22 Thousand Syrian Refugee Families

Amman – The United Nations High Commissioner, from 22,800 thousand families, faces the risk of reducing its help to meet the basic needs of the Jadari and Al -Azrak camp, only up to 14 thousand in the next quarter.
In a report on its operations in Jordan over the past month, its aim of reducing refugee support efforts, as part of the cost -saving operations, the decline in humanitarian aid continues to affect the well -being of refugees in Jordan, and seek out strategies for survival.
As part of the cost -saving operations, he declared that “he must reduce social support efforts to maintain important services”, ie, such as registration, security and basic needs, “he declared.
From the beginning of the year to the end of the year, he reached $ 82.7 million, and at a time when the basic needs were aid of $ 2.8 million to meet the basic needs, 17 thousand families benefited from the financial families in the next month.
“He is facing the risk of reducing his help to meet the basic needs of 14,000 families in the next quarter of financial support,” he said.
It is noteworthy that more than half of the income of the families in the Jatari and al -Azrak camps came from UNHCR aid and “World Food”. The average entry for refugee families in the Azrak camp is estimated to be 251 days per month and 242 for the family in the Jatari camp.
“Half of the income of the families comes from the cash assistance programs for the Food and Commission Scheme,” he emphasized. The job is still the second main income source.
According to the UNHCR report, it has facilitated 1,400 refugees from Azrak and Al -Siteer camps, such as dialysis, emergency and newly obtained obstetrics, and protecting members of its public health facilities outside the camps, and reconstructed and reconstructed and reconstructed and reconstructed.
At a time when the majority of refugees were returning to Syria one day, many of them often repeat, and 10,500 people returned to the Commission last month for a variety of reasons, including increasing security concerns. This indicates an increase of more than 60 % increased by 6,500 refugees last March, and 62,500 returned to Syria last year and last month.