Reports
Le suivi des urgences a pour but de recueillir des informations sur les mouvements importants et soudains de populations. Les informations sont collectées à travers des entretiens avec des informateurs clés ou des observations directes. Ce tableau de bord présente les informations sur les mouvements de personnes survenus dans la période du 08 au 10 mars 2020 dans un village et 2 sites de la province du Lac. Au cours de cette période du 08 au 10 mars 2020, l’insécurité croissante due aux multiples attaques armées dans le bassin du Lac Tchad a conduit au déplacement préventif (suite aux rumeurs d’attaques) de 614 individus. Parmi eux, 600 individus sont des Personnes Déplacées Internes (PDI) dont 400 individus en provenance de la sous-préfecture de N’gouboua, actuellement accueillis dans la sous-préfecture de Baga-Sola et 200 individus venus de la sous-préfecture Kaiga-Kindjiria, accueillis dans la sous-préfecture de Liwa. Les 14 autres individus sont des ressortissants tchadiens qui ont quitté le village Limé, dans la région de Diffa au Niger, et se sont refugiés dans la sous-préfecture de Daboua.
The objective of the Emergency Tracking Tool (ETT) is to collect information on large and sudden population movements. Information is collected through key informant interviews or direct observation. This dashboard provides information on movements which occurred from 8 to 10 March 2020 in 2 villages and sites in the Lac Province. Between 8 and 10 March 2020, 614 individuals were displaced (after rumours of attacks) as a result of growing insecurity due to multiple armed attacks in the Lake Chad basin. Among them, 600 individuals are Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) including 400 individuals from the sous-prefecture of N'gouboua, currently hosted in the sous-préfecture of Bagasola, and 200 individuals from the sous-prefecture of Kaiga-Kindjiria, hosted in the sous-préfecture of Liwa. The other 14 individuals are Chadian nationals who left Limé, in the Diffa region of Niger, and took refuge in the sous-préfecture of Daboua.
On 5 March 2020, IOM's Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) conducted a head count in the area adjacent to the UNMISS base in Pibor Town to get most accurate estimate number of IDPs who were displaced to the site due to communal clashes linked to cattle raiding between communities of Akobo and Pibor County. The team counted a total of 8,491 IDPs/ 1,522 households who fled to the site between 18 February and 5 March 2020. Food, shelter and non-food items were identified as the most urgent needs by the population staying on site. Eighty-eight per cent of IDPs are from Pibor/Gogolthin Payam (44%) and Lekuangole Payam (44%). The remaining are from Gumruk Payam or did not want to disclose this information to the team. More than a half (58%) are female and under 18 years old (60%).
IOM's biometric registration has been active since 2014, with 928,691 beneficiaries active in its database to date, out of which 56 per cent (520,041individuals) are female and 59 per cent (552,387 individuals) are under 18 years old. Since August 2018, IOM and World Food Programme (WFP) are collaborating on the project "Enhancing targeted food distribution through biometric data management" seeking to contribute to increased food security throughout South Sudan.
IOM’s Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) has been monitoring arrivals from Khartoum to Rubkona through headcounts at two bus stations since April 2019. Between September 2019 and January 2020, the team reported arrival of 5,536 individuals, bringing the total number of arrivals from Sudan to 32,638 since the beginning of the exercise. Previous report in April to June 2019 and April to September 2019.
Important note: Population assessment was completed in 330 soums, but did not include data collection in Ulaanbaatar. This map therefore does not contain population numbers for Ulaanbaatar.
Important note: Population assessment was completed in 330 soums, but did not include data collection in Ulaanbaatar. This map therefore does not contain population numbers for Ulaanbaatar.
Important note: Population assessment was completed in 330 soums, but did not include data collection in Ulaanbaatar. This map therefore does not contain population numbers for Ulaanbaatar.
Les opérations de collecte et de mise à jour des données menées dans le cadre du programme DTM montrent une augmentation du nombre de personnes déplacées au Mali entre janvier et février 2020. Le nombre de PDIs est en effet passé de 216 639 personnes (rapport CMP de janvier 2020) à 218 536 en février 2020 soit une augmentation de 1 897 individus. Cette augmentation est due à des violences variées dans la région de Mopti. En effet, ces violences ont provoqué le déplacement de populations de leurs villages et hameaux pour trouver refuge dans les localités où la situation sécuritaire semble plus calme. DATASET Ronde 62
DTM in West and Central Africa gathers and analyses wide-ranging data to provide a better understanding of internal displacement in the region. The purpose of DTM activities is to systematically collect key data in situations of crisis, conflict, or emergencies in order to inform humanitarian response, decision making and policy making to the benefit of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) and other affected populations. In WCA, DTM conducts Mobility Tracking, Registration, Surveys and Emergency Tracking. These tools were designed to be flexible and polyvalent so as to be implemented in such a way as to address the practical requirements of a given context.
A better understanding of mobility in West and Central Africa is critical to the development of programs and policies and decision making by the International Organization for Migration (IOM). To that end, DTM collects data on the flows, profiles, experiences, needs and vulnerabilities of migrants throughout the region. DTM has been collecting data since 2016 at strategic transit points throughout the region in order to monitor intra- and inter-regional mobility trends (Flow Monitoring) and conducts detailed assessments on the numbers and profiles of migrants present in specific locations (Migrants’ Presence).
The Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) is a system designed to regularly and systematically capture, process and disseminate information on the movements and evolving needs of displaced populations and other mobile populations, providing critical information to decision-makers and responders during crises, supporting advocacy and informing operational planning and response, and contributing to better understandings of population flows. In West and Central Africa, DTM produces a variety of products aimed at meeting the information needs of government and humanitarian actors and at deepening the understanding of displacement and population flows in the WCA region.