UN: Internally displaced Syrians expected to double by year’s end
February 6, 2014: The number of people displaced by the civil war inside Syria is
expected to nearly double from some 3.5 million today to 6.5 million by the end of
the year, a senior United Nations official said on Wednesday.
Nearly 2.5 million
others have already sought refuge in neighbouring countries, the UN refugee agency
(UNHCR) Regional Coordinator for Syria, Amin Awad, told a news conference at UN Headquarters
in New York, noting that the total funding sought for both refugees and internally
displaced persons (IDPs) for 2014 totals $6.5 billion, $2.4 billion for the former
and $4.2 billion for the latter.
“That’s a big amount of money,” he said. “However,
that statement is accurate. There are 155 agencies, UN and non-governmental organizations
[involved].” Major targets of the funding are protection, education and shelter for
the displaced.
Mr. Awad said 85 per cent of the refugees were not staying in
camps but with host communities, putting an “incredible strain and impact” on these
communities, given their meagre resources, employment and services, calling it an
“overwhelming emergency.” UNHCR planned to boost its support for them, he added.
Beyond
the IDPs there are another 3 million people inside Syria in desperate need for help
and among the refugees there are 8,000 children who have been separated from their
families, he said.
A UNHCR breakdown of refugees by country shows 900,000 in
Lebanon, 600,000 in Turkey, 590,000 in Jordan, 215,000 in northern Iraq, 135,000 in
Egypt, 20,000 in North Africa, and 30,000 in other countries. (Source: UN News)