Jeff Fahey and USCRI Ask Congress to End Refugee Warehousing

Thu Oct 29, 2009 4:55pm EDT
 
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New USCRI report, "Stonewalling on Refugee Rights," documents Sahrawi refugee
rights abuse in Algeria

WASHINGTON, Oct. 29 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- "Being a refugee shouldn't be a
life sentence -- but that's exactly what it's become for millions of refugees
who have been confined to camps and denied their freedom, some for 30 years,"
said LOST cast member & international advocate Jeff Fahey.  On Tuesday he went
to Capitol Hill with the US Committee for Refugees and Immigrants (USCRI) and
former US Ambassador Michael Ussery to meet Members of Congress and the press
to urge an end to the inhumane practice of warehousing refugees. Of nearly 14
million refugees worldwide, 8.5 million have been warehoused and denied their
basic rights for a decade or more despite guarantees in the 1951 Refugee
Convention -- which include the right to move about freely, work, receive
documentation, and choose a place of residence.

(Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20091029/DC02068)

"Unfortunately," said Fahey, "these refugees have been forgotten and ignored
by the very international organizations established to look out for their most
basic rights and ensure their welfare." 

Fahey and Ussery were joined by USCRI's Lavinia Limon, president & CEO, at a
briefing hosted by the co-chairs of the Bipartisan Congressional Refugee
Caucus. Rep. Mike Rogers (R-MI) joined a press briefing to voice his support
for the campaign to end refugee warehousing.  USCRI released a letter to donor
countries from Thai civil society asking for rights-based alternatives, and a
new report: "Stonewalling on Refugee Rights, Algeria and The Sahrawi," 
interviewing refugees who recently escaped the abuse that tens of thousands of
Sahrawi refugees endure in the Tindouf camps in Algeria.

On September 10, the UN's High Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres,
made the first visit by a UNHCR head to the Tindouf camps in Algeria since
1976 and noted, "I recognize that not enough has been done and that the
international community should wake up... we have to work more and better."
Jeff Fahey said he was pleased the UN High Commissioner visited the camps and
was recommending steps to help the refugees. "But he needs to do more.  A 2nd
and 3rd generation of children are being born into the hopelessness of these
camps."

"From Thailand to Kenya to Algeria, these refugees have been confined to camps
and forced to subsist on meager rations for 5, 15, 30 years or more," said
Lavinia Limon. "It's an appalling way to treat human beings.  It's a terrible
way to spend US tax dollars and aid from other donor nations.  Resources would
be much better spent helping refugees rebuild their lives, not ensuring they
remain refugees the rest of their lives."

"The real enemy of Sahrawi refugees is not the desert, however hot the sun and
sand are," said Ussery. "They are victims of a perfect storm: a blind eye and
neglect by UNHCR; restrictive policies by Algeria which denies the
consequences of its actions while enabling the Polisario; and a
non-transparent Polisario Front ruling entity that abuses the rights and
controls their day-to-day lives of refugees, who are confined to the camps,
forced to take handouts, and unable to make a better life for themselves."

Among the group's recommendations to end the abuses of warehousing & improve
refugees' lives:
    1. Establish a program in the camps allowing refugees who want to return
to
       their homes or go elsewhere to do so without intimidation, without
being
       arrested, and without being abused by the security forces.
    2. Conduct a census to ensure an accurate count and provide documentation
       for free movement and travel.
    3. Establish in-camp UNHCR presence to monitor aid distribution & prevent
       widespread hijacking & misuse.

    4. Implement durable, rights- and community-based solutions to help
refugees
       resettle, rebuild their lives.


*For the new Report and other information from USCRI on warehousing Sahrawi
refugees in Algeria, go to:
http://www.refugees.org/article.aspx?id=2398&subm=33&area=About%20Refugees&

*For more on refugee rights, also see:
www.moroccanamericanpolicy.org/refugee/report.pdf 

The Moroccan American Center for Policy (MACP) is a non-profit organization
whose principal mission is to inform opinion makers, government officials and
interested publics in the United States about political and social
developments in Morocco and the role being played by the Kingdom of Morocco in
broader strategic developments in North Africa, the Mediterranean, and the
Middle East.  For more, please visit www.moroccanamericanpolicy.org.

This material is distributed by the Moroccan American Center for Policy on
behalf of the Government of Morocco.  Additional information is available at
the Department of Justice in Washington, DC.






SOURCE  Moroccan American Center for Policy

Calvin Dark of the Moroccan American Center for Policy, +1-202-587-0855,
cdark@moroccanamericancenter.com

 

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