Photo: Wendy Bruere/UNICEF. Drinking safe, walking tall
Source: IRIN
DOMIZ CAMP, 3 July 2013 (IRIN) - On a hot June afternoon, 27-year-old
Gharib Mohammed stands outside his tent at this camp for Syrian refugees
in Iraq, shovel in hand.
Sewage and garbage have blocked the small stream that runs the length of his dusty avenue and the smell has entered his tent.
“There are some other streams but I can’t clean them all. I just clean
the one in front of my home. If everybody did the same thing, the camp
would be clean, but not everybody does it.”
The water running past Mohammed’s house is what is technically known as
“grey” water - cooking and washing water that is not contaminated with
sewage. Or at least it is not supposed to be.
Mohammed points to the septic tank behind his tent, which he says is shared by 25 families.
“In two days, it gets full [then] it overflows and mixes with the other water.”
In the three months he has been living there, government contractors
have emptied the tank three times, he said. He once had to resort to
paying the truck driver 5,000 Iraqi dinars (US$4.30) to empty it.
Aid agencies say overcrowded living conditions in Domiz (Duhok Province)
- built for 25,000 refugees but now accommodating almost twice that
number - have put refugees’ health at risk.
“Water, sanitation and hygiene facilities on the site are far from
adequate, increasing the risk the camp could become fertile ground for
the spread of disease,” Mahendra Sheth, regional health adviser for the
UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF), which is responsible for water and
sanitation activities, said at the start of summer.
In April, a number of measles cases were reported in the camp, and
between mid-March and mid-May, the number of diarrhoea cases tripled,
the medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) said.
An assessment conducted by MSF in April showed “clear inequalities” in water distributions, it said in a 15 May press release.
Some areas of the camp receive only four litres per person per day, MSF
said, far less than the minimum 15-20 litres per person recommended in
humanitarian emergencies.
“In some instances, people simply do not have access to water or
sanitation,” MSF emergency coordinator Stéphane Reynier wrote. “This is
simply not acceptable.”
Massoud Barzani, president of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG),
recently accused the international community of “abandoning” the Syrian
refugees in Kurdistan and asked foreign officials to bring the situation
to the attention of their governments.
Overstretched
Aid agencies have vaccinated people and are trying to increase water and
sanitation services in the camp, but the problem, explains Jaya Murthy,
head of communications for UNICEF, is that the camp is overstretched.
“Services were only planned for [25,000] people, so when you [nearly]
double that number, of course those services are stretching, which means
less for everybody.”
Many irregular settlements and transit areas have emerged, he said, and
some of the people on the fringes may not even have access to some of
those regular services.
The differences between the original areas and the irregular and transit
areas of the camp are stark. Approved tents in the first three phases
of construction of the camp each have their own latrine and share one
septic tank for every four tents.
In Phases 1-3, Swedish NGO Qandil contracts a waste removal company to
empty tanks when families report them full. “The trucks stand by 24
hours a day,” says Salar Rasheed, Iraq programme coordinator, “so the
truck is available even at night.”
But residents in unapproved tents and in some of the transit areas share
one latrine between 29 to 189 people, according to a Norwegian Refugee
Council (NRC) report
based on February data from the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). In one case
documented by NRC, residents had to keep using a communal latrine that
was overflowing for lack of an alternative.
To address the overcrowding, the UN is working with the Kurdish
authorities to allocate more land for new camps. KRG has approved the
construction of two new refugee camps in the region - one in Erbil
Province, scheduled to open this month, which will house 2,000 families;
and one in Sulaymaniyah, designed to hold 1,500 families.
Although there were initial hopes to install proper sewage systems in
both camps, the cost of doing so - around $5 million dollars each - was
prohibitive given the region’s limited budget.
“It can be done,” says Qandil’s Rasheed, “but it costs a lot of money.”
A neglected crisis?
In June, the UN issued the largest appeal for funding in history to
address humanitarian needs related to the Syrian crisis. Included is a
request for $37 million for water, sanitation and hygiene services in
Iraq, including ensuring safe water and sanitation throughout Domiz.
But aid workers say the international community has neglected the Syrian
crisis in Iraqi Kurdistan, focusing instead on Jordan and Lebanon,
where donors perceive the needs to be higher. Aid agencies in Iraq have
received just 14 percent of the funding requested for their humanitarian
response to Syrian refugees in 2013. As a percentage, and also by raw
figures, this makes Iraq the least-funded of the four countries in the Regional Response Plan that border Syria.
“The Syrian refugees have the same right to vital assistance, wherever
they flee to seek protection. However, it has - unfortunately due to
various political and economic reasons - been very difficult to attract
funding to the projects in Iraq, and the refugees are the ones paying
the price,” said Toril Brekke, acting secretary-general of the Norwegian Refugee Council, which just published a report on how the international community is “failing” Syrian refugees in the Kurdish region of Iraq.
Rising disease risk
In the meantime, government authorities and aid agencies are trying to
prevent a disaster with the little funds they do have. With temperatures
rising (in July, they often surpass 40 degrees), the risk of
water-borne diseases is increasing.
“Over several weeks [the number of reported cases of diarrhoea] went
down but it can come up at any time so ensuring access to sanitation and
safe water is absolutely critical,” said UNICEF’s Murthy. “So as new
people keep coming and settling in these irregular areas, we have to be
really on top of it to ensure that [the water supply] is properly
maintained and those services are delivered to everybody. Otherwise
contagious diseases like diarrhoea and other water-borne diseases can
catch very quickly.”
The Duhok Province authorities provide a water network to the original
settlements and, for the time being, water trucks take care of the rest
of the camp.
Thanks to a grant of $4.5 million from the Japanese government, UNICEF
is currently planning to lay a pipe network in one of the newest areas
of the camp, Phase 7.
UNICEF and NRC are about to start a water monitoring project, checking that the levels of chlorine are adequate.
As well as putting together a cholera prevention plan, UNICEF and MSF
have started to send health and hygiene promoters around the camp, tent
to tent, to teach families how to minimize the risk of disease and
infection. It is particularly important to help residents used to living
in modern urban environments to adjust to their new conditions, Murthy
said.
“Hygiene promotion is one area that we really need to critically scale
up. It’s really, really our priority area.” There are 64 hygiene
promoters working in Domiz, “but we need to double or triple that.”