Jordan s Al-Azraq Refugee Camp A Pictorial Essay Priscilla Philippi March 25, 2016

Similar documents
A Human Tragedy 14 REFUGEE TRANSITIONS ISSUE MODERN CONFLICTS

SUPPORTING DIGNIFIED CHOICES NRC cash-based NFI distribution in refugee camps in Jordan

How Global Compact can Participate in Refugees Aid

Influx of Syrian refugees highlights ongoing Palestinian struggles in Lebanon

Making Sense Of The Worst Refugee Crisis Since World War II

With fifth year of Syria crisis, a generation s future is at stake

Alan AGE 3, IRAQ. MILLIONS OF CHILDREN ARE DISPLACED by war and other threats, in Syria and around the world.

The AMAL Project GLOBAL CITIZEN FOUN DATION A SMALL WORLD

RELIANCE ON CAMPS CREATES FEW GOOD OPTIONS

Factsheet Syria. Syria. Syria s Refugee Crisis and its Implications

General Situation and Response. Syrians in Iraq. Situation Report. Update number 14

THREE YEARS OF CONFLICT AND DISPLACEMENT

SYRIA REGIONAL REFUGEE RESPONSE Jordan, Lebanon, Iraq, Turkey

Islamic Relief Jordan Achievements

A LIFE ON THE EDGE: SYRIAN IDPS

TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS IN CONFLICT AND POST CONFLICT SITUATIONS

Partnership for Prospects. Cash for Work

DONOR REPORT THANK YOU FOR PROTECTING FAMILIES FORCED FROM HOME

EMHRN Position on Refugees from Syria June 2014

NON - CLASSIFIED. EADRCC Situation Report Nº12 SYRIAN REFUGEES in JORDAN (latest update in BOLD)

Civil war makes a lost generation of Syrian schoolchildren

5 Surprising Facts About The Refugee Crisis By Jason Beaubien 2017

SYRIAN HOUSEHOLDS IN JORDAN,

Child Her Highness. Educate

The Role of the Catholic Church in the Refugee Crisis in the Middle East-- Iraq and Syria

Interview with Jacques Bwira Hope Primary School Kampala, Uganda

Committed Date. Total

LWF Jordan Report

CITY MIGRATION PROFILE AMMAN

JICA provides multifaced assistance to Jordan on Syrian refugees issue

What is displacement?

IOM Regional Response to the Syria Crisis 4 September 2012

Transit, Tents, Homes

JORDAN UNHCR OPERATIONAL UPDATE

HISAR SCHOOL JUNIOR MODEL UNITED NATIONS Globalization: Creating a Common Language. Advisory Panel

How urban Syrian refugees, vulnerable Jordanians and other refugees in Jordan are being impacted by the Syria crisis A SUMMARY

Syria & the Surrounding Countries

Syria & the Surrounding Countries

Recommendation for Case-by-Case Basis for Refugee Integration. Caroline Instrum, Jeremy Nason, Matt Joyce, Ori Cordido, & Sam Wilson

01:28-01:48 Road traffic Syrian family entering their temporary home (She her husband and four children left their home in rural Homs 9 months ago')

15 th OSCE Alliance against Trafficking in Persons conference: People at Risk: combating human trafficking along migration routes

Donor fatigue is becoming a major challenge as the wars, conflicts and displacement of civilian populations continues.

A Climate of Vulnerability International Protection, Palestinian Refugees and the al-aqsa Intifada One Year Later

In Focus January 2016

Bidibidi Refugee Settlement, Yumbe District, Uganda

SOCIAL INNOVATION FOR REFUGEE INCLUSION SEMINAR SEPTEMBER 2016 H A N E E N H A S S O U N E H

ACTED. ACTED s Response to the Syrian Crisis Overview

3 years of conflict and isolation for the most vulnerable people

Museum exhibit attempts to humanize refugee crisis and genocide

UNHCR SYRIA SITUATION REPORT FOR THE EASTERN GHOUTA AND AFRIN HUMANITARIAN EMERGENCIES. As of 20 March 2018

Palestinian Refugees. ~ Can you imagine what their life? ~ Moe Matsuyama, No.10A F June 10, 2011

WFP s Response Inside Syria and in Neighbouring Countries: Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt

8-12. A Multilingual Treasure Hunt. Subject: Preparation: Learning Outcomes: Total Time: Citizenship, PHSE, Languages, Geography,

SAVING A GENERATION THROUGH EDUCATION

Introduction. Human Rights Commission. The Question of Internally Displaced People. Student Officer: Ms. Maria Karesoja

Raising awareness about the issues affecting refugees around the world. This year s theme is. Restoring Hope.

Migration in the 21st century and its effects on education

MIDDLE NORTH. A Syrian refugee mother bakes bread for her family of 13 outside their shelter in the Bekaa Valley, Lebanon.

UNITED NATIONS NATIONS UNIES 21 st Century CAMBODIA: PROTECTING THEIR PROPERTIES (11 05)

October 16, Recent Developments:

Our eyes, our future, our dreams...

Something s Gotta Change: But When? And How? By Dr. Bill Dienst April 29, 2016, Idomeni and Polykastro, Greece

DISPLACEMENT IN THE CURRENT MIDDLE EAST CRISIS: TRENDS, DYNAMICS AND PROSPECTS KHALID KOSER DEPUTY DIRECTOR, BROOKINGS-BERN PROJECT

Findings of the Household Assessment of Syrian Households in Host Communities. Jarash Governorate. 7 th March 2013

Humanitarian Bulletin Syria

NON - CLASSIFIED. EADRCC Situation Report Nº10 SYRIAN REFUGEES in JORDAN (latest update in BOLD)

150,000,000 9,300,000 6,500,000 4,100,000 4,300, ,000, Appeal Summary. Syria $68,137,610. Regional $81,828,836

European Refugee Crisis Children on the Move

Syria crisis. Key messages ECHO FACTSHEET. 50% of all IDPs in Syria are children

Japan s Development Assistance to Jordan

UNICEF RESPONSE TO THE SYRIA CRISIS January December UNICEF Syria/2013/sharpe

Syria crisis ECHO CRISIS REPORT

SYRIAN REFUGEES IN LEBANON

83% of Syrian refugees in Jordan live in urban areas and 17% live in three refugee camps. 48% of refugees are children, and 4% are elderly people.

Syrian Refugees in Jordan: Shrinking access to services under a limited legal status

Out of the US$73 million allocated, 49% of the funds have been allocated to projects in Syria, 21% to Lebanon, 20% to Jordan and 10% to Iraq.

NO LOST GENERATIONS. Refugee children and their human right to education, from the Holocaust to the Syrian Civil War

MENNONITE CENTRAL COMMITTEE (MCC) NEWS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Aleppo Abandoned: A Case Study on Health Care in Syria. Executive Summary. November 2015

8 A SUMMARY YEARS INTO EXILE CARE

UNHCR s winterization strategy focuses on three broad areas of intervention:

Background on the crisis and why the church must respond

13 September 2012 HIGHLIGHTS

Situation in Serbia 4,258

AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL BRIEFING

Schwarzlsee Refugee Shelter Language and Integration

Baseline Study on Digital Remittances Highlights Demand-Side Survey of Low-Income Jordanians and Syrian Refugees in Jordan

Church Service Packet

Jordan. Freedom of Expression and Belief JANUARY 2016

CITIES IN CRISIS CONSULTATIONS - Gaziantep, Turkey

Syria. Child Refugees Lesson Plan KS3/4

United Nations Nations Unies. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

UNHCR Jordan CASH ASSISTANCE: Protecting the most fragile and supporting resilience

UNHCR OPERATIONAL UPDATE

75% funding gap in 2014 WHO funding requirements to respond to the Syrian crisis. Regional SitRep, May-June 2014 WHO Response to the Syrian Crisis

Towards inclusion and integration? Syrian refugee women s fragile new livelihoods in Jordan

Intercultural Dialogue as an Activity of Daily Living

Migrant/Asylum Seekers Crisis in Serbia Factsheet & Situation Report 2

NEWS BULLETIN August 1, 2014

Irish Refugee Protection Programme (IRPP) Background, Rationale and Functions

Transcription:

Jordan s Al-Azraq Refugee Camp A Pictorial Essay Priscilla Philippi March 25, 2016 When the conflict in Syria broke out in March of 2011, there was no indication as to the duration or the enormity of the ensuing humanitarian crisis. According to a recent United Nations statement, over a quarter of a million people have been killed as a result of the violence and over 4.8 million have fled the country. In addition, there are 6.6 million that are internally displaced. As refugees continued their escape, neighboring countries opened their borders and sheltered the men, women and children fleeing the unbridled brutality of this new war. Jordan, which neighbors Syria to the south, received 636,040 registered refugees and countless others that crossed into Jordan are living outside the camps. The first official refugee camp was set up in July 2012 and was catering to incoming refugees from the Dara a area on the Jordanian-Syrian border. Now the 4th largest city in Jordan and the world s second largest refugee camp, the Za atari camp is home to thousands of UNHCR tents, a supermarket and makeshift streets and villages. As the families kept crossing seeking refuge, the camp continued to grow in an ad hoc manner in an attempt to accommodate the massive influx. In order to continue catering to the continuous influx of refugees, Jordan opened a new camp in the Azraq area which was very well planned with a capacity of up to 130,000. The camp is divided into nine villages or communities with 3,500 caravans each housing up to 15,000 refugees. Each village has two clinics, playground, police units and a school. Registered refugees in the camp receive vouchers for food and other supplies that they purchase at the on-site Sameh Mall. School students are provided snacks by the World Food Program. NGOs working in Azraq Refugee Camp hire staff from within the refugee community to help them meet the needs of the camp population, thus generating income for their families instilling a sense of productivity. In addition, a UK contractor, Siren Associates, is training local Jordanian police in managing security at the camp as well as members of the Syrian refugee communities as civil police that operate inside in the camp to keep the peace and liaise with the respective police departments.

Entry into the camp is allowed only with permits issued by the Ministry of Interior s Refugee Affairs Coordination Office, a process that can take anywhere from 7-10 days. Once I obtained my permit, I drove along the desert road to the Azraq Camp, located in a mostly arid area about 62 miles east of the capital city of Amman. Upon arrival at the camp, I was greeted by Jordanian Police Officers who checked the authenticity of my permit and then proceeded to allow entry into the camp. The Jordanian Police officers were very friendly both with me and with the refugee kids that surrounded our vehicle as we made stops through the camp. The kids would come up with their beautiful innocent smiles and ask to have their pictures taken. It was heartwarming and heartbreaking at the same time. On site at the refugee camp were two enclosed and fenced in areas, each designated for a particular vulnerable segment of refugees. One is for women that have been victims of various acts of violence and the other area is for underage children, most likely orphaned, that crossed the Jordanian borders without adult family members. For safety and security of all these individuals, no photos were allowed in either area within the camp. Jordan s commitment to sheltering these refugees is highly commendable and is in sharp contrast to the treatment and reception they received in Europe as they desperately clung to unsafe boats seeking safety on European shores only to find themselves in some of the worst humanitarian conditions seen outside their home country of Syria. The following is a photo essay of my findings inside the Azraq Refugee Camp in Jordan.

The desert road leading to Azraq Refugee Camp. As you can see, there is little on either side of the road but the roads were well paved making for a relatively easy ride.

There were road signs along the route indicating location of Azraq and the Azraq Refugee Camp.

White metal and zinc huts (referred to as caravans) filled the space in a very organized and planned pattern. Every six huts share a bathroom. The huts are meant to protect from the scorching summer heat and the bitter cold of winter. There are paved roads within the Azraq Refugee Camp connecting the 9 communities or villages there.

Marketplace at the Azraq Refugee Camp where residents go to buy and sell homemade items. Each community or village had it s own water supply through these water tanks. The night lights in the common areas are all solar powered.

Playground for the kids with swings, slides and benches. The playground has adult supervisors watching over the children as they played. I was sadened to see a little girl, maybe 5 years of age crying when she saw the Police escort with me. I was told that she is afraid of uniformed officers as a result of some trauma she may have experienced in Syria. The other kids were very friendly and came up and said hello with big smiles and wanted to have their picture taken.

The Camp has an area for soccer enthusiasts to enjoy some sports (above) as well as a volleyball court adjacent to a basketball court (below). Men and women play sports separately.

Benches are set up within one of the sports areas for those who aren t playing to socialize. The walls have NO SMOKING and NO LITTERING signs and are very nicely painted with murals (above). Kids playing soccer together as they would in their neighborhood back home in Syria.

Kids sharing a bike ride on one of the paved roads within their village (above). There were numerous kids on their bikes at the camp. They were able to purchase them from the store in excahnge for vouchers. Such murals, encouraging families not to litter, can be found around the two villages that are currently occupied. The camp had a large number of industrial-sized garbage bins within the villages.

Sameh Market is the grocery store where refugees can purchase foods and other necessities through a voucher system. This market is a branch of the well-known Sameh Mall. All over the camp are similar posts listing the contributors/donors to the various components that keep the refugee camp functioning and the refugees cared for.

The Azraq Camp Hospital is easily accessible. I saw an ambulance bring in someone and I saw families leaving the hospital after receiving medical treatment for an ailment. The hospital also engages expectant mothers on pre-natal care. As the photos show, this EU-funded hospital is quite clean.

Some of the artwork on the Azraq Camp Hospital fence in an attempt to make the hospital more child friendly and less intimidating to kids.

The hospital is a fenced facility with various on-site capabilities including childbirth by C-section.

There is a school in the camp whose academic curriculum is based on the Jordanian system. I was unable to get a photo of the inside of the school since it was Friday and the school was closed for the weekend. There is a mosque on the refugee camp grounds. The sign has the flag of the State of Kuwait and states Thank you for your support. The sign also shows the flag of The Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan alonside the UNHCR logo.

These are just some of the beautiful smiling faces that greeted us as we toured the Azraq Refugee Camp