During 2015, almost 201,400 refugees from 39 countries were able to return to the countries of their origin as Congo, Iran, Pakistan, Tanzania and Uganda actively exercised the policy of voluntary repatriation and resettlement. Furthermore, 107,100 refugees were admitted for resettlement against the 134,000 refugees referred for resettlement by UNHCR. While 32,000 refugees found a permanent home in the country of asylum through naturalisation or local integration.
Today, globally there is the highest number of refugees, internally displaced persons and asylum seekers than ever before, but dealing with mass migration has remained a constant concern for more than half of the last century. It was during 1940 to 1960 when WWII, post-WWII conflicts, and partition of India-Pakistan caused the displacement of at least 81.6m people; the largest population displacement in the 20th century.
For the next 40 years, the decolonisation movements, the wars of independence, civil conflicts during the 50s to 60s, the Cold War’s proxy battles in the ’70s and ’80s and post-Cold War conflicts collectively rendered at least 46.5m ‘homeless’. The global displacement came down to a historic low in 2005 and started increasing again after the instability in the Middle East. Subsequently, the civil conflict in Colombia, US invasion of Iraq, persecution of ethnic minorities in Burma including Rohingya, civil war in South Sudan and the most recent and ongoing Syrian war have collectively expelled at least 22.9m people during the last 16 years.
From the past to the present: what needs to be done to resolve the refugee crisis?
In the aftermath of WWII, the United Nations created the International Refugee Organisation and later in 1950, the international community took the initiative and found the UNHCR to oversee global refugee issues and to provide relief for people fleeing conflict. The United Nations Refugee Convention obligates individual countries to provide assistance and protection to refugees and establish the principle of responsibility-sharing for the international community and to act collectively to address the refugee crisis. But both the individual states and the international community are constantly failing to meet these obligations.
Wealthier countries are reluctant to share the burden of the global refugee crisis and 86p of the world’s refugees are hosted by developing countries. Many governments prefer political interests over the lives of refugees, leaving thousands of children, women and men to die on dangerous journeys that could have been avoided. “At sea, a frightening number of refugees and migrants are dying each year. On land, people fleeing war are finding their way blocked by closed borders,” said Filippo Grandi, Commissioner for UNHCR.
This ever-rising scale of the global refugee crisis has exposed the limitations, fault lines and failures in our existing international protection and humanitarian system. Current approaches remained unable to find solutions for refugees displaced for long durations. Humanitarian responses mainly focus on care and maintenance of refugees and pay little attention to long-term sustainable solutions such as resettlement, voluntary repatriation and local integration of refugees. Moreover, the international community does not seem to offer enough burden-sharing to the host countries providing shelter to the majority of refugees in conflict regions.
For the last many years, assistance funding is constantly falling short of the requirements and the resettlement departures have barely increased; obvious signs of inequitable responsibility sharing by the international community.
A better, more welcoming world for devastated refugees is not possible unless every individual country starts respecting its legal obligation towards refugees and asylum seekers, providing assistance to those in distress during dangerous journeys through land or sea, allowing them to enter their territories and sincerely combating xenophobia. Furthermore, the international community needs to share the responsibility for assisting, hosting and resettling refugees and to provide substantial funding for UN-humanitarian appeals and give meaningful financial support to refugee -hosting countries for their humanitarian programmes.
A collective commitment from individual states and the international community is badly needed to attain long-term comprehensive solutions of voluntary repatriation, resettlement and local integration of refugees.
Published in Dawn, Sunday Magazine, July 10th, 2016