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On the
refugee front, a hopeful trend
With some conflicts abating, the number
of displaced persons fell about 18 percent last year.
Article
appeared in the
By Howard LaFranchi |
Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor
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Citing a trend that can only be called good news, the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reports that last year the
number of refugees around the globe fell some 18 percent to 17.1 million - the
lowest number that the international agency has counted in a decade.
With the removal
of Saddam Hussein, the Iraqis of Rafha camp can also
hope that a new government will soon secure safe conditions, allowing them to
return home.
But Rafha's Iraqis, who have lived as people without
citizenship and many basic human rights since 1991, also symbolize the plight of
the world's estimated 7 million refugees who have lived in almost prisonlike conditions for more than a decade. What experts
grimly call "warehousing" of long-term and often forgotten refugees
is also an outcome of the crisis in
Experts warn
that unaddressed, the Darfur crisis alone - where
more than 800,000 of the minority Christian population are either fleeing
militias or facing what some US officials are increasingly calling genocide -
could reverse the worldwide fall in refugee numbers.
Moreover, they
caution that the root causes of population displacements - from civil conflicts
to religious persecution to ethnic cleansing - still threaten in large parts of
the world.
"There's a
trend to lower numbers, there's no question about it, but it's perhaps not as
positive as it initially looks," says Merrill Smith, editor of the annual
global survey by the US Committee on Refugees (USCR), which is also reporting a
significant drop. "We don't see a broad willingness to change the fundamental
conditions that produce refugees."
Still, the lower
refugee population runs counter to expectations for the post-cold-war era of
globalization. Many experts had warned in recent years that the world should
expect to see more refugees as international travel became easier and human
trafficking developed as an illicit business.
But
international refugee experts say a number of positive factors - and some that
are perhaps negative - are at work.
"What is
telling is that there is a focus on durable solutions for refugees with an
increasing emphasis on safe and sustainable returns to home countries. That is
what's underlying this trend," says Pierre Bertrand, deputy director of UNHCR's
As an example,
Mr. Bertrand points to
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Countries giving rise to the most
refugees |
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Seven of those in this list saw a decrease in
the number of refugees last year. The readings at the beginning and end of
2003, along with the percent changes: |
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|
Origin |
Begin 2003 |
End 2003 |
% Change |
|
|
2,510,300 |
2,136,000 |
-14.9% |
|
|
508,200 |
606,200 |
19.3% |
|
|
574,700 |
531,600 |
-7.5% |
|
Dem. Rep. of |
424,900 |
453,400 |
6.7% |
|
Palestinians |
428,800 |
427,800 |
-0.2% |
|
|
432,200 |
402,200 |
-6.9% |
|
|
422,100 |
368,400 |
-12.7% |
|
|
373,700 |
363,200 |
-2.8% |
|
|
275,600 |
353,300 |
28.2% |
|
|
429,400 |
323,600 |
-24.6% |
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SOURCE: UNITED
NATIONS HIGH COMMISSIONER FOR REFUGEES STAFF |
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Tightening borders in developed countries - in the wake of
Sept. 11 and a global economic downturn - means that the option of seeking
asylum is also generally in decline. This is particularly true in the European
Union, which has moved toward streamlining and in effect toughening asylum
criteria among members.
The impact of globalization remains a heated international debate, and little
consensus has emerged on how global economic forces are affecting unstable
populations. But experts in refugees that come under the traditional definition
of forcibly displaced persons see reasons why lower refugee numbers may
continue - even if big drops like last year's may not.
Bertrand says refugee numbers could continue a downward trend because it's
simply in much of the world's interest - and because more global players are
recognizing that.
"We think the trend could continue because there are many stakeholders,
and by that I mean not just the parties directly involved but the members of
the international community and the international agencies who have an interest
in these processes," he says.
The USCR notes that more people, including some leaders in the
In cases like
"It takes more than just vigilance," Bertrand says. "It's really
a question of deep and sustained support."
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