ZAATARI CAMP, Jordan -- Jordan's Zaatari camp for Syrians fleeing their country's civil war is one of the largest refugee camps in the world.
Here's a look at the camp in numbers, provided by the United Nations refugee agency:
- Residents: More than 100,000, or as many as in Flint, Michigan;
- Households: 13,500 (capacity 15,000);
- Area: 530 hectares;
- Distance from the Syrian border: 12 kilometres;
- Established: July 2012;
- Districts: 12;
- Trailers: 18,000;
- Tents: 10,000 (though only about 4,000 families live in tents);
- Shops: 2,500, of those 680 larger ones;
- Schools: 3, with more than 16,000 students enrolled;
- Boys moving goods in wheelbarrows for a small fee: More than 1,000;
- Residents earning income: About 65 per cent;
- Daily cost of operating the camp: At least $500,000;
- Monthly electricity bill for the camp: $500,000;
- Daily pita bread distribution: 500,000 pieces;
- Daily number of water trucks: 350;
- Daily number of sewage trucks: 200;
- Daily water use per person: 45 litres;
- Hospitals: 3, including one for maternal delivery;
- Clinics at the camp : More than 10;
- Babies born every month at the camp: More than 200;
- Deaths: About 200 since the camp opened;
- Number of refugees who have passed through Zaatari: 350,000 to 360,000.
And here are some other statistics on Syrian refugees:
- Syrians who have fled their country: 2.1 million;
- Syrian refugees living in Jordan: 550,000;
- Of those, refugees living in Jordan's urban areas: 423,000.