Did you know that of the world's 12 million refugees, more than 7 million have been "warehoused"-confined to camps or segregated settlements or otherwise deprived of basic rights-in situations lasting 10 years or more?
Check it out at http://www.refugees.org/warehousing [2]. Refugee protection and assistance does not have to involve spatial confinement and enforced idleness. The 1951 Refugee Convention recognizes refugees right to work and freedom of movement but it's not being applied. So we're mounting a campaign to change that.
Want to join? Attached please find for your wide circulation and endorsement the U.S. Committee for Refugees' organizational "sign-on" Statement against refugee warehousing. Representatives of national and international organizations wishing to endorse the statement should contact Merrill Smith at [email protected] [3] by September 7. The statement was first released in Washington to the U.S. Senate in June and in Geneva to the UNHCR in July and will be released again-with your group's endorsement?-at the UN NGO Conference in New York, September 8-10.
Thanks,
Merrill Smith
U.S. Committee for Refugees
1717 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Suite 200
Washington DC 20036
202/347-3507
202/347-3418 fax
www.refugees.org [4]
STATEMENT CALLING FOR SOLUTIONS TO END THE WAREHOUSING OF REFUGEES
The 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol Relating to the Status of Refugees provide that persons fleeing persecution across borders deserve international protection, including freedom from forcible return (refoulement) and basic rights necessary for refugees to live a free, dignified, and self-reliant life even while they remain refugees. These rights include the rights to earn a livelihood-to engage in wage-employment, self-employment, the practice of professions, and the ownership of property-freedom of movement and residence, and the issuance of travel documents. These rights are applicable to refugees independently of whether a durable solution, such as voluntary repatriation, third-country resettlement, or naturalization in the country of first asylum, is available. They are part of the protection mandate of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Of the nearly 12 million refugees in the world today, more than 7 million are warehoused, confined to camps or segregated settlements or otherwise deprived of these basic rights, in situations lasting 10 years or more. Warehousing refugees not only violates their rights but also often reduces refugees to enforced idleness, dependency, and despair.
In light of the foregoing, the undersigned:
1. denounce the practice of warehousing refugees as a denial of rights in violation of the letter and spirit of the 1951 Convention and 1967 Protocol and call upon the international community, including donor countries, host countries and members of the Executive Committee of UNHCR to do the same;
2. call upon the international community to develop and implement strategies to end the practice of warehousing, including examining how refugee assistance can enable the greater enjoyment of Convention rights;
3. call upon UNHCR to monitor refugee situations more effectively for the realization of all the rights of refugees under the Convention, including those related to freedom of movement and the right to earn a livelihood;
4. call upon those countries that have not yet ratified the Convention or the Protocol to do so;
5. call upon those countries that have ratified the Convention and/or the Protocol but have done so with reservations on key articles pertaining to the right to work and freedom of movement to remove those reservations; and
6. call upon all countries to pass legislation, promulgate policies, and implement programs providing for the full enjoyment of the basic rights of refugees as set forth in the Convention.
Organizations
Action Réfugiés Montréal
American Immigration Lawyers Association
American Refugee Committee International
Amnesty International
Association of Human Rights Activists Bhutan
Boaz Trust (UK)
British Refugee Council
Canadian Council for Refugees
Caritas Sweden
Center for International Policy
Church World Service, Immigration and Refugee Program
Committee in Defence of Democracy and Human Rights
Darfur Organization for Human Rights and Development
Episcopal Migration Ministries
Ethiopian Community Development Council
European Council on Refugees and Exiles
Freedom House
Genocide Watch
Hmong National Development
Hodi (Zambia)
Human Rights First
Human Rights Watch
Immigration and Refugee Services of America
International Catholic Migration Commission
International Journal of Refugee Law
International Refugee Research Institute
International Refugee Rights Initiative
International Rescue Committee
Irish Refugee Council
Jesuit Refugee Service
Kurdish Human Rights Watch
Legal Resources Foundation (Zambia)
Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service
Lutheran World Relief
Mercy Corps
Organization for Aid to Refugees (Czech Republic)
Physicians for Human Rights
Refugee Consortium of Kenya
Refugee Law Project, Makerere University
Representatives of the Massaleit Community in Exile
RESPECT Refugees Ghana
Self-help Initiative for Sustainable Development (Ghana)
South Asia Human Rights Documentation Center
Southeast Asia Resource Action Center
Sudan Emancipation & Preservation Network
U.S. Committee for Refugees
Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children
Notable individuals (affiliations listed for identification only)
Jagdish Bhagwati
Columbia University
The Wind of the Hundred Days: How Washington Mismanaged Globalization
Copenhagen Consensus participant
Rosemary Byrne
Director, International Process and Justice Project
Trinity College Dublin
The Reader in Refugee Law: Cases, Documents and Materials (editor)
Stephen Castles
Director, Refugee Studies Centre
University of Oxford
The Age of Migration: International Population Movements in the Modern World
Guy S. Goodwin-Gill
All Souls College, University of Oxford
The Refugee in International Law
Barbara E. Harrell-Bond
Forced Migration and Refugee Studies
American University in Cairo
Rights in Exile: Janus-Faced Humanitarianism (forthcoming)
James C. Hathaway
Director, Program in Refugee and Asylum Law
University of Michigan Law School
The Rights of Refugees under International Law
Karen Jacobsen
Director, Refugees & Forced Migration Project
Fletcher School and Feinstein International Famine Center, Tufts University
Tamar Jacoby
Manhattan Institute
Reinventing the Melting Pot: The New Immigrants and What it Means to Be American
Gilbert Loescher
International Institute for Strategic Studies
The UNHCR and World Politics: A Perilous Path
Stephen Moore
President, Club for Growth
The Economic Consequences of Immigration, 2nd edition (revisor)
Douglass C. North
Washington University in St. Louis
Institutions, Institutional Change and Economic Performance
Nobel Laureate in economics
Copenhagen Consensus participant
Philip Peters
Vice President, Lexington Institute
Eric Reeves
Smith College
Bonaventure Rutinwa
Centre for the Study of Forced Migration
University of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania
Vernon L. Smith
George Mason University
Nobel laureate in economics, Copenhagen Consensus participant
Did you know that of the world's 12 million refugees, more than 7 million have been "warehoused"-confined to camps or segregated settlements or otherwise deprived of basic rights-in situations lasting 10 years or more? Check it out at http://www.refugees.org/warehousing [2]. Refugee protection and assistance does not have to involve spatial confinement and enforced idleness.
Links
[1] https://www.pambazuka.org/author/contributor
[2] http://www.refugees.org/warehousing
[3] mailto:[email protected]
[4] http://www.refugees.org
[5] https://www.pambazuka.org/taxonomy/term/3309
[6] https://www.pambazuka.org/article-issue/168
[7] https://www.pambazuka.org/taxonomy/term/3271
[8] http://www.pambazuka.org/en/category.php/advocacy/23587