SACW | 01 Feb 2006 | The world's lost people: neither refugees nor citizens

Harsh Kapoor aiindex at mnet.fr
Tue Jan 31 19:48:15 CST 2006


South Asia Citizens Wire  | 01 February, 2006 | Dispatch No. 2215

(INTERRUPTION NOTICE: PLEASE NOTE THERE WILL BE NO SACW DISPATCHES
BETWEEN FEBRUARY 2 to 11, 2006)

Contents:

[1] The world's lost people: neither refugees nor citizens (Donald
Steinberg)


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[1]

The Christian Science Monitor
January 27, 2006

The world's lost people: neither refugees nor citizens
By Donald Steinberg
VAVUNIYA, SRI LANKA – In a camp for displaced persons in northern Sri
Lanka, Kandhaya Kaliyankumar's voice softens as he describes the tragedy
that destroyed his home and killed his brother. He knows that he was
lucky to escape the devastation along with his wife and four children.
He is tired of living on sparse handouts from the government,
international agencies, and private charities. He wants nothing more
than to receive a small plot of land to cultivate rice and also to raise
his children away from the alcohol, drugs, and disease that pervade the
densely packed camp housing 4,000 people.

Mr. Kaliyankumar is one of the world's forgotten people. His tragedy is
not the result of the tsunami that struck Sri Lanka. Instead, it stems
from the civil strife between the largely Sinhalese government and the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam that has killed some 65,000 people and
left more than 300,000 homeless over two decades. Despite a cease-fire
signed in 2002, the conflict is worsening. New attacks and the
assassination of the country's foreign minister have dashed hopes that
cooperation on tsunami relief would bring lasting peace. And while
generous assistance floods into Sri Lanka to assist the tsunami victims
and return them to their places of origin, the victims of Sri Lanka's
man-made tragedy have languished for years in government welfare centers
that are little more than urban slums.

The homeless in Sri Lanka are part of a global phenomenon affecting 25
million people in about 50 countries. Civilians - not soldiers - are now
overwhelmingly the victims of conflict. There are at least 1 million
internally displaced persons in Sudan, Colombia, Congo, Uganda, Iraq,
Algeria, and Turkey, and the numbers are growing every day. Because
internally displaced persons - IDPs in humanitarian lingo - don't cross
international borders, they don't automatically receive the rights,
protection, and assistance that come to refugees. They have no patron
among international agencies or donors, and no formal system of legal
rights.

Often, governments responsible for displacement may restrict
international donors and foreign relief agencies anxious to help,
especially during conflict, when aid to the displaced in rebel
territories is considered aid to the enemy.

Who are the internally displaced? They are 6 million Sudanese driven
from their homes in the south and in Darfur by brutal civil war. They
are 3 million Colombians who have suffered from a half-century of civil
strife. They are women and children of northern Uganda, crowded into
squalid and ill- protected camps to prevent murder, kidnapping, and
forced recruitment by the Lord's Resistance Army. They are Congolese
civilians caught in the crossfire of ethnic militias, foreign troops,
and insurgency groups. Most recently, they are hundreds of thousands of
Zimbabweans driven from their shacks outside Harare by Robert Mugabe's
latest atrocity.

I've visited displaced persons huddled in desolate camps in the middle
of nowhere in Sri Lanka, in bombed-out buildings and train stations in
Angola, and in desperate shantytowns on the outskirts of major cities in
Sudan. IDP death rates can be 60 times those of nonaffected populations.

Beyond the moral and humanitarian imperatives, mass internal
displacement brings chaos that may serve as breeding grounds for
terrorism; trafficking in drugs, arms, and persons; pandemic diseases;
and other threats to international order. The failure to rapidly return
IDPs to their homes can doom peace agreements and reconstruction.

Various agencies are doing outstanding work on behalf of IDPs, including
the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, UNICEF, World Food Program,
International Organization for Migration, Red Cross, US Agency for
International Development, State Department's Bureau of Population,
Refugees and Migration, and private relief and development
organizations. They deserve our greater financial support and
encouragement. We must build a permanent constituency to assist and
defend the rights of IDPs, and to solve the root causes of the conflicts
that create the displacement in the first place.

Kaliyankumar and his family have been waiting in the squalor of a
government welfare center in Sri Lanka for eight years. The world has
opened its hearts and its pocketbooks to the global victims of the
tsunami. We should be no less generous to the victims of man-made disasters.

• Donald Steinberg is the vice president for multilateral affairs at the
International Crisis Group and former US ambassador to Angola.


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Buzz on the perils of fundamentalist politics, on
matters of peace and democratisation in South
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