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INTERVENTION BY THE HOLY SEE AT THE EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE OF THE UNHCR
STATEMENT OF H.E. MONS. SILVANO M. TOMASI
Geneva Wednesday, 4 October 2006
Mr. Chairman,
The Delegation of the Holy See adds its appreciation for yours,
and for the UNHCR High Commissioner’s, able and committed leadership of the
Executive Committee and in the cause of refugees and forcibly uprooted people.
1. The hundreds of victims whose lives have been lost in recent
weeks and months in their desperate search for a more secure and decent
existence is a red light of alarm that in our globalised world the international
community is failing to uphold its goals of solidarity and protection. Around
the world, through seas and deserts, people struggle to escape from war, from
violation of their human rights, from famine. Motives and flows are mixed, a
major challenge to the responsibility to protect, in our case responsibility to
protect in general. While different mechanisms and institutional arrangements
are in place to address different kinds of movement of people, clearly all of
these people need protection. The valid distinction between migrants, asylum
seekers and refugees has been blurred. A certain reluctance and fatigue to
preserve such distinction in a fair way seem to prevail, thus weakening the
protection role of the 1951 Convention on the Status of Refugees and the related
1967 Protocol as well as the 1969 Organization of African Unity Convention
Governing the Specific Aspects of Refugee Problems in Africa, the OAU
Convention. It seems reasonable, both in south-south and south-north population
flows, that in the determination of admission the UNHCR should complement the
often political approach of States and guarantee the quality of the process
through its presence or the implementation of its specific guidelines about
selection. In this way, asylum seekers, who are a small proportion in these
movements, will not be exposed to refoulement.
2. The wider awareness of the responsibility to protect should encourage an
added effort to alleviate the plight of asylum seekers who on subsistent living
and in a virtual state of limbo are scattered in various regions like, for
example, the recent flows of Iraqis throughout the Middle East. They are
particularly vulnerable. Conflicts prevent them from returning and in the
country of temporary residence their status is not well recognized; it is almost
that of stateless persons. Political necessity conditions the interpretation of
the refugee convention even though reality on the ground, often effectively
witnessed to by civil society organizations, would demand recognition of these
individuals and families as entitled to Convention protection and assistance. It
has become obvious in the current discussions that more resources are called for
to meet all protection requirements and to address not just populations in a
state of limbo, but also the 5.7 million of the world some 9 million refugees in
protracted refugee situations, the more than four million Palestinian refugees,
and the estimated 24 million internally displaced people (IDP). If international
solidarity would add to its budget on aid to refugees a small proportion of the
increase in arms expenses – from 1996 to 2005 military expenditure increased by
34 percent to US $ 1.118 billions in current dollars – then a major step forward
would be taken toward an adequate response to the pains of uprooted humanity(1).
3. Funds are a necessary but not sufficient requirement. The
political will is needed to make the responsibility to protect comprehensive
enough to embrace the prevention of forced displacement tragedies. The way of
dialogue and of respect of human rights should replace that of conflict. Refugee
camps, official and unofficial, would no longer stain the map of the world. In
the meantime the task on hand is the dissolution of these camps through the
classical strategies of voluntary repatriation, local integration and
resettlement. It seems to this Delegation that for some present complex
situations the option of resettlement should be revisited. A larger number of
countries can welcome a larger number of refugees anxious to start a new life in
freedom and self-reliance. It is not only an ethical obligation but also a
practical advantage since several developed receiving countries face scarcity of
manpower for their economy and for a sustainable demography. In the preparation
of refugees for resettlement non-governmental as well as faith-based
organizations can collaborate and provide competent help. In fact, as expression
of civil society NGOs can be good partners for their closeness to the reality on
the ground, their experience and their capacity to create a favorable public
opinion for newcomers. But an effective partnership has to take into account the
security of also their personnel and, in the least developed countries
especially, that their overhead cannot be supplied by local resources.
Mr. Chairman,
4. The initiatives undertaken to make UNHCR more effective and
flexible, the "cluster approach", the reorganization of the budget, deserve
support and they show its commitment and sensibility to the human face behind
all statistics. Society at large should also renew its sense of responsibility
to protect. First of all, education can transmit the values of solidarity and
hospitality. Training to enforcement and border officials will enable them to
recognize asylum seekers. Labour unions, employers, schools and faith
communities can prepare their constituencies to an increasingly frequent
encounter with people in need and to welcome them to build a common future. With
the human person and his / her dignity at the center of concern, the
responsibility to protect will continue finding the creative capacity to respond
in a humane and fair way to today’s new developments.
Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
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(1)
SIPRI Yearbook 2006: Armaments, Disarmaments, and International
Security. Oxford University Press, 2006, pp. 259-386
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