Syrian Arab Republic
Operation: Syrian Arab Republic
Location
{"longitude":39,"latitude":35,"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 | |
2,725,000 | IDPs, host community members and returnees will benefit from non-food item distribution |
300,000 | IDPs, spontaneous returnees, and other vulnerable people in affected populations will receive legal assistance |
240,000 | IDPs and returnees will benefit from emergency and long-term shelter interventions |
200,000 | vulnerable IDP students will benefit from remedial and catch-up classes |
90,000 | IDPs and host community members will benefit from livelihood activities |
2016 year-end results | |
4,080,000 | IDPs received core relief items, of whom, 83 per cent were reached from inside Syria and 17 per cent through cross-border operations from Turkey and Jordan |
2,012,000 | IDPs were reached with protection and community services |
92,000 | IDPs were assisted with shelter interventions |
47,000 | IDPs and individuals from the host community benefitted from vocational and life-skills trainings, of whom over 979 IDPs benefited from small start-up business grants |
21,000 | refugees and 696,000 IDPs received primary and emergency healthcare |
11,000 | refugee households received regular cash assistance to cover for their basic needs |
Latest Updates and Related Links
People of Concern
6%
Increase in
2016
2016
2016 | 7,131,910 |
2015 | 6,753,569 |
2014 | 7,947,655 |
[["Refugees",19809],["Asylum-seekers",12494],["IDPs",6325978],["Returned IDPs",600000],["Returned refugees",1],["Stateless",160000],["Others of concern",13628]]
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Syrian Arab Republic
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2016
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{"categories":[2013,2014,2015,2016,2017,2018],"p1":[40.80187504,40.86751359,23.27234083,23.57270191,null,null],"p2":[0.29587007,0.44117528,0.12660126,0.10932031,null,null],"p3":[null,null,null,null,null,null],"p4":[190.78372495,163.74056081,150.3680314,113.81792066,null,null]}
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CHOOSE A YEAR
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Year-end Overview
Working environment
The crisis in Syrian Arab Republic (Syria) has had devastating consequences for civilians with nearly half of Syria's pre-crisis population being internally or externally displaced. Currently 13.5 million people in Syria are in need of humanitarian assistance, including nearly three million people living in hard-to-reach and besieged locations. The ceasefire in December 2016 and the Astana talks leading to the establishment of four “de-escalation areas” have yielded a noticeable decrease in armed hostilities, bringing about a renewed hope for a political solution to the crisis and increased access to people in need.An estimated 600,000 IDPs and more than 30,000 refugees spontaneously returned home in the first half of 2017. However, conditions for return in safety and dignity are not yet in place and UNHCR does not promote, nor facilitate, the return of refugees to Syria at this time. UNHCR is enhancing protection and assistance in Syria for those IDPs and refugees who may voluntarily and spontaneously return, as well as continuing its programmes for IDPs and those newly displaced.
The 2018 Humanitarian Needs Overview and Humanitarian Response Plan (HRP) are being developed and will set the framework within which the humanitarian community will respond to the large-scale humanitarian needs. Despite the devastating crisis and although the country is not party to the main international refugee instruments, the Government continues to apply favorable policies towards refugees and asylum-seekers.
In the context of the Whole of Syria approach, UNHCR continues to play a key coordination role leading of the Protection/Community Services, Shelter and Non-Food items sectors.
Key priorities
In 2018, UNHCR will focus on:- Providing life-saving assistance to IDPs across the country;
- Engaging the Government in raising protection concerns and finding appropriate solutions and support national counterparts in addressing issues pertaining to civil registration/documentation, as well as Housing, Land, and Property (HLP) rights;
- Enhancing protection through a wide range of integrated community-based protection programmes, with a particular attention to sexual and gender-based violence, child protection, and services for people with specific needs;
- Registration of new asylum-seekers;
- Identifying durable solutions, including resettlement and voluntary repatriation for refugees;
- Providing services in areas of return for the expected self-organized refugee and IDP returnees, while advocating that any returns be safe, dignified, informed, voluntary and sustainable return.