The Za’atari refugee camp in Jordan with almost 82,000 Syrian refugees is facing increasing difficulties as shrinking incomes, rising prices and spiraling debt drive them further into poverty, ten years since the first tents were pitched.
Over the past decade, caravans have replaced tents and Za’atari has become the biggest Syrian refugee camp in the world with more than half of the population, children.
“Syrian refugees in Jordan are facing a burgeoning humanitarian crisis. Global shocks have compounded the vulnerabilities of refugees, whose savings are long depleted after a protracted exile; 93% of Syrian refugee households are now in debt”.
Hannah Patchett, policy and media manager for Oxfam in Jordan
A series of external crises have created economic turmoil in Jordan, from the economic fallout of the Syrian conflict to the COVID-19 pandemic, and most recently the Ukraine crisis, pushing Syrian refugees to the brink.
In Za’atari refugee camp, around a third of refugees have reduced the number of meals they eat and more than two-thirds have had to buy food on credit, according to the UN. Food prices have soared; the cost of food increased by 22% in shops in Za’atari in just four months in 2022.
Rising food prices
While each refugee receives JD 23 ($32) in monthly food vouchers from the World Food Programme, this doesn’t meet basic needs. “The price of five litres of cooking oil has risen from JD 7 to JD 16. We have nothing left after buying rice and sugar,” said Mahmoud, a father in Za’atari refugee camp.
Oxfam is responsible for waste management in Za’atari and provides short-term work opportunities to refugees in roles such as waste collection and recycling. Over the past two years, Oxfam has provided temporary work to more than 10,000 refugees in Za’atari camp. These opportunities are a lifeline, but they are at risk from shrinking funding, Oxfam warned.
Amid competing global crises, humanitarian funding for Syrian refugees in Jordan is on the decline. As of July 2022, the Jordan Response Plan for the Syria crisis does not have 90 percent of needed funds.
Up to 1.3 million Syrians have taken refuge in Jordan, of whom 675,000 are registered with UNHCR. With no end in sight to their displacement, Syrian refugees also need longer-term solutions, including a chance to build meaningful futures.
“Donor countries must increase funding to Jordan to help refugees and vulnerable Jordanians meet their basic needs in the short-term, and to support Jordan’s economic recovery and growth so all Jordanians and refugees can fulfil their potential.
“Protection and support for refugees is a global responsibility. Beyond providing financing, high-income countries must also welcome more Syrian refugees. With the Ukraine crisis, Europe has shown its capacity to provide refuge. More must be done to include Syrian and other refugees: The right of refuge is universal; it must not be selective”.
Patchett
The Za’atari refugee camp
The Za’atari refugee camp was established on July 29, 2012. The camp is divided into 12 districts and is served with 32 schools, 8 health facilities and 58 community centres.
Za’atari has a young population, 55% of which are children. More than half of families in the camp have a family member with disability, while 42 percent of families have at least one member with a chronic illness.
Each refugee living in the camp receives a JD23 (32USD) monthly WFP voucher for in-kind assistance, which is insufficient for basic needs.
UNHCR recorded in 2021 a 7 percent drop in employment for refugee individuals of working age in Za’atari compared to April 2020.
There has been a 11.8 percent increase in the number of child marriages in Syrian refugee camps in 2022 compared to 2019.
UNHCR’s 7th regional intention survey, found that in 2022, 94 percent of Syrian refugees living in Jordan are not planning on returning to Syria in the next year, compared to 73 percent in 2018.
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