UNHCR faces
difficulty helping neediest Iraqis
in Jordan
AMMAN, Jordan,
May 27 (UNHCR) – Amid rising food
and energy prices, exacerbated by
the withdrawal of state fuel
subsidies, the UN refugee agency
will find it increasingly difficult
to help the growing numbers of Iraqi
refugees in need of assistance in
Jordan.
Vulnerable
Jordanians and Iraqis have been
particularly hard hit by the
economic developments. And while the
government has tried to cushion the
blow with public sector wage
increases and the establishment of a
social safety net, these initiatives
will not benefit Iraqis, most of
whom are not entitled to earn a
living in Jordan.
More than 150,000
Iraqis in Jordan have become
completely dependent on
international aid. But the rising
fuel and food prices are also
cutting into the funds of
humanitarian aid organizations such
as UNHCR, which has received less
than half of the US$44 million it
seeks from donors for operations in
Jordan this year.
"The devastating
effect is simple; on one hand the
funds available buy dramatically
less when compared to a few months
ago. On the other hand, we are being
faced with larger numbers of
vulnerable people as their
impoverishment is accelerated due to
these rising costs," said Imran Riza,
UNHCR's representative in Jordan.
UNHCR also
provides food packages to some
20,000 Iraqis a month, but the
refugee agency has had to cut the
size of the package as a result of
the rising prices. This has
compromised the nutritional value of
these packs, which used to contain
1,300 kilo calories per person per
day but now contain 1,000 kilo
calories per day. This compares to
the daily international standard of
2,100 kilo calories. More price
rises could mean further cuts to the
calorie level.
Meanwhile, the
financial assistance that UNHCR
currently provides to 2,200 families
– between 70 and 140 Jordanian
dinars (US$100–US$200) per month –
will be insufficient to cover basic
necessities, including shelter,
because of the rising prices.
"With increased
prices and more than half my
allowance going on rent, how am I
expected to survive?" asked Mona, a
52-year-old mother of three, who
fled to Amman after her husband was
killed two years ago. She recently
started receiving assistance of 140
Jordanian dinars per month.
Tamara, a
49-year-old mother of five, was also
feeling the pinch in the Jordanian
capital and said she needed more
assistance. "The school sent me five
urgent notifications asking for
immediate payment or my children
will be dismissed from their school.
Am I not considered to be in need? I
have no money for food, rent and now
I can't even support my childrens'
education."
Meanwhile, more
and more people are beginning to ask
for assistance for the first time
from UNHCR and other humanitarian
organizations as their funds run
out.
"There is a
crucial need to re-sensitize the
international community to the
magnitude of the humanitarian
problem in Jordan," said UNHCR's
Riza, while warning that "if our
budgetary requirements remain unmet,
we will be forced to make cuts to
our humanitarian operation."
The UN refugee
agency also faces funding problems
in neighbouring Syria, where
hundreds of thousands of Iraqis have
sought refuge. UNHCR provides
education, food and health
programmes in Syria, but these are
also under threat as funds run out.
"Any further cut
in UNHCR assistance is suicide for
us. We are reaching our limits, and
not being helped any longer means
death. Assistance, even little, is
1,000 times better than nothing,"
said former gold merchant Amir,
while queuing outside UNHCR's
Damascus office.
Rebecca is also
now dependent on UNHCR for aid. "My
life will become a nightmare if
UNHCR assistance comes to an end. We
are seven people living in two tiny
rooms," she said, while lining up to
request further medical support for
herself and a niece who was set on
fire in Baghdad.
Naseer Shamaa is
a famous Iraqi musician who works
tirelessly for refugees and has
visited Syria frequently to
highlight their situation. "If UNHCR
assistance comes to an end, the
Iraqi refugees will be left
starving. Then, nobody will benefit
from anyone's feelings of guilt or
remorse. The refugees are merely
defending their right to live. UNHCR
is giving them the opportunity to do
so," he said earlier this month.
By Ziad Ayad
in Amman, Jordan
and Sybella Wilkes in Damascus,
Syria