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Refugee crisis - a new year, same tragedy

4 Comments

Refugees and other distress migrants have been forced to leave their homes in exceedingly large numbers for the past 18 months. It has become commonplace to refer to the current situation as the worst refugee crisis since World War 2, with over 65 million people – a figure in excess of the entire population of many countries – forcibly displaced.

No individual region or triggering factor can be singled out as the only precipitating cause. Refugees have been fleeing relentless bombing in Aleppo, Homs, Mosul and Juba – victims of civil wars that they have no control over and that are determined by forces indifferent to humanitarian tragedy. Refugees have been pushed out of El Salvador, Honduras and Mexico by vicious drug wars and the gangs and other forms of criminal violence that they spawn. In Eritrea, Ukraine, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Afghanistan and Pakistan, refugees flee their homes because of intolerable political oppression by authoritarian governments who care only about keeping power – whatever the human cost.

2017 doesn’t look any better.

So, how can the current extreme humanitarian suffering of millions of forced migrants be alleviated over the coming year?

The most obvious answer is peace. A toxic combination of violence and conflict, deployed to maintain or assert power lies at the heart of all the migration push factors above. Any moves - diplomatic, economic, political or social – that contribute to ending or reducing conflict will alleviate human suffering. If a lasting and sustainable truce is negotiated in the Syrian conflict, if the South Sudanese power struggle is peacefully resolved, if the government of Myanmar can be persuaded to enforce the minority rights of the Rohingya community, if drug wars in Central America are undermined by effective social policies and law enforcement measures, massive human suffering and the inevitable refugee outflows will be reduced. The urgent necessity of these resolutions cannot be overstated.

But peace is elusive.

So then what kind of alternatives exist? This is the question that the U.N. General Assembly addressed in detail during its first ever plenary session on Large Movements of People, held on September 19, 2016. The outcome document of that high profile meeting, known as the New York Declaration, and signed by 193 affirming member states, sets out a comprehensive, ambitious and convincing agenda for action.

First and foremost, the declaration participants recognized the importance of continuing to support the right to refugee protection; this is a right that has been enshrined in international law since the end of World War 2. Despite the many hostile sentiments expressed towards unexpected large scale migrations, no single country or politician has spoken about withdrawing their country’s support from this obligation. Building on this collective commitment, the UN called for a concerted effort to greatly increase the responsibility of sharing refugees among nations. Hopefully the humanitarian investment in assistance, protection and inclusion will fall more equitably on a wider cohort of players than has been the case so far.

This is a critical demand. If only a small number of countries are willing to host refugees then the refugee architecture rapidly becomes fatally flawed. Schools, hospitals, public housing, language classes, skill training programs cannot function under conditions of massive overload; and the political consensus that supports investment in humanitarian assistance crumbles under the weight of overwhelming pressure and demand. The example of acute “humanitarian burnout” in Jordan and Lebanon, Germany and Sweden clearly illustrate the point.

Second, more needs to be done to stop the flow of migrants from the source. Various elements are needed for such an effort. Much more robust and targeted investments are needed in infrastructure development in places where failing state structures enable the establishment and flourishing of gangs, criminal networks and pervasive urban violence. Many areas in the capital cities of the Northern Triangle countries are a case in point: careful, systematic and sustained reconstruction of police capability, local social and educational institutions, skill training and employment opportunities are essential if the outflow of young people is to be stemmed. Recent improvements in the infrastructure and safety of some notorious inner city areas in Honduras, thanks in part to bilateral collaborations between the US and the local and central government authorities, illustrate the type of programming urgently needed.

Another element of a harm prevention program is the expansion of safe, regular and legal migration routes so that people needing to flee can do so. A key constituency for whom this is an urgent priority are adolescents and other young people. Despite their documented needs for exit in situations where abusive military recruitment, sexual exploitation and gang warfare are endemic, these obvious migration candidates lack access to legitimate mobility. They are the most likely to be refused a legal status and treated as “mere” economic migrants, “illegal entrants” or, more crudely, “bogus asylum seekers”. In these circumstances, reliance on smugglers becomes an essential element of departure unless, even worse, abusive and deceitful recruitment by traffickers takes its place. In either case young people exercising a legitimate survival strategy are forced into deeply and foreseeably unsatisfactory situations.

Shoring up political stability, investing locally in the next generation of workers, parents and voters and more equitably distributing access to legitimate and legal asylum are essential policies that are desperately needed in 2017 and beyond. Will leaders with the vision and skill required to implement such policies emerge from the ashes of a very challenging 2016?

© The Mark News

©2024 GPlusMedia Inc.

4 Comments
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Refugees should be going to places with similar cultures as the ones they are leaving.

-1 ( +3 / -4 )

This is stating the obvious and mouthing a bunch of platitudes with no real workable proposed solution.

1 ( +1 / -0 )

Well, if they are refugees, they should be put into daily programs because:

They new residents from a different culture and need to comply with their host country's standards/morals

They are being granted an opportunity to start a new life in a safe environment

They will be getting money and more benefits that they would not have had

This should be considered a privilege, not a right.

How to do this? Daily moral and rule explanations, with language lessons. They must report when they leave their designated residence. Picture ID must be present at all time along with a copy of a document that shows they are a refugee. Any crime done gets them the boot.

Why? because obviously letting in over a million people caused major issues that is being swept under the rug because it is not PC or is considered discrimination. Screw that, they are refugees from a war zone and have a huge difference in morals an ethics.

Sounds like a lot of money and resources right? Well, if it cannot get funded or there is not enough people to carry this out, countries shouldn't take in so many refugees. Common sense right there.

0 ( +1 / -1 )

A significant portion, likely most, coming to the West are men who simply want higher living standards. The top five source countries in Calais, for example, were Pakistan, Eritrea, Iran, Syria and Albania. Only one of those countries was experiencing war.

The driving factor is human smugglers who have seen a lucrative opportunity in exploiting the West's refugee and open-borders policy. Because "oppression" and "poverty" aren't exactly new, are they.

0 ( +0 / -0 )

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