JOHANNESBURG, 21 November 2012 (IRIN) - Refugee crises appear to come
and go. In 2011, all eyes were on the Dadaab refugee complex in northern
Kenya as it received hundreds of thousands of Somalis fleeing famine
and conflict. This year, attention has shifted to the refugee exodus
from Syria, even though the majority of Somalis who arrived at Dadaab
last year are still there.
In fact, most refugee and displacement crises continue long after public
attention and donor interest wane, and others never make it into the
spotlight. This often leaves the UN’s Refugee Agency (UNHCR) and aid
organizations with the difficult task of assisting large populations of
refugees, forced migrants and internally displaced people (IDPs) without
sufficient funding, political will or support from the international
community.
Below, IRIN takes a look at some of the most neglected refugee and displacement crises around the world.
1. Sudanese refugees in Chad: Nearly a decade of
conflict in Sudan's western Darfur region displaced some 1.8 million
Sudanese. Of these, more than 264,000 fled into neighbouring Chad, where
they continue to live in 12 camps along the country’s eastern border
with Sudan. Chad is one of the world's poorest countries and, according
to
UNHCR, the working environment is “extremely challenging” due to the region’s lack of infrastructure and natural resources.
Women in the camps
report they sometimes have to walk all day to find firewood, and lack
of access to arable land has made the refugees almost entirely dependent
on humanitarian assistance to meet their basic needs. Several peace
accords between the rebels in Darfur and the Sudanese government have
failed to calm the region’s volatility, leaving the refugees reluctant
to return home. Meanwhile, humanitarian workers say the long-running
nature of the crisis has led to donor fatigue.

Photo: DRCRC |
Re-newed conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has forced hundreds of thousands of people from their homes |
2. Eritrean refugees in eastern Sudan: Eritreans have
been crossing into eastern Sudan since their country started to agitate
for independence from Ethiopia in the 1960s and, more recently, to
escape Eritrea’s policy of indefinite military conscription. Currently,
about 66,000 Eritreans are living in refugee camps in Gedaref, Kassala
and Red Sea states, which are among the poorest parts of Sudan, and a
further 1,600 cross the border every month. Many of the newer arrivals
view Sudan as a transit country, continuing north with the goal of
reaching Europe or Israel. This has made them a target for abuse by
smugglers and human traffickers. Those who remain in Sudan cannot
legally own land or property and
struggle to find jobs
in the formal sector. In 2002, refugee status was revoked for those who
had fled the independence war and subsequent conflict between Ethiopia
and Eritrea, but repatriation was halted in 2004 after widespread
international criticism of Eritrea's human rights record.
3. Sudanese refugees in South Sudan: Over the past 18
months, an estimated 170,000 people have fled conflict between Sudanese
government forces and the Sudan People's Liberation Movement-North in
Sudan’s Blue Nile and South Kordofan states, pouring into South Sudan's
Upper Nile and Unity states. Humanitarian agencies are bracing for a
further influx once the rainy season comes to an end and impassable
roads reopen.
Aid workers
fear that swelling refugee numbers, flooding and disease outbreaks
could aggravate the crisis, and UNHCR is urgently appealing for an
additional US$20 million to manage basic needs in the camps. Poor
infrastructure in South Sudan has made
delivering emergency assistance both expensive and difficult.
4. IDPs in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC): Defections from the Congolese army, which gave rise to the
M23
armed group, have led to a resumption of violence in the DRC's North
Kivu Province in the last six months. More than 260,000 people have been
displaced
so far, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs. A further 68,000 have fled to neighbouring Uganda and Rwanda.
The IDPs are living in dozens of makeshift camps across the province,
where aid agencies are providing shelter, protection, food and health
services, despite a severe funding shortfall and recurrent attacks on
aid workers. The new wave of IDPs adds to the 1.7 million already
internally displaced in the country, according to UNHCR.
5. Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh: Muslims from
Myanmar’s western Rakhine State - commonly referred to as the Rohingya -
are an ethnic minority that has endured systemic discrimination and
abuse over the past five decades, including being stripped of their
citizenship under a 1982 law. Over the past 50 years, thousands have
fled the country, the vast majority to Bangladesh. UNHCR has not been
permitted to register new arrivals since mid-1992, but it estimates that
there are more than 200,000 Rohingya in the country’s southeast. Only
about 30,000 of the refugees are documented and living in one of two
government-run camps in Cox’s Bazar District, where they are assisted by
UNHCR. International agencies, including UNHCR, have been
barred
by the Bangladeshi government from providing assistance to the
undocumented refugees, many of whom live on the periphery of the
official camps. Unofficially, several international NGOs are providing
services to these refugees, but it remains unclear how long they will be
allowed to do so.
6. Tamil refugees in India: More than three years after
the end of Sri Lanka’s protracted civil war, there are more than
100,000 ethnic Tamil Sri Lankans in the southern Indian state of Tamil
Nadu, including 68,000 in 112 government-run camps. The largest wave of
refugees arrived in the camps between 1983 and 1987, with many staying
on and having children. It is estimated that more than half of the
current refugee population was born in India and knows little of life
back in Sri Lanka. Although UNHCR does not have access to the camps,
four NGOs are delivering services to the refugees. Since the war ended,
just 5,000 have officially repatriated to Sri Lanka with UNHCR
assistance. The vast majority remain
reluctant to return, citing ongoing reports of human rights abuses and lack of job opportunities.

Photo: Marc-André Boisvert/IRIN |
Young Malian refugees at Mentao refugee camp in Burkina Faso |
7. Afghan refugees in Iran: Afghanistan is the source
of one of the world’s largest and most protracted refugee crises, with
waves of refugees fleeing the country after the 1979 Soviet invasion,
then during Taliban rule in the 1990s, and finally during the last
decade of conflict between US-led forces and Taliban insurgents. While
much has been written about the 2.7 million Afghan refugees in Pakistan,
the presence of some 900,000 registered refugees and 1.4 million
unregistered Afghans in neighboring Iran has received less attention.
Most of them live in urban areas where, under the current regime,
intolerance of the refugees has grown and their children are excluded
from mainstream education. Promises to naturalize some of the
unregistered refugees have not materialized, and they are often subject
to
mass deportations.
Experts warn that forced mass return of refugees to Afghanistan would
further destabilize the country, which has a limited capacity to provide
jobs, basic services and security to returnees.
8. Horn of Africa refugees in Yemen: Yemen has long
been a transit country for migrants trying to reach Saudi Arabia in
search of work, but since 2006 it has also become home to increasing
numbers of refugees from Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea. Despite
conflict, poverty and a sometimes xenophobic environment in Yemen, a
record 103,000 refugees and migrants arrived in 2011, bringing the total
number of registered refugees to 230,000, in addition to an estimated
500,000 migrants. Their presence has been largely overshadowed by last
year’s uprising and political crisis, which displaced hundreds of
thousands of Yemenis and contributed to rising poverty in a country that
was already the region’s poorest. Refugees living in mostly urban areas
are forced to
compete with locals for scarce jobs and resources, a situation that has aggravated
tensions
and increased the vulnerability of many refugees. A funding shortfall
of about $30 million has forced UNHCR to limit its assistance.
9. Malian IDPs and refugees in neighbouring countries:
During and after the April takeover of northern Mali by Tuareg rebels,
who were quickly supplanted by Islamist groups, some 34,977 Malians
escaped to Burkina Faso, 108,942 fled to Mauritania and 58,312 went to
Niger. Some 118,000 Malians have been internally displaced, 35,300 of
them within the north itself, in the regions of Kidal, Gao and Timbuktu.
UNHCR faces severe funding gaps in each of the host countries and in
Mali, and increasing insecurity is shrinking humanitarian access to
populations in need of protection. For host governments and aid
agencies, the refugee influx has compounded the food and livelihoods
crisis affecting the Sahel region. Should a planned
intervention by the Economic Community of West African States be launched in northern Mali, refugee populations are likely to grow further.
10. IDPs in Colombia: Since the start of the conflict
between the Colombian government and armed Marxist guerrillas in the
mid-1960s, the threat of violence has forced millions to abandon their
homes. Indigenous and Afro-Colombian populations living in remote, rural
areas have been particularly affected. The government puts the number
of IDPs at 3.6 million, but several NGOs estimate the figure is closer
to 5 million, pointing out that many of those displaced have not been
officially registered. Most now live on the fringes of Colombia’s towns
and cities, where they often struggle to adapt to urban life and face
discrimination in the search for jobs and opportunities. Lack of identity documents also excludes many from
access to public healthcare.
Despite recent peace talks between the government and the guerrillas,
it remains unsafe for most of the IDPs to return home, making the need
for better integration into host communities a priority.
Original found here:
http://www.irinnews.org/In-Depth/96797/99/
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