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UNHCR

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Title: UNHCR


1
UNHCR
  • United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
  • - Numbers as of 31st December 2006

2
What is UNHCR?
  • International refugee organisation, aim to
    protect refugees
  • High Commissioner, elected by UN General Assembly
  • Mandate, indviduals beneath the Conventions 1
    article (i.e. definition of a refugee)
  • Provide protection and assistance for those
    indviduals

3
Background the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, 1948
  • What is the meaning of universal rights?
  • Morality
  • Status condition

4
Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adopted
and proclaimed by the United Nations, on December
10, 1948
  • Article 13
  • 1. Everyone has the right to freedom of movement
    and residence within the borders of each State.
  • 2. Everyone has the right to leave any country,
    including his own, and to return to his country.
  • Article 14
  • Everyone has the right to seek and enjoy
    protection in other countries asylum from
    persecution.
  • This right may not be invoked in the case of
    prosecutions genuinely arising from non-political
    crimes or from acts contrary to the purposes and
    principles of the United Nations.

5
Who is a refugee? Definition in Article 1, 1951
Geneva Convention
  • a person who owing to a well-founded fear of
    being persecuted for reasons of race, religion,
    nationality, membership of a particular social
    group, or political opinion, is outside the
    country of his nationality, and is unable to or,
    owing to such fear, is unwilling to avail himself
    of the protection of that country...

6
Convention against Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment
  • Article 3
  • No State Party shall expel, return (refouler)
    or extradite a person to another State where
    there are substantial grounds for believing that
    he would be in danger of being subjected to
    troture.
  • For the purpose of determining whether there are
    such grounds, the competent authorities shall
    take into account all relevant considerations
    including, where applicable, the existence in the
    State concerned of a consistent pattern of gross,
    flagrant or mass violations of human rights.

7
1951 Convention in Relation to the Status of
Refugees (GC)
  • Forms a base for international refugee law
  • Puts forward nation state obligations for
    recognised refugees (the right to be treated in
    the same manner as citizens of the host society
    in general)
  • To be investigated further what does these
    rights mean?
  • What is the difference between refugee rights and
    subsidary form of protection?
  • What is the problem with returning?

8
Two fundamental principles of international
refugee law
  • asylum discretionary provision by states of
    formal legal status to refugees
  • - non-refoulement absolute obligation on state
    parties not to return refugees to countries in
    which their lives or freedom would be threaten

9
UNHCR numbers of concern
  • 32.9 million persons of concern
  • of these 9.9 million refugees globally
  • does not include 4.3 million Palestinian refugees
    who fall under the responsibility of UNRWA
    (United Nations Relief and Works Agency for
    Palestinian refugees in the Near East)
  • Other regional documents
  • OAU Convention governing the specific aspects of
    refugee problems in Africa, adopted on Sept, 1969
  • Cartagena Declaration on Refugees, Colloquium on
    the International Protection of Refugees in
    Central America, Mexico and Panama, Nov 1984

10
persons of concern
  • (a) refugees (30.1)
  • (b) asylum-seekers (2.3)
  • (c) internally displaced persons (IDPs) (38.9)
  • (d) refugees who have returned home (returnees)
    (2.2.)
  • (e) IDPs who have returned home (5.7)
  • (f) stateless persons (17.7)
  • (g) a category for other persons in a refugee or
    returnee-like situation (3.2)

11
IDPs - 12.8 million (100 increase)
  • newly displaced, notably in Colombia, Iraq,
    Lebanon, Sri Lanka and Timor-Leste
  • UNHCR has taken up lead roles for the clusters of
    protection, emergency shelter, and camp
    coordination and management as a result
    expansion of IDPs notably in the Democratic
    Republic of the Congo and Uganda

12
Major refugee hosting countries
  • Pakistan 1.3 million
  • Islamic Republic of Iran 387,000
  • United States of America 844,000
  • Syrian Arab Republic 702,000
  • Germany 605,000
  • Jordan 500,000

13
Major source countries of refugees
  • Afghanistan
  • Iraq
  • Somalia
  • Sudan
  • Congo
  • Burundi

14
Three durable solutions for refugees
  • voluntary repatriation to the home country
  • local integration in the country of asylum and
  • resettlement in a third country

15
Local integration a two-way and
multi-dimensionalprocess of acclimatization
  • Legal rights
  • Freedom of movement and the capacity to travel
    with valid travel and identity documents
  • Access to education, the labour market, to public
    relief and assistance, including health
    facilities,
  • The possibility of acquiring and disposing of
    property
  • The realization of family unity
  • Process which should lead to permanent residence
    rights and ultimately, the acquisition of
    citizenship
  • Economic rights
  • being able to pursue sustainable livelihoods and
    contributing to the economic life of the host
    country
  • Socio-cultural rights
  • understood as an interactive process involving
    both a process of acclimatization by refugees and
    accommodation by nationals and local communities,
    and based on the principles of non-discrimination
    and non-exploitation

16
Major countries of resettlement
  • United States 41,300
  • Australia 13,400
  • Canada 10,700
  • Sweden 2,400
  • Norway 1,000
  • New Zealand 700
  • Finland 550
  • Denmark 530
  • Netherlands 500
  • United Kingdom 380
  • Ireland 200
  • Brazil 50
  • Chile 40
  • Argentina 20
  • Mexico 10

17
Asylum-seekers
  • are persons whose applications for asylum or
    refugee status are pending a final decision
  • - assistance
  • - freedom of movement
  • - registration, documentation and temporary
    permits
  • - groups with special needs

18
Asylum-seekers 596,000 pending
  • Of these 503,000 lodged first time in 2006
  • Most applications were registered in Europe
    (299,000), followed by Africa (159,000), the
    Americas (78,000), Asia (53,500), and Oceania
    (7,100)
  • South Africa is the main destination for new
    asylum-seekers and one of the largest recepient
    in the world

19
Recognized
  • 196,000 asylum-seekers were recognized as
    refugees or given a complementary form of
    protection
  • In Europe, 33,200 asylum-seekers were granted
    individual refugee status under the 1951
    Convention and another 37,500 a complementary
    form of protection (humanitarian status or
    subsidiary protection).
  • Africa was the second largest region in terms of
    the number of asylum-seekers being recognized in
    2006 (53,800), followed by Asia (34,900), and
    North America (32,500).
  • Noll, Gregor (1999) Rejected asylum seekers the
    problem of return Online http//www.unhcr.org/re
    search/RESEARCH/3ae6a0cd0.pdf

20
CEAS and the Hague programme, November 2004
  • The European Commission adopted on 17 February
    2006 a Communication on Strengthened Practical
    Cooperation in the area of asylum. With this
    Communication, the Commission presents its vision
    of how Member States should further cooperate on
    asylum with a view to the establishment of a
    fully harmonised EU system. The Communication
    sets out a work programme for operational
    cooperation between Member States which should
    lead to improvements in the efficiency and the
    quality of the asylum systems of Member States.

21
Four main legal documents on asylum in the
European Union
  • the Reception Conditions Directive guarantees
    minimum standards for the reception of
    asylum-seekers, including housing, education and
    health.
  • the Asylum Procedures Directive will ensure that
    throughout the EU, all procedures at first
    instance are subject to the same minimum
    standards.
  • the Qualification Directive contains a clear set
    of criteria for qualifying either for refugee or
    subsidiary protection status and sets out what
    rights are attached to each status.
  • the Dublin Regulation clear rules about the
    Member State responsible for assessing an
    application for asylum.

22
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