BAGHDAD, 6 March (IRIN) - The United
Nations and international agencies have warned that if sectarian violence in Iraq does not abate, up to a million new people could become displaced in 2007, putting an increasing burden on the
country's infrastructure and resources. "At the current rate of 40,000 to 50,000 a month, up to 2.3 million might be permanently displaced by the end of this year," Antonio Guterres, the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees, told the Arab League in Cairo on Sunday. He added that of Iraq's population of about 27 million, 1.8 million people had already been displaced within the country and
another two million had fled its borders, with one million having gone to Syria, 750,000 to Jordan and 150,000 to Egypt. "The biggest displacement in the Middle East since the dramatic events of
1948 has now forced one in eight Iraqis from their homes," Guterres said, referring to the Palestinian exodus that followed the creation of Israel. "Last year alone, we estimate that nearly 500,000
Iraqis moved to other areas inside the country," he said, adding that UNCHR was seeking US $60 million this year to help Iraqi refugees and displaced, more than double what was spent last year. The
UN itself chose to leave Iraq in 2003, after its Baghdad headquarters were bombed twice, killing 25 people, mostly UN staff. Since then, UN agencies have handled Iraq from Amman, Jordan but are
stepping up efforts to address the country's multifaceted humanitarian problem. Single humanitarian plan John Holmes, the UN's new Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency
Relief Coordinator, said in a press conference on Monday that he would be working very closely with the Iraqi Government and NGOs to have a "single humanitarian plan for the country and the refugees
and IDPs and food needs and to establish what the real needs are". Holmes said that the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), which he heads, would be setting up a new OCHA
office in Amman to ensure that Iraq's humanitarian problems were not overshadowed by political issues, issues of violence and the future of the country. It was time to bring the humanitarian side onto
the agenda "rather more clearly and visibly", he said. The UN, the Iraqi government and NGOs say effectively meeting the needs of such a large number of displaced people in Iraq is one of the most
pressing problems that needs addressing. While aid is getting through, much more needs to be done. Local NGOs and UN agencies say that there is an urgent need for the provision of emergency items
and add that displaced people are tired of continuous visits and interviews with questionnaires to fill. "Usually those who have the economic means or the contacts are leaving the country, so those
who are left to be internally displaced tend to be the most vulnerable," Rafiq Tschannen, Chief of Mission of the International Organization for Migration (IOM), told IRIN. These, Tschannen added,
were children and the elderly. "Children's education is disrupted, lack of family income sometimes forces them to work, and witnessing violence causes psychological issues that have not been
addressed," Tschannen said. The IOM said that between 1,500 and 2,000 individuals are displaced daily in Iraq, with the most critical areas being Anbar and Baghdad provinces in the centre of the
country, and Kerbala and Basra provinces in the south. The migration agency added that one million people could be displaced in 2007 if security does not drastically improve. Emergency provisions IOM provides emergency provisions in almost all Iraq's 18 provinces. In total, IOM reached over 33,000 families over the past year with deliveries of food, water, and non-food items such as
mattresses, hygiene kits, kitchen sets, plastic sheeting, kerosene and kerosene stoves, blankets, and baby items, said Tschannen. With up to 4.5 million children in Iraq undernourished, according to
UNICEF, the distribution of food to the population, particularly the displaced, is of major concern to aid agencies. Access to food rations is a problem due to obstacles in transferring and
registering with the public distribution system (PDS) and, if registered, complete rations are often not regularly reaching IDPs because of transportation-related issues and constant shortages. Lack
of access to food is particularly acute in areas where military operations are taking place, sectarian or factional violence is prevalent or militias are in control, causing insecure transportation
routes. Potable water, sanitation and health services are urgent needs, particularly in small cities and rural areas. "The new burden put on them [amenities and services] by the arrival of IDPs
has resulted in many of the structures becoming seriously deficient. Consequently, many IDPs either have difficulties in accessing water due to distance or some only have access to non-potable water,"
said Anita Raman, Associate Reporting Officer for UNHCR Iraq Operation. "We're always working to provide shelter, water, food, health, income and other basic needs." Mahmoud Rabia'a, 52, lives in an
improvised camp on the outskirts of the capital, Baghdad. He faces an uncertain and bleak future with sectarian violence raging in the city and greater numbers of other displaced people joining his
ranks. "Our survival is getting more difficult each day," he said. "The infrastructure is still lacking and we are forced to depend on water from the river because, with the daily increase in people
joining our camps, we get fewer supplies each day." as/ar/bp/ed