|
TEHRAN, 20 March (IRIN) - With war in Iraq now underway, international
aid agencies in Iran were working hard on Thursday to boost preparedness
levels in the event of a refugee influx. About 1.3 million Iraqi
refugees crossed the border into Iran during the 1991 Gulf War.
"It is difficult to predict the number of Iraqis coming
over into Iran, but we are preparing to provide humanitarian assistance,"
the spokesman for the World Food Programme (WFP), Ramin Rafirasme,
told IRIN in the Iranian capital, Tehran.
Distribution warehouses are being set up in the southwestern
town of Ahvaz in Khuzestan Province and in the western province
of Kermanshah, regarded as two possible refugee entry points.
To cope with the initial phases of a potential crisis, when WFP
would need to assist refugees, malnourished people and the most
vulnerable population groups, the agency is in the process of
pre-positioning 32,000 mt of food around the region for the emergency
needs of up to two million Iraqis for one month. As of now, the
agency has stored enough food to feed more than one million people
for one month.
"Sixty percent of the people in Iraq are dependent on Oil-for-Food
rations and other essential humanitarian supplies. We estimate
that the majority of Iraqis would have about six weeks of food
in the event of a disruption of the Oil-for-Food programme,"
Rafirasme explained.
Under the Oil-for-Food programme, 430,000 mt of food per month
is distributed within Iraq. At present, 72 percent of Iraqi oil
export proceeds fund the UN-sanctioned humanitarian programme,
of which 59 percent is earmarked for the contracting of supplies
and equipment by Baghdad for the 15 central and southern governorates,
and 13 percent for the three northern governorates, where the
UN implements the programme on behalf of the government. United
Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan said on Monday he had ordered
the evacuation of UN arms inspectors and humanitarian staff from
Iraq and had suspended the Oil-for-Food programme there.
Similarly, the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees has a regional warehouse in Iran containing blankets,
tents and non-food items, enabling the agency to pull in resources
from neighbouring countries for up to 200,000 people.
The UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) was the first UN agency to airlift
relief supplies into Iran to enable it to respond effectively
to any humanitarian crisis resulting from an outbreak of war in
Iraq. A UNICEF-chartered cargo aircraft carrying 45 mt of emergency
supplies landed at Kermanshah airport in western Iran on Tuesday.
UNICEF is focusing on water and sanitation. The emergency supplies
will be distributed by partner agencies which will work in refugee
camps in Iran, such as the Iranian Red Crescent Society (IRCS),
the Iranian health ministry and international NGOs, in the event
of Iraqi women and children crossing the 1,458-km frontier.
Commenting on the IRCS's preparedness level, Mostafa Mohaghegh,
the director-general of the international affairs department of
the IRCS, told IRIN: "We have a permanent relief system in
place and we are ready to assist refugees."
He noted that the authorities hoped there would be no displacement,
adding if a large number of people entered the country, they would
need support from the international community. The IRCS currently
has some 1,000 buses and 3,000 trucks in place to transport refugees
from the border if need be.
Meanwhile, the NGO community is also firming up its preparedness
efforts in the event of a possible refugee influx. "We have
a three-phase plan starting with assistance to 750 families, then
a further 6,000 and another 3,250 in the final phase. But this
all depends on population movements," the operations manager
for the British NGO, Ockenden International, Stuart Templeton,
told IRIN.
The NGO plans to supply cooking sets, kerosene lamps, metal buckets,
towels, soap and children's clothing. "One of our concerns
is the long break for Nowroz [the Iranian New Year] as the country
shuts down for two weeks, and this could affect manufacturing
ability for additional supplies needed," he added.
Bruno Jochun, the head of mission for Medecins Sans Frontieres-France
in Tehran, told IRIN that his organisation had the capacity to
set up medical centres in the event of a crisis, adding that one
of its main concerns was the number of malnourished children who
could cross into Iran. "It is very difficult to know what
will happen and predict numbers. We will build on our capacity
after a needs assessment in the field," he added.
Asked to give an account of the British NGO Oxfam's plans, Chris
Dyer, its programme coordinator in Tehran, told IRIN that its
response to any population movement would be reactive. "We
have put in a proposal to assist in public health for up to 180,000
people, and a further 60,000 indirectly through the support of
partner organisations," he said.
[ENDS]
IRIN-Asia
Tel: +92-51-2211451
Fax: +92-51-2292918
Email: IrinAsia@irin.org.pk
[This Item is Delivered to the "Asia-English" Service
of the UN's IRIN humanitarian information unit, but may not necessarily
reflect the views of the United Nations. For further information,
free subscriptions, or to change your keywords, contact e-mail:
IRIN@ocha.unon.org or
Web: http://www.irinnews.org
. If you re-print, copy, archive or re-post this item, please
retain this credit and disclaimer. Reposting by commercial sites
requires written IRIN permission.]
|