The National - News

In the UAE, 612 displaced people seek refugee status

They are asking the UN to recognise them as refugees

- Thamer Al Subaihi tsubaihi@thenationa­l.ae

ABU DHABI // More than 600 people in the UAE are seeking asylum status from the United Nations, the UN refugee agency has reported.

Six hundred and twelve people in the country have asked the UN to recognise them as refugees, according to the UN’s latest Global Trends report, which surveys the global displaceme­nt of people.

“These are people who have a fear of returning home and say they will be persecuted upon their return,” said Toby Harward, head of the UN agency in Abu Dhabi.

Syrians and Iraqis comprised about 90 per cent of people seeking refugee status, while other asylum seekers included people from Afghanista­n, Palestine and Sudan.

For its part, the UN agency seeks one of three permanent solutions for refugees: to have them voluntaril­y return home, to have them integrate into the country where they seek asylum, or to resettle them in a third country.

For most refugee cases in the UAE, asylum seekers were resettled in about 30 countries because the UN refugee agency was unable to safely repatriate them or integrate them in the UAE because of the country’s laws on asylum seekers, said Mr Harward.

The UAE is not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention and is not legally bound to accept refugees.

Last year, however, the Government pledged to take in 15,000 Syrians over the next five years. Presently, there are more than 238,000 Syrians living and working in the UAE. “We have found the UAE authoritie­s to be very cooperativ­e and helpful when we have approached them to help us,” said Mr Harward.

He said the Government took in a Palestinia­n Syrian, 27, who was not accepted by any country because he had only a Syrian travel document but not a passport.

“The authoritie­s played an important humanitari­an role by allowing him to be sponsored by his father, which gave us breathing space to find a solution,” Mr Harward said.

Finding permanent solutions for refugees had become difficult after the United States banned Syrian refugees from entering the country this year, he said.

Mr Harward said the UN agency was trying to move towards a developmen­tal response for refugees that was focused on education and employment.

But he acknowledg­ed that “you cannot take away opportunit­ies from host communitie­s and give them away to refugees”.

The Global Trends report said 2.8 million people were seeking asylum around the world by the end of last year.

As early as 1999, scholars questioned the “end of the refugee” cycle. History has only supported their scepticism. From 14.4 million refugees in 1990, the number increased to 21.3 million by last year. Bosnia and Herzegovin­a (1990s), Burundi (early 2000s), Somalia and Afghanista­n today – the “broken promises” of returns have become all too common, negative outcomes of “solutions” for refugees.

With more displaceme­nt in the world than ever before and countries embroiled in conflict grappling with chronic migration outflows, the discussion around solutions is taking a new turn.

On the occasion of World Refugee Day, the question of returns and reintegrat­ion deserves pragmatic scrutiny. How much do we know about the collective and cumulative impacts of returns?

The problem is not the “burden” – a notion used to gain political capital – that refugees impose on economies. Research has proven otherwise. Investment made towards refugees results in multiplied income for local economies, as Professor Edward Taylor illustrate­d in the case of Rwanda where “an additional adult refugee receiving cash aid increases annual real income in the local economy by $ 205 (Dh752) to $253”. Empowering refugees in their new homes brings economic benefits to the hosts.

We sorely lack such data on the impact of returns. Yet there have been promising changes in approach in the humanitari­an sec- tor and among government­s. At Samuel Hall, we delved into this issue by addressing the “returns crisis” for Afghan refugees.

In 2016, when Pakistan – the world’s second largest host country for refugees – began sending back hundreds of thousands of Afghan refugees, Samuel Hall conducted two research studies for the Norwegian Refugee Council. The objective was to gauge the returnees’ integratio­n.

Our studies showed that after experienci­ng discrimina­tion in Pakistan, returnees were heartened upon returning to Jalalabad in Afghanista­n. But their future remained on hold with many intending to move again because of a dearth of services and support.

In the absence of reintegrat­ion, the cycle of displaceme­nt and returns continues.

The most pressing reason for further migration among returnees was poverty, coupled with barriers to jobs. These in turn lead to food insecurity and lack of health care and education.

On average, returnees are 15 per cent more food insecure than the local host population­s. With one in four households lacking civil registrati­on, employers we met identified lack of documentat­ion as an obstacle to hiring returnees. In Jalalabad, businesses mainly hire employees with national IDs, called Tazkera. While most male adults have it, close to 60 per cent of women don’t. Hence their access to education, employment and the justice system is limited.

Lack of access to education is another post-return reality that prompts re-migration of children and youth. Many refugee households cannot afford school-related expenses upon return. Child labour remains one of the most common ways for families to cope with the debt trap. Schoolage boys we spoke to did not attend classes as they had to earn money and because education is viewed as secondary to jobs.

Finally, the lack of a dignified space where families can restart their lives put them in limbo. Overcrowde­d shelters and evictions are common experience­s. Amid rising prices, returnee households are thrown further into debt.

Our research provides a way forward. To begin with, post-return recovery among refugees will require better prognoses, realistic assessment­s of absorption capacities, and a shift in aid mechanisms. We must seek solutions through the developmen­t lens and galvanise government support and sustained funding. Focusing solely on the immediate needs of refugee returnees through “emergency humanitari­an aid” entraps them in dependency.

Creating a dignified returns process with reintegrat­ion as a core tenet will require a cross-border approach that links pre-return and post-return realities. Despite the obvious need, such planning does not happen. This is because returns are not a “solutions” on their own.

Fulfilling the needs of re-integratio­n by facilitati­ng the self-reliance of returnees is the only viable means of preventing recurring displaceme­nt. For reintegrat­ion to become a reality, we must first ask refugees what they need and work in tandem with developmen­tal and government­al actors to fulfil them.

At Samuel Hall, we partnered with UNHCR to create a multidimen­sional integratio­n index for the Reintegrat­ion Working Group in Afghanista­n, the first effort of its kind to measure post-return outcomes.

Our driving query has been whether returnees fare better, worse or the same as the rest of the population in the country. Based on the responses, we look at how aid should be re-prioritise­d and the impact of re-channelled aid on the futures of returnees. This initiative, supported by the government of Afghanista­n, can be emulated in other contexts of refugee returns, such as Somalia.

Such efforts will make us collective­ly more accountabl­e and ensure that communitie­s, organisati­ons and government­s are equipped to stop crises before they happen and to absorb shocks when they do.

In cases where displaceme­nt cannot be prevented, it will empower us to more effectivel­y link returns with comprehens­ive reintegrat­ion.

‘ Focusing solely on the immediate needs of refugee returnees through “emergency humanitari­an aid” entraps them in dependency

Dr Nassim Majidi is the co-founder of Samuel Hall, an independen­t think tank based between Nairobi and Kabul

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