Nigeria

 

Operation: Opération: Nigeria

Location

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Key Figures

2020 planning figures
100% of settlement-based refugees (some 20,000 people) will receive 20 litres of potable water per person, per day
97% of sites where IDPs, IDP returnees and other civilians are threatened by the presence of armed actors will be monitored 
80% of primary school-aged refugee children will be enrolled in primary education
60%  of targeted IDPs in north-east Nigeria (360,000 people) will be provided with birth certificates
24% of targeted IDP households in north-east Nigeria (14,400 households) will be living in adequate dwellings
2018 year-end results
167,700 IDPs and returnees received civil documentation including birth registration and national identity cards which enabled freedom of movement and reduction in risks of statelessness
21,350 internally displaced households received targeted protection-based material assistance 
3,100 Cameroonian refugees issued with ID cards by NCFR to reduce risks of arrest, detention and improve freedom of movement 
2,050 internally displaced households received livelihoods and capacity enhancement support to address negative coping mechanism   
1,840 IDPs benefitted from multi-sectoral referral pathways
910 permanent shelters were constructed for Cameroonian refugees

People of Concern Personnes relevant de la compétence du HCR

5%
Decrease in
2019
2019 2,269,468
2018 2,379,761
2017 2,379,195

 

[["Refugees",54166],["Asylum-seekers",1033],["IDPs",2195779],["Returned IDPs",18356],["Returned refugees",134]]
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Nigeria

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2019 {"categories":[2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020],"budget":[null,40.906967547,79.767047754,80.40000002,93.06523573,89.73044018],"expenditure":[null,21.96523424,30.61301372,30.46963491,40.28442153,null]} {"categories":[2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020],"p1":[null,1.82155943,5.94289722,13.36027901,34.6076047,37.75216307],"p2":[null,null,null,null,null,null],"p3":[null,2.831582997,30.23548234,22.89000044,27.08602015,15.06266468],"p4":[null,36.25382512,43.588668194,44.14972057,31.37161088,36.91561243]} {"categories":[2015,2016,2017,2018,2019,2020],"p1":[null,1.18809322,2.46861358,11.30156782,20.0278546,null],"p2":[null,null,null,null,null,null],"p3":[null,1.5415473,15.80133905,7.63509863,4.57641393,null],"p4":[null,19.23559372,12.34306109,11.53296846,15.680153,null]}
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  • 2020

Year-end Overview

Working environment

Nigeria continues to face a complex humanitarian situation with no end in sight to the Boko Haram insurgency. Although the Nigerian military made significant gains against the insurgents in 2017 and 2018, Boko Haram remains a serious threat to security. So far, IDPs and refugees have only returned to the Local Government Areas headquarters, often resulting in IDP like situations with many returnees living in camps and camp-like situations.  Returnees are not authorized to move beyond a security perimeter defined by the military around the headquarter towns. This restriction reduces the capacity of returnees to engage in meaningful livelihood activities.  Due to the absence of services and civil authority in areas of return, services like education, health and law enforcement including the security of IDP camps has been assumed by the military.  Humanitarian movements to the field are possible only through air transport provided by the humanitarian air service helicopters. In some locations, humanitarian hubs (safe temporary accommodation and work space) were set up to facilitate field missions.
 
Elsewhere in Nigeria, clashes between herdsmen and farmers in the middle belt (Benue, Nasarawa and Taraba states) are on the increase. In 2017 and in the first quarter of 2018, theses clashes generated thousands of IDPs and resulted in several deaths as well as destruction of property and livelihoods. This conflict has been identified as a threat to national security.
 
The last quarter of 2017 and 2018 saw the arrival of Cameroonian refugees in Nigeria with the majority settling in host communities in Cross River and Benue States. Due to security concerns, the Government of Nigeria has advised the establishment of camps /settlements far from the border areas. These refugees are in addition to some 2,500 refugees and asylum-seekers that were already present in urban areas, mostly in Lagos.
 
UNHCR will continue to explore and fully utilize opportunities for strategic partnerships with agencies like the World Bank, UNDP, and Presidential committee on the North-east (PCNI) to integrate its programmes into the development strategy and implement activities that are beneficial to both displaced and host communities. UNHCR will continue to strengthen interagency partnership through coordination structures at both state and federal level including the Inter-Ministerial Task Force (IMTF) and the government-led Humanitarian Coordination Working Group (HCWG).
 
UNHCR’s will continue to lead the Protection Sector Working Groups at Abuja and Maiduguri levels, as well as the Camp Coordination and Camp Management and Shelter/ ShelterNFI Sectors.
 
Following the signing of the Tripartite Agreement for the return of Nigerian refugees from Cameroon in March 2017, organized return is expected to be a major trend in 2019, in addition to spontaneous return of both non-registered refugees and IDPs from camps to areas of origin.
 
 

Key priorities

In 2019, UNHCR will focus on:
  • continuing to implement a protection-centred operational strategy for IDPs to respond to pressing needs of vulnerable displaced individuals identified during protection monitoring, vulnerability screening and community-based participatory assessments;
  • providing IDPs with protection-based material assistance, livelihood assistance and peacebuilding; access to justice; response to sexual and gender-based violence, psychosocial support and advocacy; and child protection;
  • Providing core-relief items and shelter assistance, including through cash-based interventions (CBIs), for IDPs
  • advocating for increased engagement with government and other humanitarian actors and promote collaboration with development actors to ensure interagency and inter-sectorial complementarities;
  • promoting sustainable return of refugees and reduce recourse to negative coping strategies through promoting and stimulating livelihoods and CBIs in the areas prioritized by refugees  returnee communities;
  • distribution of core relief items, livelihood assistance, shelter interventions to the most vulnerable, access to justice and strengthening peaceful coexistence to the returning refugees;
  • integrating CBI components in shelter/NFIs kits, business start-up kits and income generation cooperatives for refugee returnees;
  • supporting government counterparts in registration of newly arriving Cameroonian refugees and provision of individual documentation to enhance legal protection;
  • continuing to move refugees (on a voluntary basis) to the new settlements in Cross River and Benue states away from the borders and ensuring provision of access to services as well as livelihood support to refugees both within the communities and the settlements;
  • working closely with ECOWAS for implementation of agreed plan of action.
Latest contributions
  • 25-JUN-2020
    New Zealand
    $1,297,017
  • 22-JUN-2020
    France
    $24,325,877
  • 19-JUN-2020
    Japan
    $55,646
  • 18-JUN-2020
    Switzerland
    $265,675
  • 17-JUN-2020
    Belgium
    $162,867
  • Sweden
    $172,374
  • 16-JUN-2020
    Qatar

    private donors

    $2,000,000
  • Estonia
    $56,883
  • 10-JUN-2020
    Kuwait
    $2,600,000
  • 08-JUN-2020
    Canada
    $725,689
  • 04-JUN-2020
    Egypt

    private donors

    $1,800,000
  • Japan
    $60,583
  • 31-MAY-2020
    Germany

    private donors

    $2,273,071
  • Malaysia

    private donors

    $236,672
  • Spain

    private donors

    $6,697,838
  • China

    private donors

    $821,610
  • United Arab Emirates

    private donors

    $1,179,124
  • Philippines

    private donors

    $164,687
  • Thailand

    private donors

    $470,206
  • Saudi Arabia

    private donors

    $277,187