April Statistical Dashboard - data.unhcr.org

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The monthly dashboard summarizes the progress made by partners involved in the Lebanon Crisis Response and highlights tr
April Statistical Dashboard The monthly dashboard summarizes the progress made by partners involved in the Lebanon Crisis Response and highlights trends affecting people in need. Partners in Lebanon are working to: 1) ensure humanitarian assistance and protection for the most vulnerable among the displaced from Syria and poorest Lebanese; 2) strengthen the capacity of national and local delivery systems to expand access to and quality of basic services; and 3) reinforce Lebanon’s economic, social, institutional and environmental stability.

2016 Funding Requirements US$ 2.48 billion

2016 Planning Figures 5.9 million

Sector requirements (millions US$)

Estimated population living in Lebanon

3.3 million People in need

Food Security

300,000

Palestinians (PRS and PRL)

473.5 391.3

Energy & Water

388.2

Education

356.6

Basic Assistance 290.9

Health

1.5 million

Displaced Syrians

143.3

Livelihoods

138.7

Shelter Social Stability

119.4

Protection Child Protection

98.5 48.1

SGBV 31.7

Basic Assistance

reached / target

# of households profiled

35,083 / 136,000

# of Syrian households receiving multi-purpose cash transfers (every month)

42,527 / 124,800

# of Palestinian refugee households receiving multi-purpose cash transfers (every month) Total USD amount distributed in multi-purpose cash (Syr & Pal)

10,509 / 11,200

Minimum Expenditure Basket (MEB)1

114 $/capita/month

Survival Minimum Expenditure Basket (SMEB)1

87 $/capita/month

Syrian refugee households living on less than MEB1

69%

Syrian refugee households living on less than SMEB1

52%

$29.8 m / $183 million

# of households assisted with core relief items

29,717 / 65,000 100%

0%

Education

reached / target

# of children (3 - 5 years) enrolled in formal or non-formal Early Childhood Education

no data available

# of targeted children (5 – 17 years) enrolled in formal education (primary or secondary)

no data available

# of targeted children (5 – 17 years) enrolled in non-formal education and life-skills

no data available

School aged Syrian refugee children (age 3-17)2

477,034

School aged Palestinian refugees from Syria (age 3- 17)3

10,950

# of public schools operating second shifts for the 2015-16 school year4

238

100%

0%

Energy & Water

reached / target

# of people with sufficient safe water supply at an adequate level of service

Trends of WASH related diseases from Jan 2015 to April 2016 8 250

599,124 / 1,343,137 190,932 /  467,172

# of people benefiting from improvements to municipal solid waste management systems at the local/municipal level

  171,496 /  2,084,494

# people who have experienced a behaviour change session and related activity

200 reports

# of people with access to appropriate sanitation facilities and services

150 100 50 0 Jan 2015

139,258 / 863,296

Food Security

reached / target

# of vulnerable people reached with food assistance (every month, various modalities) Total USD transferred as cash for food # of farmers with enhanced farming production # of people supported for employment in the agriculture sector # of people supported for improved nutritional practices

691,640 / 934,320

$66.9 m / $ 344.8 million 1,639 / 22,700 0 / 30,000 460 / 10,000 100%

Apr 2015 Jul 2015 Oct 2015

Cholera Typhoid Fever

100%

0%

0%

251 Most Vulnerable Cadastrals

Jan 2016 Apr 2016

Dysentery Viral Hepatitis A

WFP food voucher amount6

21.6 $/person/month

Percentage of Syrian households with food security1 35%

32%

30% 25%

25% 20% 15% 10%

11% 2013

2014

2015

Prepared by the Interagency Information Management Unit- UNHCR | For more information contact InterAgency Coordinators Margunn Indreboe [email protected] and Kerstin Karlstrom, [email protected]

Health

reached / target

# of primary health care consultations provided

573,056 / 3,204,000

# of persons assisted with their hospital bills

22,044 / 128,500

# of staff receiving salary support at central, peripheral and public health centre level

55 / 283

Number of PHCs in MoPH network

222

The Number of PHCs in MoPH network supported by NGOs

45

# of new PHCs added to the MoPH-PHC network (LCRP 2016 target is 32)

8

100%

0%

Livelihoods

reached / total

# micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) & cooperatives supported

213 / 1,800

# of targeted vulnerable people working on public infrastructure/ environmental assets upgrading

2,724 / 65,000

# people trained and/or provided with marketable skills and services

4,042 / 54,159

Percentage of Syrian households living below the poverty line ($3.84 per/day) Host community members report an increase of unemployment since the beginning of the crisis

70%

90%

Youth unemployment rate before the crisis

34%

100%

0%

Protection, SGBV and Child Protection

reached / total

Total registered Syrian refugees2

1,041,784

# of individuals enrolled for the first time in life skills activities in community centers

Percentage of Syrian refugee who are women and children2

79%

5,379 / 17,000

# of individuals who received individual legal counseling on obtaining legal stay documentation

Percentage of Syrian refugees without legal residency1

41%

4,982 / 30,000

# of individuals who received individual legal counseling on birth registration

7,995 / 50,000

Percentage of Syrian households with residency permits for all members1

28%

# of interventions to mitigate protection concerns and ensure access to services (includes referrals)

5,739 / 20,000

Residency permit fee per person (age 15+)

# community leaders  and gatekeepers trained and/or engaged on GBV # individuals accessing psycho-social support in safe spaces # of girls and boys who are survivors or at risk receiving specialist child protection support

212 / 4,500

Documents required to obtain legal residency (for UNHCR-registered refugees) include:

19,271 / 120,000

• certified copies of a lease agreement or real-estate deed; • certified attestation from a mukhtar (village leader) that the landlord owns the property; • notarized pledge not to work; and • proof of financial means or support received.

2,853 / 8,304

# of girls and boys participating in structured, sustained child protection or psychosocial support programmes

68,813 / 152,682

# of individuals (girls, boys and caregivers) reached with community mobilization, awareness or information

127,967 / 402,470

# of people trained on child protection           

773 / 2,550 100%

0%

USD 200

Shelter

Community-based groups trained and supported to address child protection concerns

280

Referrals of boys and girls from community-based programs to case management and focused PSS programs

727

Syrian refugee shelter type5

reached / total

# of people benefiting from weatherproofing or shelter enhancements in informal settlements 0%

44,230 / 285,030 100%

# of people benefiting from rehabilitation of substandard buildings

16,351 / 147,353

# of people benefiting from weatherproofing or weatherproofing and WASH upgrades of substandard buildings

14,925 / 60,566

# people who received conditional cash for rent

3,620 / 57,468

Apartments Substandard buildings Informal settlements

Percentage of households living in substandard shelter5 Average monthly rent per household5

16% 57%

27%

58% USD 200

100%

0%

Social Stability # community & municipal support project implemented to alleviate resource pressure and reduce tensions # new dispute resolution and conflict prevention mechanisms established

51 / 732 14 / 32

# youth and children engaged in social stability initiatives

2,244 / 12,550

114

Percentage of municipalities too small to provide any local services

70%

Percentage of host and displaced communities members reporting multiple causes of tensions

55%

100%

0% Sources: 1 Vulnerability Assessment of Syrian Refugees (VASyR) 2015, http://data.unhcr.org/syrianrefugees/download.php?id=10006 2 UNHCR refugee data, as of 30 April 2016 3 UNRWA, 2015

reached / total

Number of vulnerable cadastres where population has increased by 50% or more

UNHCR 2016 Interagency Shelter Survey 2015 World Food Programme January 2016 Update, http://data.unhcr.org/syrianrefugees/download.php?id=10220 7 Interagency Social Stability December 2016 Update, http://data.unhcr.org/syrianrefugees/download.php?id=10171 8 Ministry of Public Health 4 5 6

April Statistical Dashboard MULTIPURPOSE CASH ASSISTANCE : WHAT IS IT AND WHO BENEFITS? Multi-purpose Cash Assistance (MCAP) is provided to the most severely economically vulnerable of the Syrian refugee population. Cash as a modality of assistance aims to mitigate the need of families to resort to negative coping mechanisms by helping them address some of their basic needs, and facilitating their access to goods and services in the market such as additional food, hygiene items, rent, water, clothing, services, etc. Cash grants promote the dignity of households and ensure their freedom of choice. Cash grants boost the purchasing power of poor families with US$175 per eligible family of five on a monthly basis. This in turn positively impacts local markets as demand for products increases. MPC grants are given with the understanding that people are free to spend this money without conditions or restrictions according to their most pressing needs. Post-distribution monitoring has revealed that MPC grants are used to compensate for food and shelter needs as well as covering parts of their health and debt repayment expenditures.

$175

1,041,275 Registered Syrian Refugees

per household/month MCAP package

Syrian refugees receiving MCAP

families receiving MCAP 1 As of 30 April 2016

TOTAL REGISTERED SYRIAN POPULATION2 5.3

53%

SYRIANS RECEIVING MULTI-PURPOSE CASH ASSISTANCE 6.4

47%

Children

Average household size

62%

38%

Children

Average household size

Adults

Adults

58%

24%

18%

49%

38%

13%

Apartments

Substandard buildings

Informal settlements

Apartments

Substandard buildings

Informal settlements

Souce: VASyR 2015

Declared household expenditure per month

Souce: Household profiling results as of 30 April 2016

Percentage of households in each governorate receiving MCAP Akkar

Distribution of households receiving MCAP

Households receiving MCAP 64.4 USD/capita/month on average

Akkar

24%

14%

1,500

Nort 17%

North

1,300

15%

All visited households 91.5 USD/capita/month on average

1,100 families

42,527

272,951

1

900

Minimum expenditure basket 114 USD/capita/month

700

Beirut

1%

Mnt. Lebanon

Baalbek El Hermel

11%

Mnt. Lebanon

Beirut

8%

7%

13% Bekaa

Bekaa

37%

500

Baalbek El Hermel

16%

30%

300 100

South

$1

$21

$41

$61

$81

$101

$121

declared expenditure

$141

$161

$181

$201

Nabatieh South

Nabatieh

6%

3%

6%

CONFLICT MITIGATION MECHANISM PARTNERS BY DISTRICT

SFCG UNDP Tripoli

District

Akkar AND UNDP

El Hermel Mercy Corps Mercy Corps DRC ElUNDP Minieh-Dennie El Koura Zgharta Bcharre El Batroun

The map to the right takes stock of the different 'conflict mitigation mechanisms' established by social stability partners over the past two years. These 'mechanisms' are generally local dialogue committees, gathering key community stakeholders and aiming at defusing tensions, improving inter-group relations and identifying joined solutions to local issues for the municipality, community, or international partners to take forward. The mechanisms are therefore an important potential local resources for partners from all sectors to use in their programmes. The detailed map of communities covered by existing mechanisms is available here: http://data.unhcr.org/syrianrefugees/admin/download.php?id=11025 and a summary table on the composition and mandate of each committee can be found here: http://data.unhcr.org/syrianrefugees/admin/download.php?id=10567 For more information contact the social stability sector coordinator at [email protected].

11%

Jbeil Kesrwane Beirut

Baalbek Forum ZFD Mercy Corps UNDP

El Meten Zahle Alef Forum ZFD UNDP

Baabda Aley Chouf

UNDP West Bekaa

UNDP Rachaya Alef Saida Jezzine SFCG UNDP El Nabatieh Hasbaya UNDP UNDP UNDP Sour

Marjaayoun Bent Jbeil

Districts with Conflict Mitigation Mechanisms more information contact InterAgency Coordinators Margunn Indreboe [email protected] and Kerstin Karlstrom, [email protected] Prepared by the Interagency Information Management Unit | For Social stabilty sector coordinator: Bastien Revel, [email protected]