Mali
Operation: Mali
Location
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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% | of refugee households have basic needs met through multipurpose cash grants or vouchers |
100% | of refugees will have returned voluntarily |
100% | of returnees will have their national rights re-established |
80% | of refugees are involved in combatting sexual and gender-based violence through prevention and sensitization |
2,500 | returnees and vulnerable host community members will have their protection monitoring incidents reported |
2016 end-year results | |
2,600 | IDPs were sensitized on human rights |
210 | Mauritanian and urban refugee children were enrolled in primary school |
14 | water points were rehabilitated or constructed |
6 | schools were rehabilitated in areas of return |
Latest Updates
People of Concern
26%
Decrease in
2016
2016
2016 | 100,247 |
2015 | 135,816 |
2014 | 291,615 |
[["Refugees",17512],["Asylum-seekers",301],["IDPs",36690],["Returned IDPs",35986],["Returned refugees",9758]]
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Mali
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2016
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{"categories":[2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018],"p1":[2.8587129,11.38623867,9.3844582,7.040851,null,null],"p2":[null,null,0.10197148,0.57564893,null,null],"p3":[null,null,3.67058966,4.66259468,null,null],"p4":[14.73841253,9.26613482,1.709622,1.09318194,null,null]}
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CHOOSE A YEAR
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Year-end Overview
Plan Overview
Working environment
The implementation of Agreement on Peace and Reconciliation from the Algiers process, completed in June 2015, continues to slowly advance, but has not yet produced the stability and security needed to ensure genuine peace in northern Mali. The volatile security situation resulting from ongoing violence amongst armed groups, intercommunity tensions and escalating threat of terrorism, particularly along the transboundary zones with Burkina Faso and Niger, continue to hinder humanitarian access in the north, necessitating specific risk reduction measures for UNHCR staff on mission to specific areas. The ongoing insecurity coupled with limited economic opportunities and the lack of access to basic services in parts of the north and centre continues to prevent the voluntary returns of high numbers of Malian refugees and IDPs.
Despite the volatile security situation, Mali continues to welcome refugees and asylum-seekers. It remains in favour of supporting the naturalization and integration of protracted refugees.
UNHCR works with the Government of Mali and its partners in the Humanitarian Country Team, the UN Country Team, development banks, the technical and financial partners to support a more favourable environment for the protection of refugees, refugee returnees, IDPs and IDP returnees. UNHCR plays a key role in the strategy and planning of humanitarian responses as lead of the Protection and the Shelter/NFI clusters.
Key priorities
UNHCR’s priorities focus on durable solutions. The legal integration of protracted refugees will be supported through the advocacy and advancement of naturalization and accompanied with local integration assistance, while those who wish to voluntary return will receive assistance to facilitate their secure and dignified return. Urban refugees and asylum-seekers will be assisted through cash-based interventions, documentation, health, education and SGBV prevention.
UNHCR will work with partners to improve conditions in priority zones of return, and ensure the sustainable and voluntary return of Malian refugees and IDPs through cash-based assistance, protection monitoring, SGBV prevention and response, documentation and social cohesion activities. It will continue to work with the government in the revision of its laws in order to prevent and reduce statelessness in Mali.
Funding constraints will negatively impact the already limited assistance to the populations of concern, particularly Malian returnees who remain in a volatile protection environment.