http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/Turkey_70940.html
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/Turkey_statistics.html
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/Turkey_67847.html
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/Turkey_61566.html
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/Turkey_69603.html
http://www.unicef.org/infobycountry/Turkey_69813.html
14 Mart 2016 Pazartesi
About Funding Requirements
| Egypt | Iraq | Jordan | Lebanon* | Turkey | Regional Office | Total (US$) | ||||||||
| Health and nutrition | 3,350,000 | 4,270,000 | 11,232,996 | 31,341,333 | 3,250,000 | 53,444,329 | ||||||||
| Water, sanitation and hygiene | n/a | 8,356,320 | 61,703,263 | 106,814,325 | n/a | 176,873,908 | ||||||||
| Child protection | 7,525,000 | 6,298,076 | 32,800,000 | 50,255,630 | 12,620,000 | 109,498,706 | ||||||||
| Education | 6,158,882 | 19,060,000 | 54,772,200 | 261,400,495** | 92,470,000 | 433,861,577 | ||||||||
| Basic needs | n/a | 2,000,000 | 32,173,154 | 13,477,928 | 4,000,000 | 51,651,082 | ||||||||
| Other | 16,000,000 | 6,000,000 | 22,000,000 | |||||||||||
| Total (US$) | 17,033,882 | 39,984,396 | 192,681,613 | 217,889,216 | 112,340,000 | 6,000,000 | 847,329,602 | |||||||
* The Lebanon Country Office includes US$16 million for youth and adolescent programmes. | ||||||||||||||
| ** In Lebanon, UNICEF will support scaled-up access to quality formal and non-formal education, including through support for 233,000 vulnerable children in formal education and for 78,000 children in non-formal education. | ||||||||||||||
Funding Requirements
Funding requirements
In line with the 3RP 2016, UNICEF is requesting US$847 million to respond to the humanitarian crisis faced by Syrian refugees and other vulnerable children in countries hosting Syrian refugees in the region for 2016. The funds will enable UNICEF to continue programming support for those living in and outside of camps, and to reinforce services and public administration in communities impacted by the influx of refugees. The funds will also help to strengthen the resilience of refugees and the communities impacted by the crisis, as well as other target groups – such as Palestinian refugees from Syria – by supporting needed services in communities and building up national response capacities.This Humanitarian Action for Children chapter for Syrian refugees and other affected populations is complementary to the separate Humanitarian Action for Children appeals for the Syrian Arab Republic and Iraq. The budget in this chapter is not reflected in those chapters.
| Country | 2016 requirements (US$) | |
| Lebanon | 479,289,711 | |
| Jordan | 192,681,613 | |
| Turkey | 112,340,000 | |
| Iraq | 39,984,396 | |
| Egypt | 17,033,882 | |
| Regional | 6,000,000 | |
| Total | 847,329,602 |
2015 PROGRAMME TARGETS AND RESULTS
| 2015 PROGRAMME TARGETS AND RESULTS | UNICEF targets (Jan-Dec 2015) | UNICEF total results (Jan-Oct 2015) | ||||
| CHILD PROTECTION | ||||||
| Children provided with access to psychosocial support services | Lebanon* | 120,000 | 81,526 | |||
| Jordan | 203,264 | 151,105 | ||||
| Iraq* | 39,044 | 31,989 | ||||
| Turkey | 50,000 | 39,523 | ||||
| Egypt | 10,750 | 13,379 | ||||
| Children receiving specialized services from qualified front-line workers | Lebanon | 800 | 2,101 | |||
| Jordan | 13,785 | 5,914 | ||||
| Iraq | 3,500 | 1,725 | ||||
| Turkey | 2,000 | 766 | ||||
| Egypt | 1,500 | 3,877 | ||||
| EDUCATION | ||||||
| Children enrolled in formal education | Lebanon | 87,150 | 155,153 | |||
| Jordan | 130,000 | 143,259 | ||||
| Iraq | 24,782 | 28,919 | ||||
| Turkey | 180,000 | 102,126 | ||||
| Egypt | 14,500 | 13,181 | ||||
| Children in informal/non-formal learning opportunities | Lebanon | 90,000 | 27,003 | |||
| Jordan | 91,500 | 36,269 | ||||
| Turkey | 40,000 | 333 | ||||
| Children who receive school supplies* | Lebanon | 290,000 | 297,746 | |||
| Jordan | 160,000 | 143,743 | ||||
| Iraq | 24,782 | 25,563 | ||||
| Turkey | 180,000 | 223,074 | ||||
| WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE | ||||||
| Emergency-affected population provided with access to drinking and domestic water | Lebanon | 592,614 | 603,670 | |||
| Jordan | 1,840,000 | 707,709 | ||||
| Iraq | 123,948 | 109,316 | ||||
| Emergency-affected population who access hygiene promotion messaging | Lebanon | 773,326 | 1,209,818 | |||
| Jordan | 305,000 | 48,208 | ||||
| Iraq | 49,290 | 91,605 | ||||
| HEALTH AND NUTRITION | ||||||
| Children vaccinated against measles | Lebanon | 150,000 | 205,913 | |||
| Jordan | 34,000 | 18,488 | ||||
| Iraq | 6,366 | 3,743 | ||||
| Egypt | 15,000 | 0 | ||||
| Children under 5 years vaccinated against polio | Lebanon | 1,799,982 | 806,579 | |||
| Jordan | 248,970 | 407,789 | ||||
| Iraq | 750,582 | 883,406 | ||||
| Egypt | 14,500,000 | 15,000,000 | ||||
| BASIC NEEDS | ||||||
| Vulnerable children receiving monthly cash assistance | Jordan | 75,000 | 55,677 | |||
| * Target revised from the initial Humanitarian Action for Children submission. | ||||||
Results from 2015
Results from 2015
As of 31 October 2015, UNICEF had received 73 per cent (US$454.8 million) of the US$624.3 million appeal, in addition to US$138.6 million carried forward from 2014. In 2015, UNICEF scaled up the programmatic response under the No Lost Generation initiative. UNICEF education programmes reached more than 506,000 children, including 442,000 children with access to formal education and 63,000 children with access to non-formal education.
UNICEF also supported education advocacy to overcome legal, policy and language barriers that hinder child and youth access to education. In child protection, UNICEF promoted the expansion of community-based services beyond psychosocial support to reach more children with a broader range of interventions. A package of integrated services is being offered in social development centres in Lebanon and Makani centres in Jordan. In refugee camps in Iraq and Jordan, UNICEF invested in reducing the costs of providing WASH services by transitioning from expensive emergency mechanisms such as water trucking to more cost-effective service delivery.
UNICEF continued to scale up the provision of WASH services in host communities in Jordan and Lebanon. Across the region, UNICEF continued to support polio immunization to ensure that that the Middle East remains polio free and responded to disease outbreaks, including cholera in Iraq and hepatitis A in Jordan.
UNICEF provided 332,000 children in vulnerable families and vulnerable areas with cash or seasonal clothes and materials to meet their basic needs. The winter needs of most vulnerable families were addressed across the region through the provision of cash grants, winter clothing and blankets.
- See more at: http://www.unicef.org/appeals/syrianrefugees.html#sthash.BB0YhN9Z.dpuf
Humanitarian Strategy
In 2016, under the inter-agency Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan (3RP),6 humanitarian response will be combined with efforts to build the medium- and long-term resilience of affected individuals, households, communities and institutions in refugee hosting countries.
UNICEF is supporting the coordination of the No Lost Generation initiative to scale up and improve the quality of education, child protection and youth/adolescent programming across the five countries.
UNICEF is also implementing strategies to increase the supply of and access to services; improve service quality; increase demand and address barriers to access; and advocate for legal and policy reforms to strengthen national education and child protection services. UNICEF is promoting access to quality education to reduce the number of out-of-school children and provide young people with life skills, while also supporting services for the most vulnerable children and youth at the community level. Dedicated youth programmes such as civic engagement and livelihood opportunities will also be promoted.
In WASH, UNICEF is supporting the ongoing transition from emergency services to more sustainable cost-effective systems, including the replacement of water tankering with piped water networks, which will benefit refugees and host communities.
UNICEF will also strengthen national capacities, including by augmenting existing water, sewage and waste collection systems and building capacity on tariffs and regulatory frameworks.
The WASH sector will continue to work on preventing and responding to disease outbreaks. In health and nutrition, UNICEF will promote public health through vaccination campaigns, including against polio and measles, as well as by reinforcing routine immunization services.
Given the escalating vulnerabilities among refugees, UNICEF will reinforce nutritional screening and the provision of micronutrients and nutritional supplements, in particular for the most vulnerable children, youth and their families across the region. Programmes will be delivered in coordination with the operations described in the separate Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) appeals for the Syrian Arab Republic, Iraq and the refugee and migrant crisis in Europe - See more at: http://www.unicef.org/appeals/syrianrefugees.html#sthash.BB0YhN9Z.dpuf
UNICEF is supporting the coordination of the No Lost Generation initiative to scale up and improve the quality of education, child protection and youth/adolescent programming across the five countries.
UNICEF is also implementing strategies to increase the supply of and access to services; improve service quality; increase demand and address barriers to access; and advocate for legal and policy reforms to strengthen national education and child protection services. UNICEF is promoting access to quality education to reduce the number of out-of-school children and provide young people with life skills, while also supporting services for the most vulnerable children and youth at the community level. Dedicated youth programmes such as civic engagement and livelihood opportunities will also be promoted.
In WASH, UNICEF is supporting the ongoing transition from emergency services to more sustainable cost-effective systems, including the replacement of water tankering with piped water networks, which will benefit refugees and host communities.
UNICEF will also strengthen national capacities, including by augmenting existing water, sewage and waste collection systems and building capacity on tariffs and regulatory frameworks.
The WASH sector will continue to work on preventing and responding to disease outbreaks. In health and nutrition, UNICEF will promote public health through vaccination campaigns, including against polio and measles, as well as by reinforcing routine immunization services.
Given the escalating vulnerabilities among refugees, UNICEF will reinforce nutritional screening and the provision of micronutrients and nutritional supplements, in particular for the most vulnerable children, youth and their families across the region. Programmes will be delivered in coordination with the operations described in the separate Humanitarian Action for Children (HAC) appeals for the Syrian Arab Republic, Iraq and the refugee and migrant crisis in Europe - See more at: http://www.unicef.org/appeals/syrianrefugees.html#sthash.BB0YhN9Z.dpuf
About:Refugee Children
ABOUT MY ERASMUS+ KA2 PROJECT
There is only one wish in my heart and in my mind:
"Children can enjoy their childhood in peace and serenity"Located refugee problem in international migration issues project represents our issues.
"Refugee children's right to education is not a blessing, the state of liability.
We are also children's rights in schools, human rights, we will carry out our activities for labor and professional organizations in the government and the whole society to fight the right to education of children coming to Turkey to escape the harsh conditions fully qualified and access. Students are registered at state schools in the realization of the right to education is our priority to be given the opportunity to receive education in their mother tongue, the most important obstacle to overcome language barriers.
This allows them to benefit from literacy courses to facilitate education rights provided in the existing system and trying to be submitted until permanent interpreter service.
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