Reports

47,875 Families comprised of 287,250 IDPs were recorded. Most IDPs originated from Mosul (252,768 individuals) and most IDPs were living in camps or emergency sites (244,404 individuals).

This is a compilation of all Round 15 Yobe site profiles.

This is a compilation of all round 15 Taraba site profiles.

This is a compilation of all Round 15 Borno Site profiles.

This is a compilation of all site profiles in Adamawa identified in Round 15 assessments.

This is a list of all round 15 wards including state, local government area (LGA), ward and the number of households/ individuals. 

The Surveys conducted indicate that 73% of education facilities are functional, 73% of health facilities are functional and 21% of villages are deserted. In addition, 52% of bomas reported the presence of UXOs. The payams hosting the majority of IDPs are Rumameer, Majak and Alal. The Payams receiving the majority of returnees are Rumameer, Abyei tow and Majak.

This is a list of all Round 15 sites including site number, site name, state local government area (LGA), ward name with the respective number of households and individuals.  

As of December 2016, there were 3,064,1462 IDPs displaced due to conflict in Iraq, living in 3,700 locations across the country. Although the pace of these displacement movements has slowed steadily since May 2015, and their absolute numbers have been decreasing since August 2016, military operations and generalised violence have still been producing waves of displacement. All of the nine major military campaigns conducted in 2016 have created new displacement —such as the current ones along the Mosul corridor— and depending on the intensity and length of fighting in Mosul, Hawiga and Telafar, it is highly likely that in 2017 as many as 1.2 million additional civilians may be forced to flee their homes.3 These displacement waves take place amid continuous return movements: 1,273,824 displaced individuals have been able to return to their places of origin between 2014 and 2016.

A total of 1,151,427 individuals have returned to their respective homes. 78,575 (6.8%) individuals returned from Cameroon, Chad and Niger Republic. This dashboard highlights areas with high return populations. It furthermore details the shelter condition of returnees, places of prior displacement and displacement reasons (100% were displaced by insurgency).

DTM recorded 47,875 families comprised of 287,250 individuals. The district hosting the most IDPs is Mosul (151,182 IDPs). 13,438 families (80,628 individuals) were recorded as returnees.

IOM conducted a population headcount from 8-10 March which resulted in a total of 21,129 individuals or 3,458 households currently staying in Abrouc of which 15,000 individuals are estimated to have come from Wau Shilluk and the remaining 6,000 individuals from the host community of Abrouc and IDPs from Fashoda and Kodok. The vast majority of IDPs in Abrouc are from Wau Shilluk.

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