Warda is 2.5 years old and very excited to have her photo taken! She is waiting in line for a voucher together with her mother Aidda and sister Rasha (3 months). Aidda says the family will spend the money on clothes, because they wore out all their clothes on the way to Azraq. They have other vouchers to use for food.  Photo taken at a distribution of vouchers to Syrian refugees in Azraq refugee camp on November 17, 2015. Refugee families were given a 10JD voucher that can be spent on what the families need the most, such as clothes for winter.  Photo: NRC/Guri Romtveit
Syrian Aidda and her daughters, Warda (2 1/2) and three-month-old Rasha, queued for distribution of vouchers in Zaatari refugee camp, in Jordan. NRC distribute vouchers so families themselves can buy whatever they need most. "We will use them on clothes," says Aidda. Photo: NRC / Guri Romtveit, November 2015

Record-breaking assistance

Hanne Eide Mortensen|Published 13. May 2016
A historically high number of displaced people in Syria and the neighbouring countries in the Middle-East, were assisted by NRC in 2015.

Altogether, NRC assisted over 1.8 million Syrians and other people displaced in Syria and the neighbouhring countries in 2015, according to NRC's annual report for last year.

"That's more than any year since the war in Syria began," says NRC's Head of Social Policy Department, Harriet Rudd.

In total, NRC reached 5.4 million people with lifesaving and provident assistance in 2015, also a record-high number. In addition to major donors like Foreign Affairs, EU, including Swedish and British aid agencies. Increased funding from private sponsors and fundraising initiatives in Norway also contributed to achieving this result.

Several received education

A lot of the funds raised by the private donors have been earmarked for displaced Syrians in Syria and the neighbouring countries.

"With these funds, we have been able to step up our efforts to provide Syrian children with an education. Education for Syrian children is among the most important causes we can support today. Hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugee children are not attending school," says Rudd.

We provide humanitarian aid to Syrians fleeing in Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Northern-Iraq and Turkey, with all core activities represented.

Many serious crises

There were also many who earmarked their funds to help refugees in Europe.

"This helped us start our relief work in Chios in October," says Rudd. "We have also used funds from fundraising for relief work in Serbia, in addition to sending out experts from our standby force, NORCAP, to Greece, Italy and Macedonia."

Funds that are not earmarked, known as unrestricted funds, are used by NRC wherever the need is the greatest, at any given time.

"Syria gets the most attention, but unfortunately there are several large, serious humanitarian crises in the world today. Last year, people in need in countries like Mali, Colombia, Kenya, Palestine and Pakistan were assisted using unrestricted funds," explains Rudd.

Earthquake in Nepal

Unrestricted funds are also used to establish new programs, or to get quickly into place when an acute crisis occurs.

"Unrestricted funds were essential for NRC to be able to start relief work in northern Nigeria, where over 2.2 million people have been displaced by a brutal conflict and violence," says Rudd.

Unrestricted funds were also used to initiate relief work for Syrian refugees in Turkey, in addition to sending personnel from our standby force, NORCAP, to Nepal, after the earthquake, last April.

"Altogether, we have sent over 90 NORCAP-experts to the relief work in Nepal, and we still have several people on the ground there," says Rudd.