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Partner Publications - Pilot Study on the Southern Migration Route and Access to Protection…
Read More...THE APPEAL - Regional Migrant Response Plan (MRP) for the Horn of Africa to Yemen…
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Read More...Somalia
$16,135,750
FUNDING REQUIRED
528,085
PEOPLE TARGETED
818,495
PEOPLE IN NEED
INTRODUCTION
Each year, thousands of migrants, mainly from Ethiopia, intending to reach the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf States, transit through Somalia via Northern port cities such as Berbera and Bossaso. As such, northern coastal areas of Somalia serve as hot spots for the departure of migrants. An estimated 40,836 migrants were recorded entering Somalia from Ethiopia in 2022 (IOM, 2022). However, due to access issues, actual figures are likely to be much higher. In addition to being a transit country, migrants from Somalia also migrate along the Eastern Route. On average, nearly a quarter of arrivals into Yemen depart from Somalia, indicating Ethiopian migrants utilizing Somalia as a transit country. As of December 2022, 1,400 migrants were stranded between Bossaso and Hargeisa (Ibid.). In 2022, 1,539 migrants spontaneously returned from Yemen via boat and another 15,061 migrants were non-voluntarily returned from the Gulf States (Ibid.). Key drivers of migration include protracted conflict in addition to the ongoing HoA drought, which contributes to an existing lack of livelihoods and increases vulnerability to irregular migration. According to Somalia’s National Development Plan 2020-2024, more than 60 per cent of the population lives under the poverty line, with a similar percentage facing unemployment. Migrants are often kidnapped, tortured, and financially extorted as well. The national protection system is fragmented and poorly financed, resulting in inadequate provision of appropriate services compared to the needs on the ground. Specific groups such as children, women, the elderly and people with medical and other forms of disabilities are particularly vulnerable to abuse and exploitation, such as GBV, family separation, human trafficking, and labour exploitation.
As a key transit country and a country of origin of the Eastern Route, identified needs in Somalia include humanitarian aid, protection assistance, and addressing the drivers of irregular migration in hotspots. Migrants transiting through Somalia endure extreme weather conditions and will need food, water, NFIs, WASH, temporary accommodation, and medical assistance to recover physically.
Nearly all (93%) of the migrants who registered for assistance at the MRCs in November 2022 reported a lack of basic services as the main hardship experienced traveling along the Eastern Route. Furthermore, research conducted by DRC and UNHCR in 2022 across four regions in Somaliland with 220 migrant respondents reported food as the priority need, followed by accommodation. Most migrants reported resorting to negative coping strategies such as begging to meet their food needs and sleeping outside due to being unable to pay rent and, as such, faced protection and security risks.
Moreover, research conducted by the Mixed Migration Centre revealed that water and food were the most common forms of assistance that local community members in Hargeisa reported giving migrants (92%). Migrants also face considerable protection risks in Somalia, mainly from smugglers who frequently facilitate poorly planned and dangerous journeys.
Migrants are often kidnapped, tortured, and financially extorted as well. The national protection system is fragmented and poorly financed, resulting in inadequate provision of appropriate services compared to the needs on the ground. Specific groups such as children, women, the elderly and people with medical and other forms of disabilities are particularly vulnerable to abuse and exploitation, such as GBV, family separation, human trafficking, and labour exploitation.
Beneficiary needs will be further exacerbated due to recurrent droughts, conflicts, and potential famine in Somalia. Migrant returnees also face difficulties reintegrating due to ongoing conflict, resource availability, and stigmatization.
MRP partners will target 67,280 migrants (2,015 departing migrants, 46,100 transiting migrants, 17,400 migrants at destination living in Somalia, and 1,765 returnees) and 460,805 host community members. In 2023, due to the impact of the HoA drought, the MRP will target a larger proportion of host community members than in previous years.
The MRP response in Somalia will focus on providing life-saving humanitarian and protection assistance as well as sustainable solutions. The most urgent forms of life-saving assistance will include food, water, NFIs, protection kits, MHPSS, and medical support to address the complex needs of migrants and host community members enduring protracted conflict and drought.
Returning migrants will be provided with post-arrival assistance to facilitate reintegration, including internal transportation assistance, reception services, post-arrival medical and MHPSS, and accommodation. The support will also ensure communities of return, as well as those along migratory routes, are provided with tailored assistance to ensure successful reintegration, sustainable solutions, and community stabilization.
MRP partners will also look at other strategic priorities centering on support to protection, community stabilization and most importantly strengthening of partnerships through HDPN. The response in Somalia for 2023 will also emphasize migration management capacity building for both government and non-state actors, advocating for an inclusive and holistic response to the needs of migrants. Capacity-building activities for government agencies will also focus on collecting migration data to support policy development.