Assistance to Vulnerable Syrian Refugees and Host Communities in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey
Operation ID: 200987
This operation has been modified as per budget revision 1 (see below)
In its sixth year, the Syrian regional crisis continues at enormous cost, with refugees and vulnerable host communities in the region facing continued vulnerability to food insecurity, deterioration of living conditions and sources of resilience, exposure to protection risks and erosion of social cohesion. Inadequate access to public infrastructure and services, including shelter, safe water, sanitation, education and healthcare, remains a major concern. The length of displacement, lack of formal livelihood opportunities, and rising costs have exhausted sources of self-reliance for refugees and vulnerable host communities, forcing households to deplete their savings and assets to pay for basic needs such as food and shelter. Refugees and vulnerable host community households remain heavily reliant on international assistance. Reductions of assistance have resulted in the adoption of negative coping strategies, including decreased food consumption and food quality, and increased exposure to protection risks.
Vulnerability to food and nutrition insecurity is
increasing for refugee and vulnerable host communities,
driven by a lack of economic access to food. These
trends were evidenced in late 2015 by the concurrence of
reductions in assistance and significantly increased
food insecurity rates among refugee households –
reaching 37 percent in Jordan. Vulnerability in the
region is often greater among women-headed households
than those headed by men, and is negatively correlated
with international assistance, education levels and
income-earning opportunities.
Protracted relief and recovery operation 200987 will
intensify efforts to achieve sustainable solutions
through support to the human capital and self-reliance
of vulnerable refugee and host communities, while
providing life-saving food assistance when needed. WFP
will address the underlying causes of vulnerability,
increase beneficiaries’ self-reliance and reduce the
need for international assistance in the future. The
operation will maintain flexibility between the relief
and self-reliance components, using regular assessments
and revisions to respond to changing needs, maximize
programme impact and prepare for recovery and stability
as part of longer-term work.
This operation builds on WFP’s Vision 2020 and is fully
aligned with national and regional response plans and
Sustainable Development Goals 2 and 17. Activities will
contribute to WFP’s Strategic Plan (2017–2021) through
the provision of conditional, restricted food assistance
to end hunger (Strategic Objective 1) and improve
nutrition (Strategic Objective 2); and resilience-based
approaches to enhance self-reliance, human capital and
livelihoods. Broader actions for food security will
include national social safety nets (Strategic Objective
3) and support to Sustainable Development Goal results
(Strategic Objectives 4 and 5). The Gender Policy
2015–2020 and its regional implementation strategy will
be mainstreamed throughout the operation.
------
This BR 1 is to reflect an increase in Landside, Transport, and Storage and Handling (LTSH) rate and to update the project rate in the system as a result of including two air operations into the PRRO.
Budget revisions | File |
---|---|
Budget Revision |
PDF | 1.6 MB
Download
|
Resource situation | File |
---|---|
Resource Situation |
PDF | 95.71 KB
Download
|