Posts Tagged ‘IDPs’

Displaced Colombians seek shelter at unconventional sites

Monday, January 4th, 2010

(UNITED NATIONS) – As the number of people driven from their homes to escape violence across Colombia topped three million in 2009, the United Nations refugee agency said today that more and more of the forcibly displaced are seeking safety on scraps of land that no one else wants.

A stretch of beach on the outskirts of Cartagena is one such site, where some 118 families have created a settlement accommodating a new family every week, noted the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).

When these families arrived, the Villa Gloria district on the Caribbean coast had no electricity or other municipal services because city authorities said it was prone to flooding and land ownership was unclear.
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UN sends food aid to thousands displaced in Dem. Rep. of Congo

Friday, January 1st, 2010

The United Nations is rushing food to thousands of displaced Congolese in northwest Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where tribal clashes have driven 130,000 people from their homes.

“Because of ongoing clashes in the area where these people live, it has been difficult to get food assistance to those who need it most,” UN World Food Program (WFP) Country Director Abdou Dieng said, noting that the food distributions would be widened if security conditions improved.

Convoys carrying 50 metric tons of food escorted by peacekeepers from the UN mission in DRC (MONUC) left Gemena in Equateur Province yesterday for the two distribution sites in Bozene and Boyazala, where more than 6,000 displaced people will receive month-long rations of maize, beans, vegetable oil and salt, to be distributed by AVEP, a Congolese non-governmental organization (NGO).
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Reforms in Dominican Republic increase number of stateless people

Thursday, December 10th, 2009

On December 10, International Human Rights Day, the government of the Dominican Republic is set to promulgate a constitutional reform measure that could leave large numbers of Dominicans of Haitian descent stateless. The changes to nationality provisions, first approved in October 2009 by the country’s legislators, will redefine Dominican citizenship and deny children born on Dominican soil to immigrant parents “residing illegally” in the country their legal claim to Dominican nationality.

Over the past year the Dominican Republic has been de-nationalizing many of its citizens of Haitian descent, despite their constitutional right to nationality. Under the amended Constitution, there is fear that thousands more Dominicans of Haitian descent will be retroactively stripped of their Dominican nationality, placing them at risk of losing their fundamental rights to attend school, access adequate housing, health care, property, and freedom of movement. Further, the constitutional change will leave thousands of Dominicans suspected of Haitian ancestry vulnerable to the intermittent mass expulsion campaigns carried out by Dominican authorities, in which military and immigration police have been known to deport thousands of people who “look Haitian” or who have French last names, over the border into Haiti.

Human rights organizations throughout the Dominican Republic and around the world are alarmed by this decision because of the impact it will have on this already marginalized community. The new constitutional provisions on nationality are incompatible with international law, as the Inter-American Court of Human Rights has held that the migratory status of a person is not transmitted to their children. Any attempt by the Dominican Republic to apply this constitutional reform retroactively would constitute a clear violation of international law.

“The Dominican Republic has witnessed a steady drumbeat of discrimination against Dominicans of Haitian descent. Prior to this constitutional change, thousands have had their identity documents denied, or confiscated for no reason other than their ancestry,” said Monika Kalra Varma of the RFK Center for Justice and Human Rights.
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Sri Lanka continues media ban on war refugees

Monday, December 7th, 2009

AFP reports that despite proclamations to the contrary, the government of Sri Lanka is continuing to bar journalists from reporting on people displaced by the war in Sri Lanka. The northern part of the island nation is still off-limits to reporters.

Foreign minister Rohitha Bogollagama declared in a BBC interview Tuesday that the media now had full access, prompting a flood of requests from reporters to travel to the former war zone in the north.

But restrictions on visits to the northern district of Vavuniya where the government maintains its camp complex remain in place despite them being declared “open” on Tuesday.

“The restrictions on journalists to visit displaced people in camps have not been relaxed yet,” Human Rights Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe told reporters. Pressed for a date when the camps would be open to the media, the minister said: “We are trying to lift the ban on media access, but it will take time.”

The few visits that have been allowed have been under strict military supervision.

UNHCR welcomes actions by Sri Lanka

Friday, December 4th, 2009

The United Nations refugee agency has welcomed Sri Lanka’s decision this week to allow greater freedom of movement for some 135,000 internally displaced persons (IDPs) remaining in 20 closed camps in the country’s north following the recently-ended civil conflict.

“We are encouraged by the Sri Lankan Government’s long-awaited decision,” Andrej Mahecic, spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), told reporters in Geneva.

“Our teams are in the process of assessing the number of IDPs exercising their new freedom of movement over the past few days and report that people continue to leave the camps,” he added.

There were some 280,000 IDPs staying in closed camps in May after a final push by Government forces ended the decades-long civil war with separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
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Dispatches from Sri Lanka, Day Four

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Father Kenneth J. Gavin, S.J., the Regional Director of Jesuit Refugee Service/USA, is in Sri Lanka this week for a meeting of JRS Regional Directors. He will be writing daily updates on what it is like in Sri Lanka, seven months after the end of a devastating civil war that left tens of thousands dead, and hundreds of thousands displaced. This is the fourth installment.

Wednesday, December 2. “Speak on our behalf,” a human rights activist in Trincomalee urged us today as we watched a short PowerPoint presentation on the history of injustice and violations of human rights endured by the Tamil people of the north and east of Sri Lanka over the past 60 years.

Victims of intense shelling during the war seek help at a hospital in Sri Lanka.

Victims of intense shelling during the war seek help at a hospital in Sri Lanka.

“Speak on our behalf because we have no voice,” he repeated. Many of us were shaken by the presentation’s photos of atrocities committed against the Tamil civilian population. One of the facilitators of our reconciliation workshop has lived through the brutal years of partisan bloodshed in Northern Ireland and has spent much of his life there in the difficult struggle for peace and reconciliation. Visibly shaken, he reflected on the photos of human slaughter by saying in a choked voice, “I had never seen a picture of a child hanged.”

In fact, as a Sri Lankan present explained, the harrowing photo was only a small piece of a larger, more brutal story. In 2006, a Tamil woman was raped and murdered while her husband and young children were forced to stand by and watch helplessly. Afterwards, the children themselves were slashed with machetes and hanged in front of their father who was then himself finally killed.

This story and so many others like it fill the pages of the sad history of Sri Lanka’s recent conflict — a conflict marked by inhumanities committed by all sides of the conflict. In a real way, these crimes against humanity force us to ask ourselves not simply what has become of the people of Sri Lanka, but what has become of humanity itself. How can we, as humankind, face and understand such brutality?
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Released from camps, Sri Lankans face long road home

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

IRIN reports that thousands of internally displaced persons who have left camps in Sri Lanka’s north say they are struggling to rebuild their lives.

Those leaving camps are transferred to transit points such as schools or churches, and then make their way to their places of origin or new resettlement areas, according to local NGO sources working with the returnees. Many are accompanied by dozens of other family members who cannot return to their homes because the areas have still to be cleared of mines laid during the conflict. This means homes are overcrowded and resources stretched, according to local NGOs in Jaffna.

Learn more here.

Dispatches from Sri Lanka, Day Two

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

Father Kenneth J. Gavin, S.J., the Regional Director of Jesuit Refugee Service/USA, is in Sri Lanka this week for a meeting of JRS Regional Directors. He will be writing daily updates on what it is like in Sri Lanka, seven months after the end of a devastating civil war that left tens of thousands dead, and hundreds of thousands displaced. This is the second installment.

Monday, November 30. The retreat house where our meeting is taking place is located in Trincomalee, on the northeast coast of Sri Lanka. Trinco, as the locals call it, is a six hour drive from Colombo, the capital, on a congested two-lane highway unceremoniously called A-9. Stretching from the south all the way to the northern tip of the island, A-9 is the main artery for trade, travel and military movement in the country. During much of the last phase of Sri Lanka’s recent conflict, travel along A-9 was severely restricted by dozens of checkpoints that caused great hardship for civilians and tradesmen visiting family members or moving produce and goods to markets in the south.

Trincomalee’s harbor is one of the finest in all of Southeast Asia. The gentle rolling waves cast a soothing calm over the long stretch of beach where generations of Tamil fishermen and their families have lived and worked. Both a Hindu temple and a small Catholic chapel face east on the shore just outside our retreat center, in testimony to the religious diversity of the Tamil people.

Fishing in Sri Lanka. (Jesuit Refugee Service/USA)

Fishing in Sri Lanka. (Jesuit Refugee Service/USA)

Walking along the beach today, Fr. Peter Balleis, S.J., the International Director of Jesuit Refugee Service, and I pass dozens of multi-colored fishing boats with crews of Tamil men unloading their morning’s catch. Many greet us in English or simply stare in surprise at their unexpected visitors. Some lift large fish in the air to show us their catch and cry out to us, “Where are you from?” Older children run from their families’ wooden shacks, waving and greeting us while the smaller kids just stand and stare in amazement.
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Dispatches from Sri Lanka, Day One

Monday, November 30th, 2009

Father Kenneth J. Gavin, S.J., the Regional Director of Jesuit Refugee Service/USA, is in Sri Lanka this week for a meeting of JRS Regional Directors. He will be writing daily updates on what it is like in Sri Lanka, seven months after the end of a devastating civil war that left tens of thousands dead, and hundreds of thousands displaced.

The conflict in Sri Lanka forced this man to flee multiple times from various places he sought shelter. (Ken Gavin, S.J. - Jesuit Refugee Service/USA)

The conflict in Sri Lanka forced this man to flee multiple times from various places he sought shelter. (Ken Gavin, S.J. - Jesuit Refugee Service/USA)


Sunday, November 29. I land in Colombo, the capital city of Sri Lanka, at 8 a.m. this morning after nearly 16 hours of flying time from Washington, D.C. I am here to attend a meeting of the worldwide regional directors of Jesuit Refugee Service on the theme of reconciliation and its role in the mission of JRS.

The choice of locations was far from arbitrary. After more than 25 years of conflict between federal forces in the south and a northern rebel group known as the Tamil Tigers, the government of Sri Lanka finally defeated the Tigers this past May. The victory was not without devastating losses to both sides and the number of civilian deaths in the conflict was shocking. Both sides in the war have been accused by the international community of violations of the Tamil people’s human rights.
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Report: one in 10 Colombians uprooted due to violence

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

A new report from Refugees International says that

Displaced Colombian women and girls are the resilient survivors of the ongoing conflict inside the country. Frustrated by continued neglect from the authorities, displaced women’s organizations successfully petitioned the Constitutional Court, which ordered the Colombian government to bring to justice perpetrators of sexual violence and devise programs attending to the protection and socio-economic needs of displaced women. It is time for the government of Colombia to prioritize the implementation of the court orders. The U.S. government should take the opportunity of its close relationship with its Colombian counterpart to strongly encourage full compliance and provide help and resources to facilitate that task.

The report, which can be downloaded in PDF form here, also notes there are 3.2 million displaced people registered in Colombia – the second highest figure in the world after Sudan. Including unregistered individuals, one in 10 Colombians is uprooted because of violence..
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