The International Organisation for Migration (IOM) has relocated 100 households displaced by conflicts to modern mud-brick shelters built in Gofta Community in Pulka, Gwoza Local Government Area, as part of efforts to decongest camps in Borno State, Nigeria.
The intervention is in response to the recent closure of camps and camp-like settlements in Maiduguri Metropolitan Council (MMC) and Jere in mid and late 2022 and the resettlement of some of the affected population in Pulka, which has resulted in congestion in existing camps in the area.
As many of those relocated from the state capital chose to move and settle in local government areas that are close to their pre-displacement locations, the burden on existing infrastructure in camps continues to increase, with humanitarian agencies working to scale up operations to address the new challenge.
“The decision to move the families from the Reception Center in Pulka to the Gofta Community Settlement is essential to improving the quality of life of the conflict-affected population and signifies the first steps towards transitioning to a normal life,” said Laurent De Boeck, Chief of Mission, IOM Nigeria.
- N700m contingent budget: Senate issues 24-hour ultimatum to interior ministry
- Finance bill: FG adds 0.5% fee to duty for goods imported outside Africa
“Through this intervention, each family now owns a mud brick shelter equipped with a latrine and a shower space, and is less susceptible to climate-induced hazards like floods and stormy winds,” he added.
Aside from shelters, the resettled population also received livelihood support and non-food items to help them kickstart a new life, in addition to the over 3,000 direct and indirect jobs created as the mud brick shelters were constructed by the local community, who are mostly from the displaced communities.
The durable mud-brick shelters initiative was adopted by IOM as a long-term solution to resettling all internally displaced persons to their pre-displacement communities in line with the state government’s reconstruction, rehabilitation, and rehabilitation drive amid camp closures in the state capital.
Since kick-starting the project in late 2021 with funding from USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA), OCHA’s Central Emergency Response Fund, the Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office (FCDO), and the Nigeria Humanitarian Fund (NHF), IOM has constructed 1006 new mud-brick shelters and upgraded 295 in different locations including Gwoza, Gombi, Ngala, Yola South, and Jere LGAs in northeast Nigeria.