Ending the Refugee Crisis
Millions of people are trapped in a kind of permanent limbo. An expert from CARE explains how they can be helped.
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No one wants to become a refugee. The events that force a person to flee are always traumatic: war, natural disasters, internecine quarrels.
The numbers are staggering. At the end of 2006, the United Nations was assisting nearly 10 million refugees and 13 million "internally displaced persons," people who had fled from conflicts to another part of their country. The common thread is a sense of uncertainty and dependence, particularly when people are forced to live in camps. Camps are never intended to be permanent. Yet, all too often, people remain trapped in limbo as conflicts drag on and once-thriving communities disintegrate. Generations of children are born and raised in camps. Meanwhile, the world forgets.
Displaced people strive to get an education, earn a living and raise their families. But their options are skewed by their confinement. Consider:
Nearly 40,000 people between the ages of 12 and 26 live in the Dadaab camps in Kenya. After completing school, there are limited possibilities. A tiny few obtain scholarships to attend foreign universities. Others find work with aid agencies in the camps as teachers, mechanics, shopkeepers or office clerks. But many young people have no way to study beyond high school or to earn a living.
In crisis settings like Darfur, attention and resources go toward immediate survival needs, like food, water and medical care; so social and psychological services are often unmet. A December 2006 report found that more than 70 percent of children in Darfur are not in school. Children need schooling not only to continue their development, but to provide a sense of stability and routine. Education can also promote conflict resolution and peace.
Camps usually offer little natural protection from the sun or rain; they lack water and fuel sources. This presents at least three problems: people generally can't provide for themselves so they are dependent on aid, the influx takes an environmental toll and occupants must leave the safety of camps for necessities like firewood, which means that women suffer assault and rape with alarming frequency. There are some solutions. Agencies can provide camp residents with fuel-efficient stoves and solar cookers, and they can distribute food that requires less cooking. They can limit the size of camps, ensure adequate sanitation facilities and try to minimize environmental impacts when planning sites. Residents can be trained to provide services, like tailoring, shoe repair, basket-weaving and making crutches and wheelchairs. But these are temporary measures. In order for people to go home, which they desperately want to do, the international community must and can do more.
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