Regional Migrant Response Plan for the Horn of Africa to Yemen and Southern Africa 2025

Regional Plan
CRP last updated: January 31 2025
$60,559,874
Funding required
1,300,000
People in need
782,200
People Targeted
69
Entities targeted

Migration from the Horn of Africa is triggered by insecurity, environmental degradation, harsh climatic conditions, public health, emergencies, socioeconomic drivers, and traditional seasonal factors. Within the broader Regional Migrant Response Plan (MRP) for the Horn of Africa to Yemen and Southern Africa inter-agency framework coordinated by IOM, the MRP contributes to the whole-of-government and whole-of-society response to address the drivers of migration and vulnerabilities of migrants travelling along both the Eastern and Southern Routes. In line with the humanitarian-development-peace nexus, the MRP’s areas of intervention encompass both life-saving humanitarian assistance and longer-term responses directed toward resilience and sustainable solutions. 

VHR flights from Yemen provide a pathway to safety and a new beginning for migrants who have faced immense challenges. © IOM Yemen /Abeer Alhasani 2024

The Horn of Africa (HoA) is a major hub for migration, with thousands of people departing, transiting, or returning due to various interlinked drivers, including the adverse effects of climate change, conflict and socioeconomic instability. The Eastern Route is one of the busiest and most dangerous migration routes, accounting for nearly half of the over half a million movements tracked by August 2024, with mostly Ethiopian and, to a lesser degree, Somali migrants traveling through Djibouti and Somalia, crossing the Gulf of Aden to Yemen, and continuing onwards to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states. Migration flows are bi-directional, with both outward migration as well as voluntary, involuntary and spontaneous returns.  

As of July 2024, over 128,000 migrants exited Ethiopia along the Eastern Route in 2024. While men comprised the majority of these migrants, women and children made up 32 per cent, with many children traveling alone. Migrants face significant protection risks (trafficking, forced labour, smuggling networks, etc.) as well as harsh conditions such as extreme climates and limited access to shelter, food, and water. In 2024, Djibouti remained the primary transit country, with over 114,000 entering the country compared to 13,000 entering Somalia as of July 2024. Migrants travelling through Djibouti face extreme conditions, including long treks across the desert on foot, exacerbated by the worsening impacts of climate change. 2024 has also seen a deva

The MRP is a comprehensive, route-based framework addressing both the humanitarian and protection needs as well as the longer term drivers of migration of migrants from the Horn of Africa. Coordinated by IOM since 2018, it fosters effective coordination, capacity-strengthening, analysis, and resource mobilization along the Eastern and Southern Routes. Currently, 48 partners work within the MRP to address critical needs, aiming to deliver lifesaving assistance, resilience-building initiatives, and sustainable solutions for migrants and host communities.   

IOM’s coordination and response to migration along the Eastern and Southern Routes is led by its Regional Office for East, the Horn, and Southern Africa in Nairobi, with operations in Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, Tanzania, and Yemen.  

At the regional level, the MRP is guided by Regional Coordination Committees (RCC), which include directors and technical focal points from 15 partners. IOM co-chairs several key working groups, such as the Communications Working Group (with the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) and Save the Children), the Migrant Protection Working Group (with the Danish Refugee Council), and the Information Management Working Group (with the Mixed Migration Centre). These groups coordinate protection efforts, joint advocacy, and annual target setting. The MRP is also integrated into the Regional Child Protection and Gender-Based Violence (GBV) Working Groups and collaborates with entities such as the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) and the Southern African Development Community (SADC), including to strengthen regional cooperation. Additionally, IOM participates in initiatives such as the Regional Ministerial Forum on Migration (RMFM) Nairobi Process to protect migrant workers from the HoA in collaboration with Gulf States.  The Regional Office in Nairobi coordinates closely with IOM’s Regional Office for the Middle East and North Africa, particularly in relation to the response in Yemen. Furthermore, the MRP liaises with the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) with regards to the Eastern Route.   

At the country level, the MRP aligns with the UN Sustainable Development Cooperation Frameworks (UNSDCF) and humanitarian programme cycles.

IOM's Regional Office in Nairobi leads the implementation of the Regional Migrant Response Plan (MRP) for the Horn of Africa to Yemen and Southern Africa 2025 and has the coordination capacity to ensures that partners’ roles and responsibilities are clearly defined, identify gaps in response, and reduce duplication of efforts across the Humanitarian-Development-Peace Nexus (HDPN).  

The IOM Regional Office also provides strategic direction, guidance, and coordination to country offices for implementing the MRP. This support includes managing partnerships, overseeing project implementation, and ensuring robust monitoring and evaluation. In addition, IOM emphasizes the importance of strategic communications at the regional level, ensuring that all country offices engage in media outreach and visibility efforts to promote a balanced narrative on migration. These communications efforts help increase awareness of the challenges faced by migrants and host communities along the Eastern and Southern Routes. Effective advocacy can potentially impact policy changes including establishing regular pathways for migration, regularization, and other policies that improve the situation of migrants and host communities.  

Regionally, IOM offers multi-sectoral thematic expertise and provides technical support to country offices, governments, and RECs. At the country level, IOM has specialized staff with humanitarian, development, peacebuilding, and migration management expertise. Key service provision will include food security, nutrition, cash assistance, shelter, health, protection, mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS), movement assistance, community stabilization humanitarian border management, support services, and information management. 

IOM’s strong field presence enables the Organization to provide humanitarian and development assistance to vulnerable migrants and host communities, even in remote and high-risk areas along these migration routes. 

IOM maintains the flexibility to address emerging needs, recognizing the dynamic nature of migration patterns, mobility, and risks along these routes. This includes applying a conflict sensitive lens to the work of MRP partners based on a formal conflict sensitivity analysis system developed by IOM’s Regional Office for East, the Horn and Southern Africa. T

The implementation of the MRP for the Horn of Africa to Yemen and Southern Africa is led by governments and supported by various partners, including the IGAD, SADC, UN agencies, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), international NGOs (INGOs), civil society organizations (CSOs), think tanks, and academic institutions. IOM plays a key role in coordinating these efforts. The MRP is also integrated into the RMFM, an inter-state consultation mechanism involving 11 states from the region, and engagement with Gulf States to address labour migration policies, enhance labour mobility, and protect the rights of migrant workers. 

In Ethiopia, IOM collaborates with the National Partnership Coalition (NPC) on Migration. Key partners include the Ministry of Women and Social Affairs (MoWSA), the Ministry of Health (MoH), the Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI), the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), and the Ethiopian Disaster Risk Management Commission (EDRMC). These partnerships extend to regional and local branches and authorities at Bole International Airport. 

In Somalia, IOM works closely with federal and state-level authorities on migration management. The Organization has a cooperation framework with the Office of the Special Presidential Envoy for Migration, Returnees, and Children’s Rights (OSE MRC) in Mogadishu. Regular coordination meetings are held under the National Coordination Mechanism (NCM). IOM and partners in Puntland and Somaliland collaborate with the government-led MMTF, co-chaired by IOM and UNHCR. IOM also supports the Somali National Bureau of Statistics (SNBS) to collect and analyze migration data through a Technical Working Group (TWG) on Migration and Displacement Data. 

In Djibouti, IOM partners with the Ministry of Interior, the NCM, the Ministry of Health, the Ministry of Women and Family Affairs (MFF), and local authorities. IOM chairs the UN Migration Network in Djibouti to support the government's implementation of the Global Compact for Migration. Additionally, IOM co-chairs the MMTF with UNHCR and the National Office for Assistance to Refugees and Disasters (ONARS) to coordinate migration-related activities and share information on mixed migration and protection issues.

Key Operating Modalities
Participation and empowerment Conflict sensitivity Integrated Programming Collaboration and partnership Localization Cash-based interventions
Cross-cutting priorities
Data and evidence Protection Mainstreaming Gender Equality Prevention of sexual exploitation and abuse Disaster Risk Climate Change Law and policy

As the lead agency for the MRP in the Horn of Africa and Yemen, IOM prioritizes a localized, inclusive approach that places people at the centre of its response. All MRP activities are carried out with a commitment to the "do-no-harm" principle and a focus on non-discriminatory, needs-based approaches that promote safety, dignity, empowerment, and beneficiary participation. IOM emphasizes the involvement of affected populations in every phase of the response, from planning to implementation, monitoring, and evaluation, ensuring their active role in decision-making. MRP partners regularly train government officials, frontline actors and partners on the provision of life-saving assistance, various protection modalities, and referral mechanisms to ensure civil society organizations, non-governmental organizations, and women-led organizations are equipped to respond to migrants traveling irregularly and associated migration risks.  

In Djibouti, IOM regularly engages with beneficiaries through satisfaction surveys and establishes migrant committees in Migration Response Centres (MRCs).

Objective 1 - Saving lives and protecting people on the move
Saving lives and protecting people on the move

$34,746,235
Funding required
329,220
People Targeted
13
Entities Targeted
Primary target groups
Local population / community
International migrant

The Migrant Response Plan (MRP) 2025 directly focuses on alleviating human suffering while upholding the dignity and rights of crisis-affected migrants and their host communities. Through the provision of life-saving assistance such as food, non-food items (NFIs), cash assistance, shelter and settlements, water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH), and health care (both primary and specialized), IOM aims to ensure that basic needs are met while respecting their dignity.  Within this objective, voluntary humanitarian return assistance for migrants stranded in Yemen will be a priority in 2025. Assistance to access voluntary, safe and dignified return opportunities is often the only lifeline for migrants stranded in Yemen.  

Additionally, IOM seeks to reduce threats and vulnerabilities through humanitarian protection, which is addressed through the MRP’s focus on providing protection services for migrants, especially victims of trafficking and human rights violations. Furthermore, multi-layered MHPSS and child protection services are also provided to promote migrants’ well-being and uphold their rights in line with the "do-no-harm" principle. The MRP 2025 also includes protection capacity-strengthening initiatives for government agencies that further contribute to reducing vulnerabilities, enhancing effective migration management, protection of vulnerable populations, and mitigation of potential threats. 

Interventions under this objective will be conducted in accordance with the principle of do no harm and to maximize positive impact on conflict dynamics through institutional conflict sensitive approaches.

Objective 2 - Driving solutions to displacement
Driving solutions to displacement

$12,544,867
Funding required
238,080
People Targeted
6
Entities Targeted
Primary target groups
Local population / community
International migrant

In 2025, under the MRP, IOM will implement targeted activities aimed at addressing the root causes of displacement, and building the resilience and self-reliance of vulnerable returnees and crisis-affected communities.  

To minimize the adverse drivers of displacement, IOM will implement community-based initiatives in main areas of transit and return. These initiatives will focus on improving access to essential services such as lifesaving healthcare, while promoting sustainable livelihoods and fostering resilience against environmental degradation and climate change in complementarity. By addressing structural factors such as poverty, lack of services, and environmental vulnerabilities, these activities seek to reduce the pressures that force people to migrate, contributing to long-term stability at the community level. 

Additionally, training will be provided to local actors on MHPSS, ensuring that community-based interventions are available to returnees to further bolster their resilience.

Facilitating pathways for regular migration
Facilitating pathways for regular migration

$13,268,772
Funding required
214,900
People Targeted
56
Entities Targeted
Primary target groups
Local population / community
International migrant

IOM  will provide migrants with legal aid and counselling assistance and information on regularization of stay to ensure channels for regular migration are sustainable and responsive to current and emerging trends, reducing the risks associated with irregular migration.  

IOM will also offer voluntary return and reintegration assistance to migrants stranded along the Eastern and Southern Route and onward transportation assistance to support returnees arriving in reception centres in Ethiopia and Somalia to reach their point of destination.

Migration flows and cross-border mobility will be effectively managed through measures that prioritize the health, security, and safety of individuals throughout their journey. Associated activities include assistance for the families of dead/missing migrants and unaccompanied and separated children, awareness-raising campaigns, and building an evidence base on migration. To ensure migration policy and legal frameworks are coordinated through a whole-of-government approach and are aligned with international standards, IOM will support regional governmental dialogue initiatives and cross-border coordination initiatives, including to promote the expansion of regular migration pathways and the establishment of bilateral labour agreements.  

In addition, IOM will produce communication products to highlight the plight of migrants and host communities along the Eastern and Southern Route, appealing for policy change from member states and support from the donor community. Lastly, IOM will provide tailored protection assistance to victims of violence, exploitation, and abuse as well as train  government officials, front-line actors, and partners in child protection, GBV, counter-trafficking, and MHPSS. 

Objective 1
Saving lives and protecting people on the move
$34,746,235
Funding required
[{"name":"Human suffering is alleviated","y":80},{"name":"Threats and vulnerabilities are reduced","y":20}]
Objective 2
Driving solutions to displacement
$12,544,867
Funding required
[{"name":"Adverse drivers of displacement are minimized","y":18},{"name":"Displaced people are resilient and self-reliant","y":82}]
Objective 3
Facilitating pathways for regular migration
$13,268,772
Funding required
[{"name":"Channels for regular migration are sustainable and responsive","y":14.4},{"name":"Migration flows and cross-border mobility are well managed","y":43.299999999999997},{"name":"Migration policy and legal frameworks are aligned with international standards","y":20.350000000000001},{"name":"Migrants are protected from violence, exploitation and abuse","y":20.899999999999999}]

Percentage of funding required contributing to the long term outcomes expressed on IOM's Strategic Results Framework.

$1,211,197
Funding required
Related inter agency plans
MRP

In 2025, IOM and MRP partners will continue to contribute to promoting and upholding the rights of migrants, host communities and other vulnerable populations. IOM and MRP partners will address protection risks and support governments to manage migration in a rights-based manner by implementing preventive, responsive and remedial actions.  Prevention of sexual exploitation and abuse will also be a cornerstone of MRP partner programming, including risk mitigation measures, awareness raising, and complaint and feedback mechanisms to ensure beneficiaries are able to confidentially report issues and accountability to affected populations.  

Protection thematic areas such as child protection, GBV, counter trafficking (CT), alternatives to detention (ATD), access to justice, and MHPSS will be mainstreamed into other areas of programming. As part of this, IOM will conduct gender and child protection mainstreaming training for relevant actors. Furthermore, in alignment with IOM’s Institutional Framework for Addressing Gender-Based Violence in Crises (GBViC), IOM will integrate GBV risk mitigation across its interventions.

$1,211,197
Funding required
[["Saving lives",57],["Solutions to displacement",21],["Pathways for regular migration",22]]
Migrant returnees being welcomed at IOM's Transit Center in Addis Ababa for provision of post-arrival assistance tailored to their specific needs © IOM Ethiopia 2024
Migrant returnees being welcomed at IOM's Transit Center in Addis Ababa for provision of post-arrival assistance tailored to their specific needs © IOM Ethiopia 2024
Basic needs, including food and multi-purpose cash assistance
$3,883,244 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Shelter and settlements
$6,284,683 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Health
$3,610,794 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Protection
$8,794,709 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Water, sanitation and hygiene
$754,600 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Support services for response actors
$6,155,679 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Movement assistance
$9,721,850 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Mental health and psychosocial support
$701,868 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Community stabilization and community-driven development
$13,854,633 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Humanitarian border management and search and rescue
$1,035,616 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Data for action, insight and foresight
$4,551,001 Funding required
Related inter agency plans MRP
Operational presence in

Kenya, Djibouti, Yemen, Somalia, Ethiopia, United Republic of Tanzania

 

The map used here is for illustration purposes only. Names and boundaries do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by IOM.

Figures are as of November 2024. For more details of IOM's operational capacity in country, please see the IOM Capacity section.