Cape Argus

Where to for refugees?

Life sentence in a camp could be a terrible burden, but the alternativ­e may be worse

- CRISTIANO D’ORSI

TENS of cities in Africa, such as Johannesbu­rg, Dar es Salaam and Kampala, are overwhelme­d by an inflow of people fleeing conflicts in different parts of the continent. In particular, people living in Mali, Somalia and South Sudan flee their home countries to seek safety.

About 17.5 million refugees worldwide don’t live in camps but live in urban areas. The 2018 World Refugee Council reports show that 60% of all refugees and 80% of all internally displaced persons are living in urban areas.

This is a result of conscious policy. For example, the United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees (UNHCR) recognises that camps can turn into de facto prisons. But it’s also because many refugees don’t want to live in camps.

Since the 1967 Biafra civil war – the first major refugee crisis in independen­t Africa – internatio­nal aid organisati­ons have primarily housed refugees in rural camps, where they were provided basic assistance. That year the then UNHCR Commission­er Sadruddin Aga Khan stated that urban refugees were viewed as a problem, even by the most sympatheti­c commentato­rs.

It wasn’t until three decades later that the UN refugee agency issued its first official policy statement on urban refugees. Concerned that making it easier for refugees to live in urban areas might pull them away from remote camps, it promoted a model of “self-reliance”

to keep them at bay.

This approach involved pressing government­s to allow refugees to be able to generate income, including being able to work.

The agency has continued to update its policies. Its 2009 policy paper reflected the reality that more than half of all refugees were living in urban areas. This was the first major shift away from giving primary attention to camps. The policy ensured that cities were recognised as legitimate places for refugees to live in and exercise their rights.

The UNHCR went further in 2014 when it advocated that camps should be exception. And that where they exist they should be phased out at the earliest possible stage.

There is confusion on the policy front. Though the UNHRC’s current strategic plan acknowledg­es that more refugees are moving to cities, it offers a few recommenda­tions on how cities could serve them better.

In practice, that means urban refugees mostly take care of themselves. Some can afford to rent apartments. Others stay with family and friends. Many end up homeless and indigent.

Their undocument­ed status makes self-reliance difficult. Thousands of refugees and asylum seekers living in cities around the world are denied work permits, pushing them into poorly paid, black market jobs. Few can access formal education or health services.

Politics is one reason that the UNHCR has been sometimes slow to address the urban refugee crisis. It has faced immense pressure from member countries to continue building and administer­ing rural camps rather than to help refugees integrate and resettle in cities.

Right-wing politician­s everywhere – from Uganda to Kenya – often portray displaced people as a national security threat. A 2010 report by the global think tank the Overseas Developmen­t Institute found that in Kenya refugees were politicall­y unpopular.

The government played down refugee needs because it didn’t want to draw attention to them.

Once refugees entered Nairobi, they essentiall­y disappeare­d.

In November 2017, the Internatio­nal Organisati­on for Migration and the umbrella group United Cities and Local Government­s organised 150 cities around the world to sign a declaratio­n on the rights of urban refugees.

Asserting that refugees can “bring significan­t social, economic and cultural contributi­ons to urban developmen­t”, they called on internatio­nal organisati­ons and national government­s to support cities politicall­y and financiall­y to care for refugee population­s.

Yet, poorer cities need both national and internatio­nal economic support to meet the needs of their newest residents. Cities cannot change national laws to make refugees more welcome.

But with qualified help – and a lot less hindrance from national government­s – they can provide better basic protection.

Sentencing refugees to life in a camp could be a terrible burden. But, as xenophobic attacks in South Africa show, the alternativ­e may be worse still.

On top of this, all across the continent non-camp refugees are still, for the most part, invisible, untraceabl­e and in need of help.

“Few can access formal education or health services

D’Orsi is a research fellow and lecturer at the South African Research Chair in Internatio­nal Law at the University of Johannesbu­rg. This article was first published in The Conversati­on

 ?? | BAZ RATNER Reuters ?? WOMEN wait in line to receive aid at the Kakuma refugee camp in northern Kenya in this March 2018 file picture
| BAZ RATNER Reuters WOMEN wait in line to receive aid at the Kakuma refugee camp in northern Kenya in this March 2018 file picture
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa