Reports
Un séisme de magnitude 7.0 a frappé Haiti le 12 janvier 2010. Celui-ci a causé la destruction de plus de 300,000 immeubles et le déplacement de 1.5 millions de personnes. Le rapport suivant présente les résultats de visites de terrain effectuées entre le 1er Juillet et le 31 Décembre 2015. 14 679 ménages déplacés soit 59 720 PDI, demeurent toujours dans des sites. 37 sites de déplacés demeurent ouverts. 51% de ces sites se composent de tentes, tandis que 3% de ces sites se composent d’un mélange de tentes et d’abris transitoires et 46% de ces sites se composent d’abris transitoires. De plus, 10 sites PDI ont été fermés entre le 1er Avril et le 30 Juin 2015.
From the start of January 2014 through 07 January 2016, the DTM has identified 3,290,310 internally displaced individuals (548,385 families). This map shows locations where IDPs are currently residing, as well as overall concentrations across the country. Anbar governorate hosts the second largest IDP population (17% or 571,500 individuals) and reports a very high rate of intra-governorate displacement, with 97% of IDPs originally from the same governorate. IDPs were displaced mainly after April 2015 (44%) and before June 2014 (41%).
From the start of January 2014 through 07 January 2016, the DTM identified 3,290,310 internally displaced individuals (548,385 families). This maps shows the sizes of IDP population residing in 3 main shelter categories (private, critical, camp plus unknown). In total, 71% reside in private settings, 17% in critical shelter arrangements, 10% in camps and 2% in unknown shelter arrangements.
From January 2014 to 7 January 2016, the DTM identified 3,290,310 internally displaced individuals (548,385 families), dispersed across 105 districts and 3,663 locations in Iraq. The governorates hosting the largest IDP populations are Baghdad, Anbar and Dahuk (page 2) with a total of 1,579,164 individuals corresponding to 49% of the total IDP population. A total of 76% of the displaced population (2,514,504 individuals) have fled from two governorates only, namely Anbar and Ninewa. From 3 December to 7 January 2016, the total number of identified IDPs recorded an increase of 3%, i.e. 94,920 individuals. Particularly, the governorates of Ninewa, Salah al-Din, Erbil and Baghdad recorded a significant increase (27,450 individuals, 26,046, 22,662 and 20,724 respectively). Overall, the returnee population increased by 6%, i.e. 27,042 individuals.
2,151,979 displaced individuals (318,937 households) were identified in Round 7 of DTM in Nigeria.This document provides the list of wards assessed and the numbers of individuals and households identified in each, organised by State and Local Government Area (LGA).
Between January and December 2015, a total of 663,295 Afghans spontaneously returned and were deported through Torkham, Islam Qala, Milak and Spin Boldak borders. Compared with the same period in 2014, spontaneous returns through the four borders have increased by 31% (416,457 vs. 318,570), while deportations have increased by 8 % (246,838 vs. 228,111). The rise in spontaneous returns can be largely attributed to the dramatic increase in returns from Pakistan through Torkham since the beginning of the year, as explained in detail on the next page.
A total of 143,760 IDPs were registered in Sudan between January and Decemebr 2015. The greatest number of IDPs registered by IOM this year has been in North Darfur (109,164 individuals). A total of 146,626 individuals were registered as returnees.
IDP assessments were completed in 91 out of 104 areas in Libya, identifying 88 IDP-hosting areas. 268,943 IDPs (53,740 IDP households) were identified in the 88 covered areas. 79% of identified IDPs were displaced during the last 18 months. The most common IDP accommodation type was rented or hosted accommodation. However, critical shelter types such as schools and other public buildings, unfinished and abandoned buildings, and random/non-formal collective settlements were also prevalent. 130,637 returnees were identified in 19 areas; 71% of the identified returnee population arrived from other areas within the country. 8 migrant transit points and 50 migrant-hosting areas were identified.
Ce document présente des données relatives au nombre de personnes déplacées dans le contexte de la crise nigérianne, identifiées au sein de 86 sites de déplacement dans cinq sous-préfectures de la Région du Lac au Tchad.
As of December 2015, 2,151,979 IDPs or 313,575 households were identified in the seventh round of assessments. Of these, 56% were children and 52% were females. The dashboard includes a map of displacement severity by Local Government Area (LGA) and ward.
More than 5 years after the devastating 12 January 2010 earthquake, an estimated 14,679 households or 59,720 individuals are still residing in 37 IDP sites in the earthquake affected communes. As of 31 December 2015, 37 sites remain open in Haiti. As of this period, Delmas and Leogane host the highest share of the IDP sites, with 9 open sites each (24% of the total of open sites each). They are followed by Tabarre, open sites (16% of total of open sites). Combined, these three communes account for 64% of all open sites. Of the 37 open sites, 19 are categorized as tent sites (51%). One site is composed of mixed shelters, accounting for 3% of all sites.
2,151,979 IDPs (313,575 households) were identified in Adamawa, Bauchi, Benue, Borno, Gombe, Taraba, Yobe, Nasarawa, Plateau, Kaduna, Kano, Zamfara states and Abuja. Borno state (1,434,149 IDPs) has the highest number of IDPs, followed by Adamawa (136,010 IDPs) and Yobe (131,203 IDPs). 55.73% of the IDP population are children and 28.13% are less than five years old. 92.44% of IDPs live in host families while 7.56% live in camps. 78 camps and camp-like sites were identified. The report contains details of location of displacement, demographics, reasons for displacement, duration of displacement, place of origin of IDPs, types of location, data on returnees, registration of IDPs (including information on needs and return intentions). Site assessment information is available for 76 camps or camp-like sites, and includes sectoral needs, namely shelter, WASH, food and nutrition, health, education, protection, communication and livelihoods.