Response plan
HRP
Myanmar Humanitarian Response Plan 2023
Strategic Objectives
SO1
Protection risks and needs are identified, monitored, mitigated, and met for 2.1 million people, while the centrality of protection is upheld across the humanitarian response including through promotion of respect for human rights, international humanitarian law and humanitarian principles
SO2
Suffering, morbidity, and mortality is prevented or reduced among 3.1 million displaced, returned, stateless and other crisis-affected people experiencing or at risk of food insecurity, malnutrition, and health threats
SO3
At least 2 million displaced, returned, stateless and other crisis-affected people have safe, tailored, timely and dignified access to the essential services and support to ensure their survival and prevent deterioration of their humanitarian needs
Specific Objectives
SP1
960,000 people including boys, girls, women, men, persons facing life-threatening risks of abuse, neglect, violence, exploitation, injury, and severe distress have received targeted support through individual or community-based protection services to prevent, mitigate and respond to these risks. Increased number of communities reached by protection monitoring with particular focus in townships with exposure to armed confl ict, violence and risks of forced return and work to increase respect for human rights, humanitarian law and principles including through capacity support and dialogue with duty bearers and responders to mitigate the effects of armed confl ict on civilians. Collective actions on the centrality of protection are promoted by ensuring protection mainstreaming and integration including GBV mainstreaming, complaint and feedback mechanisms, PSEA, child safeguarding, explosive ordnance risk education, and psychosocial support across the humanitarian response.
SP2
Food insecure internally displaced (1,470,000) and other crisis-affected people (366,000) have access to adequate levels of food, while vulnerable farmers (533,482) have access to agricultural inputs.
SP3
Improved availability and accessibility of primary health care services for 2.3 million internally displaced, returned, non-displaced stateless, and other crisis-affected people.
SP4
Suffering, morbidity and mortality is reduced for 590,263 internally displaced, returned, stateless and other crisis-affected people experiencing or at risk of malnutrition and related food security and health threats.
SP5
More than 1.3 million crisis-affected children and youth have access to safe, inclusive, relevant quality education, while communities are empowered to support and sustain children’s safe learning opportunities.
SP6
A total of 952,157 displaced, returned, resettled, non-displaced stateless and other crisisaffected people with humanitarian needs receive emergency shelter items and repair kits, and emergency NFIs, ensuring the safety, dignity and privacy of their living conditions.
SP7
Implement, operate and sustain quality, high standard water and sanitation services and good hygiene practices to maintain the health, dignity and protection of affected people, on the basis of risk-sensitive programming and consultation with communities for integrated/mainstreamed WASH services.
Clusters
CLCSS
Coordination and Support Services
CLEDU
Education
CLFSC
Food Security
CLHEA
Health
CLNUT
Nutrition
CLPRO
Protection
CLSHL
Shelter / NFI / CCCM
CLWSH
WASH
Cluster Objectives
CLEDU/CO1
Crisis-affected and other vulnerable children and youth with humanitarian needs have continued access to safe, inclusive, quality learning opportunities
CLEDU/CO2
Crisis-affected and other vulnerable children and youth with humanitarian needs receive quality, protective, and inclusive education that caters for their mental health and psychosocial needs
CLEDU/CO3
The capacity of communities and local/national education partners is strengthened to support safer, coordinated education that monitors and responds to identified needs, and mitigates impacts of shocks and crises
CLFSC/CO1
1,470,000 crisis-affected people (IDPS) (764,400girls/women and 705,600 boys/men) have equitable access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food in-kind and/or through cash assistance.
CLFSC/CO2
366,000 vulnerable people with humanitarian needs (non IDPs) (190320 girls/women and 175,680boys/men) have equitable access to sufficient, safe and nutritious food in-kind and/or through cash assistance.
CLFSC/CO3
Restore, protect and improve livelihoods of over 533,482 crisis-affected people (277,411 women and 256,071men) by rehabilitating agricultural production, protecting productive assets, and rebuilding or creating income-generating activities to prevent negative (and potentially irreversible) coping mechanisms.
CLHEA/CO1
Reduce and prevent suffering, morbidity and mortality by the timely detection and coordinated response to notifications of outbreaks for epidemic-prone diseases, such as malaria, diarrhea, acute respiratory infections, and vaccine-preventable illnesses.
CLHEA/CO2
Improve availability and accessibility of primary health services, among displaced, returned, stateless and crisis-affected people, through basic and complementary packages including maternal, child and adolescent health, sexual and reproductive health, MHPSS, GBV-related health, illnesses such as TB, disability, emergency health for surgical, trauma, and referrals.
CLHEA/CO3
Strengthen the capacity of health partners on accurate and timely data collection and reporting for displaced, returned, stateless and crisis-affected people, disaggregated by age, sex, and disabilities, to inform decision-making.
CLNUT/CO1
563,552-thousand girls, boys and children U5 years old and 423,667 pregnant and lactating women, receive integrated support to avert malnutrition and its long-term health impacts
CLPRO/CO1
Protection of people affected by crisis is improved through provision of individually-targeted life-saving assistance and multi-sectoral, age-specifi c, gender-appropriate and inclusive protection, GBV, Mine Action, child protection, and MHPSS, responses to meet protection needs and reduce the risk of resorting to negative coping mechanisms
CLPRO/CO2
Community-based protection structures and community-led risk mitigation initiatives supported
CLPRO/CO3
Promotion of and respect for international humanitarian and human rights laws and humanitarian principles is enhanced through protection monitoring, analysis of risks and advocacy with all relevant stakeholders
CLPRO/CO4
Capabilities to prevent, mitigate and respond to protection risks and needs are strengthened by building technical capacity and community awareness of stakeholders on priority protection topics, as well as mainstreaming and integration of protection, GBV, Mine Action, child protection, and MHPSS support in all humanitarian actions
CLSHL/CO1
To assist IDPs and other conflict and disaster affected people with emergency temporary shelter, or semi-permanent shelter support (including the maintenance, repair, upgrading and replacement of existing shelters) and emergency NFI provision that enhances protection, lifesaving, dignity and privacy (CO1)
CLSHL/CO2
To assist returnees/ resettled, stateless people with emergency, temporary shelter, or semi-permanent shelter support (including the maintenance, repair, upgrading and replacement of existing shelters) and NFI provision to enhance protection, dignity, safety and privacy (CO2)
CLSHL/CO3
Strengthening settlement monitoring, service coordination and maintenance of camp infrastructure in line to humanitarian life-saving support (CO3)
CLSHL/CO4
Strengthening the capacity of camp management actors, communities, and service providers at camp level on camp management and coordination; and protection mainstreaming (CO4)
CLSHL/CO5
Reinforce community participation activities at camp level (CO5)
CLWSH/CO1
Implement, operate and sustain quality and standards of water and sanitation services and good hygiene practices to crisis affected population:
CLWSH/CO2
People have access to integrated/mainstreamed WASH services, on the basis of risk-sensitive programming and consultation with communities.
Cluster Activities
CLEDU/CA1
Establish/rehabilitate TLSs that are accessible to all crisis affected children and youths (incl those with physical disabilities)
CLEDU/CA2
Provide/improve safe accessible context appropriate and gender segregated WASH facilities in learning spaces
CLEDU/CA3
Provide/expand safe, relevant, accessible, quality and inclusive non formal education opportunities for all crisis and displacement affected children and youth (ECCD, and basic education)
CLEDU/CA4
Provide individual age/ task-appropriate, and inclusive learning materials/education supplies/ for use by learners and educators (learners and educators kits - note books, pencils, pens, back packs, uniforms/school clothing, etc)
CLEDU/CA5
Equip learning spaces with appropriate supplies (e.g black boards, furniture, chalk, etc)
CLEDU/CA6
Provide cash and voucher assistance (based on feasibility)
CLEDU/CA7
Provide age and context-appropriate menstrual hygiene and health management information sessions and materials/supplies ( sanitary pads/napkins/towels) to adolescent girls in learning spaces
CLEDU/CA8
Recruit and retain quality educators through provision of incentive payments for educators
CLEDU/CA9
Provide EiE relevant capacity building to volunteer and community educators (EiE, learner centered pedagogy, SEL, PSS, DRR, CP, Child safeguarding, etc)
CLEDU/CA10
Provide inclusive age and context-appropriate, supplemantary open learning materials/ resources to conflict and displacement-affected children and youth to support their education
CLEDU/CA11
Train educators and or parents/caregivers in effective use of supplementary learning materials
CLEDU/CA12
Strengthen EiE response capacity of CSOs, NGOs, ethnic ,monastic and local partners (incl MRE, PSEA, advocacy, coordination, resource mobilization,contingency plans, AAP, etc )
CLEDU/CA13
Establish/ and or build capacity of education committees/PTAs to actively participate in education in their communities
CLFSC/CA1
Food assistance / MPCA
CLFSC/CA2
Food assistance / MPCA
CLFSC/CA3
Agriculture & livelihoods MPCA
CLHEA/CA1
Fill vaccination gaps for U5 children
CLHEA/CA2
Timely detection and coordinated response to notifications of outbreaks for epidemic-prone diseases
CLHEA/CA3
COVID-19 mainstreaming (testing,case management, IPC, vaccination, RCCE, capacity building) into humanitarian health services
CLHEA/CA4
Primary Health services Basic Package including maternal, child and adolescent health, sexual and reproductive health, MHPSS, GBV-related health
CLHEA/CA5
Primary Health services Complementary Package for surgery and trauma
CLHEA/CA6
Primary Health services Complementary Package for TB
CLHEA/CA7
Primary Health Services Complementary Package for rehabilitation services and provision of assistive devices for persons with injuries and different forms of impairments
CLHEA/CA8
Training on systematic applying data disaggregated by sex, age and vulnerable population
CLNUT/CA1
# children 6-59 months screened for wasting
CLNUT/CA2
# PLW screened for malnutrition
CLNUT/CA3
# children aged 6-59 months with SAM admitted for treatment
CLNUT/CA4
# children aged 6-59 months with MAM admitted for treatment
CLNUT/CA5
# PLW with MAM admitted for treatment
CLNUT/CA6
# boys and girls aged 6-59 months at risk of acute malnutrition in priority locations who received blanket supplementary feeding support programme
CLNUT/CA7
# PLWs at risk of acute malnutrition in priority locations who received blanket supplementary feeding programme
CLNUT/CA8
# primary caregivers of children 0-23 months receiving IYCF counselling
CLNUT/CA9
# children 6-59 months receiving multiple micronutrient powders
CLNUT/CA10
# pregnant women receiving preventative Multiple Micro-nutrient tablet or iron-folic acid supplementation
CLPRO/CA1
CA 1.1 - Provision of targeted/specialized support to persons with specific protection needs/risks
CLPRO/CA2
CA 1.2 - Case management and psychosocial support
CLPRO/CA3
CA 1.3 - Provision of legal aid services including counseling and legal aid support
CLPRO/CA4
CA 2.1 – Community-based protection structures and community-led risk mitigation initiatives supported
CLPRO/CA5
CA 2.2 - Community awareness raising for prevention and mitigation of protection risks
CLPRO/CA6
CA 3.1 - Protection monitoring and assessments
CLPRO/CA7
CA 4.1 - Capacity building support to humanitarian actors and services providers
CLSHL/CA1
1. Provision of Emergency shelter support (construction)
CLSHL/CA2
2. Provision of Emergency shelter support (kits and materials/ cash assistance)
CLSHL/CA3
3. Shelter construction and reconstruction (IDP Camps and Sites)
CLSHL/CA4
4. Provision of NFI kits to IDPs in camps/ sites
CLSHL/CA5
5. Provision of NFI kits to IDPs
CLSHL/CA6
1. Provision of transitional shelter and reconstruction (Returnees)
CLSHL/CA7
2. Provision of NFI kits to returnees/ resettled, stateless people
CLSHL/CA8
1. Coordination and monitoring of multi-sector responses in IDP settlements
CLSHL/CA9
2. Improve living conditions through site care and maintenance (CA)
CLSHL/CA10
1. Implementation of CCCM trainings
CLSHL/CA11
2. Implementation of CCCM ToTs
CLSHL/CA12
1. Development of community participation activities
CLSHL/CA13
2. Establishment/maintenance of complaint/ feedback mechanism and clear referral pathway
CLWSH/CA1
Crisis-affected people including IDP's returnees, stateless and other vulnerable groups have equitable, inclusive and safe access to safe/improved drinking water meeting demand for domestic purposes, at minimum/agreed standards
CLWSH/CA2
Crisis- affected people including IDPs, returness, stateless and other vulneraberal groups have equitable, inclusive and safe access to functional excreta disposal systems.
CLWSH/CA3
Crisis-affected people including IDP's returnees, stateless and other vulnerable groups have equitable, inclusive and safe access to hygiene items and community-tailored messages, enabling health seeking behavior.
CLWSH/CA4
Crisis-affected people have access to integrated/mainstreamed WASH services, on the basis of risk-sensitive programming and consultation with communities