2014/2015

HUMANITARIANIRAQ NEEDS OVERVIEW

SUMMARY

OCHA/Iason Athanasiadis 5.2 MILLION people in need of humanitarian assistance ESTIMATE HUMANITARIAN COUNTRY TEAM

1.8M 1.5M 1.7M 0.2M + + +

Internally Displaced Affected host Affected non-host Syrian Refugees Persons communities communities in areas under the control

1 million people of armed groups 500,000 250,000

IOM DISPLACEMENT ESTIMATE HUMANITARIAN ESTIMATE HUMANITARIAN UNHCR, COVERED UNDER TRACKING MECHANISM COUNTRY TEAM COUNTRY TEAM THE SYRIA REGIONAL RESPONSE PLAN 2014

Source: UNCS, Government. The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on the maps in this document do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. 2 OCHA/Iason Athanasiadis Priority Needs

Since the outbreak of fighting between government forces and armed groups in December 2013 in Anbar governorate, internal armed conflict has swept quickly across large parts of . The humanitarian consequences have been catastrophic, impacting all eighteen governorates. At least 5.2 million people are now estimated to be in need of protection and emergency humanitarian assistance.

PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS

Protection of the civilian population has become the overarching concern in Iraq. The number 1 of civilian victims of armed violence has sharply increased in all governorates directly affected by fighting. Some 3.6 million people live in areas under the control of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), of which 2.2 are in need of humanitarian assistance. Violations of human rights and international humanitarian law by all parties to the conflict have been widespread. MASSIVE NEEDS AS A RESULT OF DISPLACEMENT, INCLUDING SHELTER 2 An estimated 1.8 million people have been newly displaced since January 2014, approximately 800,000 of whom are in urgent need of emergency shelter assistance and 940,000 require basic household items. FOOD ASSISTANCE At least 2.8 million people are now food insecure. In addition to food insecurity among 3 those displaced, the conflict has disrupted the public distribution system of subsidized foods upon which more than 4 million individuals who are not displaced depend. Among these, approximately 1.5 million individuals in the lowest 20 percent income group are estimated to have already become highly food insecure and are now in need of emergency food assistance. ACCESS TO ESSENTIAL SERVICES Over 5 million people lack sufficient access to critical social services as a direct result of 4 the conflict including 5.2 million people in need of healthcare assistance; 5 million who require emergency water, sanitation and hygiene (WASH) assistance, and at least 950,000 displaced school-aged children who need emergency interventions to ensure access to education.

3 Breakdown of Affected People

BREAKDOWN OF TOTAL NUMBER OF PEOPLE IN NEED BY GOVERNORATE AND CATEGORY

GOVERNATE POPULATION IDPS AFFECTED AFFECTED SYRIAN PEOPLE % OF (EST. JAN 2014) HOST PEOPLE IN REFUGEES IN NEED PEOPLE COMMUNITIES* AREAS UNDER *** IN NEED THE CONTROL OF ARMED GROUPS (NON-HOST)**

Anbar 1,675,606 360,803 482,345 115,360 4,529 963,037 63.20% Babylon 1,953,184 17,865 9,868 4,557 0 32,290 1.64% 7,665,292 106,385 162,654 7,278 0 276,317 3.57% Basrah 2,744,758 4,030 0 0 0 4,030 0.15% Dahuk 1,220,396 488,906 316,329 0 94,447 899,682 49.88% Diyala 1,548,493 60,312 150,943 45,653 0 256,908 16.80% 1,749,915 185,806 50,853 0 88,699 325,358 16.07% Kerbala 1,151,152 59,139 26,770 0 0 85,909 7.10% 1,508,854 136,207 76,745 33,938 631 247,521 15.21% Missan 1,050,580 5,367 3,292 0 0 8,659 0.82% Muthanna 770,476 3,600 0 0 0 3,600 0.47% 1,389,549 79,269 0 0 0 79,269 5.40% Ninewa 3,524,348 110,384 49,757 1,117,431 1,344 1,278,916 46.37% Qadissiya 1,220,333 13,848 12,016 0 0 25,864 2.10% Salah al- 1,509,153 39,792 75,150 363,463 0 478,405 37.48% Din Sulaymani- 2,039,767 95,034 43,787 0 23,855 162,676 7.54% yah Thi-Qar 1,979,561 7,038 4,717 0 0 11,755 0.59% Wassit 1,303,137 26,215 25,802 0 0 52,017 3.91%

TOTAL 36,004,554 1,800,000 1,491,028 1,687,680 215,303 5,194,011 14.34%

* People living in two km radius of IDP concentration areas where the ratio of IDPs to host communities is more than 10% ** People (minus IDPs and host communities) living under national poverty line with 50% increase *** 1798 Syrian refugees whose location is not known but has been added to the total Syrian refugees

4 Impact of the Crisis

IRAQ’S PROTECTION CRISIS Iraq is facing a massive protection crisis, characterized by profound levels of violence, targeted attacks on civilians, restricted access to basic services by marginalized groups, appalling levels of gender-based violence and grave violations against children, including recruitment and unlawful detentions. ISIL is the most prominent threat actor in the Iraq conflict, but they are by no means the only party to the conflict committing violations. At least 7,715 civilians were killed and another 12,297 were injured in Iraq during the first eight months of this year as a result of sectarian violence. Systematic and widespread violations of human rights and international humanitarian law (IHL) have forced entire communities to flee their homes, minority groups in particular. Many families have now been displaced four or five times, and have been forced to shelter in unfinished buildings, public facilities, and out in the open with little or no security. While many have managed to reach neighboring governorates, not all find safe haven. At least 237,000 of the total 3.6 million Iraqis living in areas under the control of ISIL and affiliated armed groups are IDPs. Efforts to improve and advocate for the protection of civilians in this conflict must form the basis of all humanitarian and early recovery interventions in Iraq, across all clusters/sectors.

Displacement: An estimated 1.8 million people have been displaced since January 2014, 13 per cent of whom remain displaced in areas under ISIL control. The first major wave of displacement was in eastern Anbar in the final days of December 2013 and in January 2014, as a result of major military operations in urban areas. This affected at least 50 per cent of the population in who were largely displaced to other towns within Anbar, but also to northern and central Iraq. The second major wave of displacement occurred after 6 June 2014, when ISIL and affiliated armed groups assaulted Iraq’s second largest city, . Over the course of several days, more than 450,000 people fled the city - or nearly a quarter of the city’s population - with the vast majority travelling to the Ninewa Plains and Kurdistan Region of Iraq to seek refuge. These displaced people included large minority communities. The most recent large-scale IDP movement began on 3 August when ISIL occupied the city of , in Ninewa Governorate. At least 300,000 people, mostly Yazidi families fled to Mount Sinjar before reaching Syria and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq. These families arrived in host communities with fewer coping capacities than other IDP groups, and their influx created a substantial shortage of adequate shelter. Across Iraq, approximately 800,000 IDPs are in urgent need of emergency shelter assistance, and at least 940,000 lack basic non-food items (NFIs). Few displaced people are prepared for the approaching winter months in the northern governorates. They lack access to heating systems, carpets, blankets and winter sets. Only two per cent of surveyed tents met minimum winterization requirements. Food security, agricultural production and livelihoods are severely threatened by the escalating conflict in Iraq. Approximately 2.8 million Iraqis are now food insecure. This includes 1.3 million IDPs both inside and outside formal camp settings, in addition to 500,000 people who remain in areas affected by the conflict and around 200,000 people within host communities. Ongoing conflict has disrupted the government’s Public Distribution System (PDS) of food rations in parts of the country, upon which millions of Iraqis depend. Also affected was the June 2014 cereal harvest and post-harvest activities in key production areas such as Ninewa and Salah al-Din governorates, which contribute nearly a third of Iraq’s wheat. Large parts of the wheat production belt lie directly under the control of ISIL and affiliated armed groups. Annual wheat production in Ninewa was approximately 655,000 tons last year of which only 179,000 tons has been sold, leaving many farmers with a wheat surplus in their fields and plunging incomes. In Ninewa, Salah al-Din, Kirkuk, Diyala, Anbar and Babil, the food security of more than 4 million individuals, who are not displaced, but who rely on the PDS for more than 50 per cent of their energy intake, have had their household food security compromised.

5 Essential public services, including health, water and sanitation and education have sharply deteriorated in conflict affected areas, and are overstretched by a rapid influx of internally displaced people. • Health: Facilities have been damaged by bombing and shelling in Anbar, Ninewa, Diyala, Salah al-Din and Kirkuk Governorates, with reports of some 45 per cent of health professionals in these areas now displaced. In Ninewa over half the health facilities were reported to be non-functioning as of September. The conflict has also severely disrupted the national system for procurement and distribution of medical supplies, preventing essential items from reaching clinics and hospitals. Approximately 5.2 million people are in need of emergency health interventions as a result. • Education: The influx of refugees is putting pressure on already limited education infrastructure impacting at least 950,000 school children across the country. In the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, the continued use of some 1200 school buildings for housing the displaced has delayed the start of the 2014/15 school year in Dohuk and other locations. Host community schools have been overloaded with an influx of displaced children, many – if not all – of whom have been traumatized and require special psycho social assistance. • WASH: High volume displacement is placing unsustainable stress on municipal water supply systems. The conflict has also damaged water systems and in some cases entire districts have had their water supply networks cut-off by armed groups. An estimated 5 million people now require emergency water and sanitation interventions. Livelihoods have been severely impacted by insecurity and conflict. Displaced people, having left behind jobs and businesses, face considerable difficulties finding new employment in areas where they move to. IDPs and refugees rely on depleted savings, help from host communities, daily wage labor, begging and humanitarian assistance to survive. Iraqis remaining in areas of conflict are also severely impacted. Around 20 per cent of Iraq’s public sector personnel work in the most conflict-affected governorates of the country, including Ninewa, Anbar, Salah al-Din, Diyala and Kirkuk – all areas where payment of public sector salaries have been severely disrupted. Public funds financing construction projects and other public-private enterprises have not been available, resulting in stalled projects and terminated employment contracts throughout the country. The impact of the conflict on trade is most significant in areas close to the border or conflict. Traders, seasonal laborers, farmers have lost subsidized agricultural inputs and now face loss of markets for their products.

6 Most Vulnerable Groups

People displaced by conflict: All 18 governorates are now hosting families fleeing violence. Of the 1.8 million newly displaced, 860,000 people, or nearly half, have found refuge in the Kurdistan Region, mainly in Dohuk Iraq: Displacement - HumanitarianGovernorate. Around Snapshot 700,000 IDPs(as of 11have October fled 2014) to the central and western region of the country, including 400,000 in Anbar Governorate, and well over 200,000 have sought refuge in the south. At least 13 per cent of all SITUATION OVERVIEW displaced Iraqis remain in areas under the control of ISIL and affiliated armed groups.PEOPLE The absence IN NEED of1 a country- wide IDP registrationTURKEY process and loss of official documents by IDP families continues to impact access by the There are now 5.2 million people in need of people in need urgent humanitarian assistance across Iraq. displaced to essential services and government interventions. 5.2M Dahuk as of 14 Sep 2014 This includes; ERBIL Ninewa Mosul 1.8 million people displaced since DISPLACEMENTIraq: Displacement by Origin BY ORIGIN(1 Jan. to 14 Sep. (1 2014) Jan. to 14 Sep. 2014) DISPLACEMENTIraq: Displacement by Destination BY DESTINATION(1 Jan. to 14 Sep. 2014) (1 Jan. to 14 Sep. 2014) . Anbar January 2014 Erbil TURKEY TURKEY Dahuk . 1.5 million individuals in host communities million DAHUK Kirkuk Sulaymaniyah million DAHUK 1.8 SYRIA 1.8 . 1.7 million vulnerable Iraqis who are not Internally displaced Internally displaced NINEWA KIRKUK Salah al-Din (planning figure) Mosul (planning figure) 488,906 Mosul IDPs but live in areas directly impacted by 185,806 Erbil Erbil the conflict. SALAH AL-DIN Erbil 878,146 ERBIL ERBIL 110,384 . 215,000 Syrian refugees. 95,034 NINEWA DIYALA NINEWA Baghdad 18,792 SULAYMANIYAH 136,207 SULAYMANIYAH KIRKUK IRAN KIRKUK IRAN Vulnerable groups in Iraq continue to suffer Ba`aqubah Diyala SALAH AL-DIN 290,000 the cumulative effects of civil war, mass SYRIA SYRIA SALAH AL-DIN Samarra DIYALA BAGHDAD Samarra DIYALA Kirkuk39,792 displacement, social tension, and a 272,481 Baghdad IDPs 60,312 79,832 Other people considerably weakened social sector. This Ba`aqubah in need Sulaymaniyah Ba`aqubah Ramadi Ramadi 517,032 WASSIT situation is compounded by the low quality Kerbala 360,803 109,113BAGHDAD Hilla 106,385 ANBAR 30,052 ANBAR Kerbala BAGHDAD of essential health, water, and sanitation KERBALA BABYLON KERBALA WASSIT Diwaniya KERBALA 26,215 WASSIT services caused by decades of JORDAN ANBAR 3,665 17,865 Kut Amarah Najaf Kut Hilla Najaf Hilla 59,139 BABYLON under-investment in social infrastructure. BABYLON MISSAN MISSAN JORDAN Najaf Diwaniya QADISSIYA JORDAN Najaf Diwaniya MISSAN Wassit NAJAF Amarah 13,848 Amarah 5,367 QADISSIYA 79,269 QADISSIYA Nassriyah Babylon 2 Samawah THI-QAR Samawah THI-QAR DISPLACEMENT SITES Nassriyah Nassriyah THI-QAR (1 Jan. to 03 Oct. 2014) BASRAH Qadissiya 4,030 NAJAF Basrah NAJAF 7,038 IDPs 950,000 IDPs Basrah 500,000 IDPs 3,600 Basrah Affected host population DAHUK MUTHANNA BASRAH Thi-Qar MUTHANNA BASRAH 500,000 250,000 Syrian refugees Mosul SAUDI ARABIA MUTHANNA 100,000 SAUDI ARABIA 100,000 SAUDI MissanARABIA NINEWA ERBIL Affected non-host communities in KUWAIT KUWAIT areas underKU armedWAIT groups control SULAYMANIYAH Source: IDP figures: Iraq Humanitarian Country Team Source: IDP figures: Iraq Humanitarian CountryBasrah Team The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. Samarra Muthanna Ramadi DIYALA Fallujah Baghdad Waves of displacement from3 January to August 2014: ANBAR WASSIT TIMELINE OF EVENTS 2014 KERBALA MISSAN January March July QADISSIYA Approximately 85,000 people Intense fighting centred in Anbar Governorate Access to basic services in areas

are internally displaced due to cities of Fallujah and Ramadi increases the controlled by armed groups deteriorating. IDPs displaced - 1 Jan. NAJAF THI-QAR to 01 Sep. 2014 (Families) BASRAH fighting in Anbar Governorate. number of IDPs to 380,000. MUTHANNA 1 - 1,000 1,001 - 5,000 1.2 M 1.2 M 1.45 M 1.8 M 5,001 - 11,450 June February The conflict increases the number August Continued fighting increases the number of IDPs from central and northern Violence in northern Iraq and several regions of the country of IDPs to approximately 140,000. parts of Iraq including cities of Mosul and to and from has resulted in an increase in Tikrit 650,000 Anbar Governorate to 550,000. the number of displaced Iraqis. The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. The data for this map has a limited number of sources, including parties to the conflict. The data has not been independently verified and is subject to error or omission, deliberate or otherwise by the various sources. Due to the fluidityMINORITIES of the conflict, control status is likely to change. Creation date: 11 Oct 2014 Sources: 1. Iraq Humanitarian Country Team 2. IOM DTM 3. UNOCHA, UNHCR, ICODAH Feedback: [email protected] iraq.humanitarianresponse.info www.reliefweb.int Civilians of all ethnic and religious backgrounds have been targeted by the violence sweeping across Iraq. This includes not only minority communities such as Yezidis, Christians and Turkoman in the north, but also Shiites and Sunnis. Of the multiple groups forming the armed opposition, ISIL in particular has employed brutal tactics against minorities and sects. Such persecution is likely to be a persistent feature of the ongoing conflict. Protection concerns are equally faced by groups who are now in the minority in the areas of displacement, including those from Shia and Sunni communities. WOMEN AND CHILDREN Women have been particularly brutalized in the conflict in Iraq, with thousands reportedly abducted, sold, and sexually abused by ISIL and a variety of other armed groups. Surveys in IDP concentration points in KR-I revealed gender related protection issues including camp layouts with long distances and poor lighting to toilets and washing facilities. Overcrowded living conditions coupled with unemployment carry significant risk of domestic violence against both women and children. Children in conflict are particularly vulnerable to deteriorating health, poor nutrition, psychosocial issues, and reduced learning opportunities. Over half of all IDPs are children. At least 520 have been killed and another 379 injured in the violence so far this year.

7 Capacity to Respond

3W OPERATIONAL PRESENCE (AS AT 10 OCT. 2014) Some 36 international humanitarian actors, including the United Nations system, the Red Cross/Red Crescent Movement and international NGOs are engaged in the humanitarian relief effort in Iraq. Approximately 70 national non-governmental organizations (NGOs) active in the country and registered with theIraq: NGO OPS Coordination Online Committee Planning in Iraq/ Projects (NCCI) are System also engaged (as of in10 humanitarianOctober 2014) operations.

NUMBER OF PROJECTS PER DAHUK GOVERNORATE

< 30 ERBIL NINEWA 31 - 60 61 - 90 KIRKUK SULAYMANIYAH > 90

SALAH AL-DIN Armed group controlled areas where humanitarian access and response capacity is DIYALA extremely limited. Number of

projects for the governorate BAGHDAD may not reflect actual implementation in these areas. ANBAR WASSIT KERBALA BABYLON

QADISSIYA MISSAN

NAJAF THI-QAR

BASRAH MUTHANNA

NUMBER OF PROJECTS BY CLUSTER/SECTOR

0 1 5 10 15 20+

TOTAL Protection Health Shelter and Food Security Social Water and Education Coordination Camp Logistics Emergency Non-Food and Cohesion and Sanitation Coordination Telecommuni- Items Agriculture Livelihoods and Camp cations Management Dahuk 30 23 32 16 21 25 18 4 3 1 1 174 Erbil 34 20 20 13 20 16 18 4 3 1 1 150 Sulaymaniyah 25 18 17 13 20 14 12 4 1 1 1 126 Ninewa 9 10 9 16 3 9 5 2 2 1 66 Diyala 12 11 11 7 9 7 3 2 2 64 Anbar 15 13 7 9 3 6 5 2 1 61 Kirkuk 9 12 8 7 7 5 3 3 1 1 56 Salah Al Din 7 10 6 14 2 4 3 2 1 49 Baghdad 9 10 4 4 5 4 4 3 1 1 45 Najaf 8 7 4 3 8 3 2 2 2 39 Kerbala 7 7 3 4 8 2 2 2 2 37 Basrah 7 6 3 4 4 2 2 1 29 Babylon 5 8 3 3 1 1 5 2 25 Wassit 4 6 3 3 1 4 1 2 1 25 Missan 4 5 2 2 3 1 2 1 1 21 Qadissiya 4 5 3 4 1 1 2 1 21 Muthanna 3 5 3 4 1 1 2 1 20 Thi-Qar 3 5 2 4 2 1 1 2 20

The boundaries and names shown and the designations used on this map do not imply Creation date: 12 August 2014 official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. The data for this map has a Glide Number: OT-2014-000074-IRQ limited number of sources, including parties to the conflict. The data has not been Sources: Clusters independently verified and is subject to error or omission, deliberate or otherwise by the Feedback: [email protected] various sources. Due to the fluidity of the conflict, control status is likely to change. https://www.humanitarianresponse.info/operations/iraq http://www.reliefweb.int Humanitarian Access

AS OF 09 SEP. 2014

Humanitarian access is severely compromised in areas under the control of ISIL and affiliated armed groups. UN agencies and their partners have very limited access to much of Anbar, Ninewa and Salah Al Din governorates, including Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul. At least 3.6 million Iraqis reside in areas under the control Iraq: of HumanitarianISIL and affiliated Access armed groups;(as of 2.29 Sep. million 2014) of them are estimated to be in urgent need of aid.

TURKEY DAHUK Dahuk

Mosul

Erbil ERBIL SULAYMANIYAH NINEWA Kirkuk SYRIA Sulaymaniyah KIRKUK

IRAN

SALAH AL-DIN Samarra DIYALA Ba`aqubah Ramadi Baghdad ANBAR BAGHDAD

Kerbala WASSIT KERBALA BABYLON Kut Hilla Najaf Diwaniya JORDAN Amarah QADISSIYA MISSAN Samawah THI-QAR NAJAF Nassriyah SAUDI ARABIA Humanitarian Access Basrah BASRAH Extremly Difficult Access MUTHANNA Some Access Constraints

Accessible Area KUWAIT Number of IDPs

The boundaries and names show n and the designations used on this map do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the United Nations. The data for this map has a limited number of sources, including parties toLEVELS the conflict. The OF data ACCESShas not been independently verified and is subject to error or omission, deliberate or otherwise by the various sources. Due to the fluidity of the conflict, control status is likely to change. Defining difficulty of access is a combination of access of humanitarian actors to the affected population as well sec urity and physical constraints. The presence of multiple security and access indicators as described below under each access level define humanitarian access in a district.

EXTREMELY DIFFICULT ACCESS SOME ACCESS CONSTRAINTS ACCESSIBLE AREA

Area with presence of ISIL and their Areas within range of the ‘front line’ Areas subject to normal (and affiliated armed groups, ISF and but under control of security forces, at times, heightened) security US airstrikes, heavy presence of destruction of key bridges, presence protocols and bureaucratic ERW, snipers and explosive devices of explosive devices and booby procedures (possession of letters in recently abandoned towns, traps and vulnerability to short of authorisation for inter-provincial bureaucratic constraints (denial of notice attacks by militants, areas travel), some delays may occur in travel permits, closure of roads/ hostile to the presence of foreigners, response to short notice security checkpoints and travel restrictions extreme kidnap threat warnings, issues or the presence of religious on civilians) engagement with under control of militia groups, pilgrims or VIPs on a route or within security forces and government is bureaucratic (denial of travel permits an area. required to facilitate access. to Arab staff, refusal to permit convoys or lengthy delays). Response gap analysis for IDP response Iraq: Response gap analysis for IDPs response (as of Oct 2014) AS OF OCT 2014

Since January 2014, about 1.8 million people have been displaced in Iraq. Nearly half of the IDPs have fled to the Kurdistan Region. The remaining have moved mainly to Anbar, Kirkuk, Baghdad and Ninewa governorates. More than 240,000 IDPs are in areas controlled by ISIL and their affiliated armed groups and are largely beyond the reach of humanitarian actors. The fluid nature of the conflict further complicates delivery of humanitarian assistance. This analysis seeks to depict the response gaps across the four clusters only for those newly displaced in 2014, not the host communities that have also been affected by the conflict.

FOOD SECURITY WATER, SANITATION & HYGIENE

1.8M =1.2M+0.6M 66% 1.8M =1.1M+0.7M 61% # of people # of people # of people % reached # of people # of people # of people % reached targeted reached not reached targeted reached not reached (thousands) (thousands) (thousands) (thousands) (thousands) (thousands)

Babylon 26 34 0 100% Babylon 26 34 0 100% Muthanna 4 4 0 100% Dahuk 455 538 0 100% Kerbala 61 54 7 88% Muthanna 4 4 0 100% Diyala 71 61 10 86% Ninewa 135 145 0 100% Erbil 160 137 23 86% Kerbala 61 54 7 88% Sulayma- Thi-Qar niyah 100 84 15 85% 8 6 2 74% Dahuk 455 379 76 83% Najaf 81 54 27 67% Thi-Qar Sulayma- 8 6 2 74% niyah 100 56 43 57% Najaf 81 54 27 67% Anbar 352 176 176 50% Kirkuk 136 86 49 64% Erbil 160 77 83 48% Ninewa 135 75 60 56% Diyala 71 27 44 38% Anbar 352 176 176 50% Qadissiya 16 6 10 36% Qadissiya 16 6 10 36% Wassit 28 10 18 34% Wassit 28 10 18 34% Salah al-Din 42 13 29 31% Salah al-Din 42 13 29 31% Kirkuk 136 13 122 10% Baghdad 113 0 113 0% Baghdad 113 0 113 0% Basrah 7 0 7 0% Basrah 7 0 7 0% Missan 6 0 6 0% Missan 6 0 6 0%

NON-FOOD ITEMS EDUCATION

1.3M =0.7M+0.6M 54% 0.5M =0.1M+0.4M 20% # of people # of people # of people % reached # of people # of people # of people % reached targeted reached not reached targeted reached not reached (thousands) (thousands) (thousands) (thousands) (thousands) (thousands)

Basrah 5 7 0 100% Diyala 21 31 0 100% Erbil 112 121 0 100% Erbil 46 35 11 76% Sulayma- Basrah niyah 70 82 0 100% 2 1 1 64% Dahuk 318 262 56 82% Anbar 102 50 52 49% Muthanna 3 2 1 71% Wassit 8 1 7 14% Sulayma- Missan 4 3 1 70% niyah 29 4 25 14% Ninewa 94 53 42 56% Dahuk 132 18 114 13% Thi-Qar 6 3 3 51% Ninewa 39 3 36 8% Najaf 56 28 28 50% Babylon 8 0 8 0% Diyala 50 22 28 44% Baghdad 33 0 33 0% Salah al-Din 30 12 17 42% Kerbala 18 0 18 0% Kirkuk 95 38 57 40% Kirkuk 39 0 39 0% Babylon 18 7 11 40% Missan 2 0 2 0% Baghdad 79 31 48 40% Muthanna 1 0 1 0% Kerbala 43 11 31 26% Najaf 23 0 23 0% Anbar Qadissiya 10 246 55 192 22% 5 0 5 0% Wassit 20 4 15 21% Salah al-Din 12 0 12 0% Qadissiya 11 1 10 6% Thi-Qar 2 0 2 0%

Creation date: 14 Oct 2014 Sources: Clusters Feedback: [email protected] www.unocha.org www.reliefweb.int