559372,null,null]}
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Year-end Overview

Plan Overview

Working environment

 
The ongoing conflict has resulted into a significant humanitarian crisis and forced displacement in North East Nigeria with 6.9 million persons in need of protection services. More than 1.87 million people have been internally displaced, 97 per cent due to the insurgency. The crisis has also had negative consequences on the already fragile political and economic structures of Nigeria.
 
UNHCR continues with Level 1 registration of returnees from Cameroon, Chad and Niger. The majority of returnees have returned to a situation of internal displacement in North-East Nigeria, and are staying in abandoned public buildings and unorganized IDP settlements close to military camps in liberated areas. Most returnees often end up as IDPs in need of registration services and reintegration assistance, such as shelter, protection-based material assistance and psycho-social support.
 
Nigeria has a functioning legal and administrative framework for refugee protection. The National Commission for Refugees, Migrants and IDPs (NCFRMI), which is the government agency designated for refugee management, remains UNHCR’s main partner in refugee protection.
 
UNHCR’s operation in Nigeria is aligned with the Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP), the Regional Refugee Response Plan (RRRP), the UN Development Assistance Framework (UNDAF) and UN Development Action Plan (UNDAP). The Government of Nigeria launched an ambitious recovery programme named the ‘Presidential Committee for the North East Initiative’. UNHCR’s operational plan is informed by the strategy and programmes planned under this initiative.
 
UNHCR seeks to implement a comprehensive strategy that ensures effective protection and solutions for refugees, asylum-seekers, IDPs and returnees. The strategy is based on the assumption that the situation in North-East Nigeria will improve gradually and that it may take at least two more years before active military operations are finalized and full state authority re-established. UNHCR will implement the protection and solutions strategy in collaboration with various partners, including donors (bilateral and emerging donors, the private sector, and foundations); multilateral organisations including ECOWAS; UN agencies; civil society and international/local non-governmental organizations (NGOs); the media; people of concern including host community representatives.
 
 

Key priorities

 
In 2018, UNHCR will focus on:
  • Striving towards implementing the local integration work plan developed in 2016 and sustaining or expanding opportunities for livelihood and self-reliance of refugees;
  • Supporting the  decision making bodies and agencies through         capacity-building to ensure access to asylum in a fair and expeditious manner;
  • Issuing biometric national identity and machine readable travel documents to facilitate freedom of movement of refugees;
  • Supporting the organized voluntary return in safety and dignity from Cameroon, in light of tripartite agreement already signed;
  • Conducting border monitoring, including cross border exchanges. The operationalization of tripartite agreements and protection coordination will remain crucial areas of intervention;
  • Promoting sustainable returns and reducing negative coping strategies through promoting and stimulating livelihoods and cash-based interventions;
  • For the IDPs, undertaking protection monitoring and analysis, vulnerability screening and response through establishment of protection action groups (PAGs) as well as protection-based material assistance in livelihoods;
  • Peacebuilding, access to justice, response to sexual and gender-based violence, psychosocial support and advocacy;
  • Conducting capacity-building and awareness on protection related issues; Protection /CCCM Sector Coordination in all 6 North-East States
  • Supporting people of concern with the distribution of core relief items and shelter, including through cash-based interventions;
  • Advocating for increased engagement with government and other humanitarian actors, and promote strong interactions with development actors to ensure interagency and inter-sectorial complementarity.