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USIS Washington File

14 January 2000

Text: UNHCR Ogata Security Council Remarks on Africa

(Urges Security Council action to help end African conflicts) (4290)
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) Sadako Ogata
told the Security Council January 13 that the refugee situation in
Africa is far worse than other parts of the world and deserves more
attention from the international community.
Addressing a UNSC meeting on refugees in Africa, Ogata said that there
can be no solution to the refugee crises "if wars that force people to
flee are not stopped."
The UN commission Ogata heads cares for about six million refugees and
displaced people in Africa. The bulk of those uprooted in Africa are
internally displaced persons. Caring for them is often difficult and
dangerous because of their isolation, location near war zones, and ill
conceived government policies, she said.
Ogata appealed to the international community to intervene more
quickly and forcefully to end conflicts in sub-Saharan Africa and to
provide more support for refugee aid and reconstruction programs.
The high commissioner also said that:
-- Nowhere has war and violence affected more lives than in Central
Africa;
-- Burundi must grant access to "regrouped" people;
-- If the peace process in the Democratic Republic of Congo is not
implemented there could be "frightful repercussions" for refugees;
-- The humanitarian crisis is the worst in Angola;
-- Peacekeepers and military observers must be swiftly deployed to
Sierra Leone if the refugee situation is to improve;
-- UNHCR is working on repatriation in Somalia, Eritrea, and Ethiopia;
-- In some regions of Africa the control of valuable natural resources
such as oil and diamonds is of more concern to the warring parties
than the welfare of the population; and
-- There is a "grave imbalance" in the assistance provided for Africa
as compared to that provided to other parts of the world.
Following is the text of Ogata's remarks:
(begin text)
New York, 13 January 2000
Briefing by Mrs. Sadako Ogata, United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees, to the Security Council of the United Nations on the
Situation of Refugees in Africa
Mr. President,
I wish you and all members of the Security Council a happy new year.
In saying this, at your second "Month of Africa" session, my thoughts
go to the African people. A majority of them have spent Christmas,
Ramadan, and the turn of the millennium, struggling to survive, in
misery and fear. Let me therefore congratulate you for launching the
"Month of Africa". I hope it will also be the "Month of the Africans"
- because, while we celebrate this time of extraordinary hope, energy
and opportunity, it is important that we also speak about the millions
of dramatically deprived people living on the African continent. As
the head of an organization which devotes a substantial portion of its
resources to Africa - where UNHCR takes care of about six million
people - I feel encouraged by your initiative, and wish to thank you
for inviting me.
Twice last year, discussing African problems with the Council, I
shared my hopes and expressed my concerns - concerns which, I should
add, have further deepened. In July, at the OAU Summit in Algiers, new
and dynamic leaderships in some key African states, and the signing of
the Lome and Lusaka cease-fire agreements, had been the cause of some
optimism. Six months later, however, the situation in many areas,
especially in Central Africa, is becoming more critical.
Mr. President,
In the last few years, the pattern of refugee crises, especially in
Africa, has undergone significant changes. Refugees continue to flee
violence and conflict - almost invariably compounded by poverty - and
to seek asylum in safer countries. Others - and increasingly so - seek
refuge as internally displaced people in safer parts of their own
countries. In Angola, for example, almost 20% of the population has
fled - both outside and inside the borders of the country.
Dealing with the internally displaced is often more arduous than with
refugees who cross borders. The difficulty of having access to large
numbers of people in insecure and isolated areas is compounded by the
complexity of assisting civilians in their own country - where their
own state authorities, or rebel forces in control, are frequently the
very cause of their predicament. Hundreds of thousands of people at
risk in war areas such as South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the
Congo, Burundi, Angola and Sierra Leone - a majority of them
internally displaced - are presently not accessible to humanitarian
agencies. And where such access is possible, it is often very
dangerous. The killing of two United Nations staff members in Burundi
last November is just the last of many such fatal incidents affecting
humanitarian personnel.
Current refugee crises also have other complex aspects. The security,
socio-economic and natural environment of countries of asylum are
severely affected by large forced population movements. It is the
countries which have most generously hosted refugees that have paid
the highest price - such as Tanzania and Guinea. Other countries, in
spite of their own difficult situations, have nevertheless received
large refugee groups - Liberia, for example, or the Democratic
Republic of the Congo. War-induced, mass population movements have
also contributed to the spreading of conflicts, as has been the case
in Central and West Africa.
Throughout your recent African tour, Mr. President, you have
repeatedly declared that we need to bring quick, or should I say
quicker solutions to refugee crises. Who would not agree, knowing of
the desperate plight of refugee women and children in makeshift,
inhospitable and dangerous camps? Seeking solutions to refugee
problems has always been part of UNHCR's mandate, along with the need
to ensure the protection of refugees. The international context also
demands faster solutions. Following the end of the Cold War, the
narrowing links between forced human displacement and conflicts have
increased the concerns of governments about human displacement
problems - pressure to resolve them rapidly is constantly mounting,
and not only in Africa, as Kosovo and East Timor have demonstrated.
However, there can be no solution to refugee crises - and especially
no voluntary repatriation - if wars that force people to flee are not
stopped. Conflicts, in turn, will not be resolved unless some basic
power sharing problems are addressed. In some regions of Africa,
controlling natural resources - oil, diamonds, wood - appears to be a
more pressing concern, for governments and rebel groups alike, than
the welfare of people living in embattled areas. The relative ease
with which arms are trafficked between countries all over the world
means that conflicts are continuously supplied. The worst pages of
colonial history seem to live again in situations in which people
struggle to survive while small groups benefit from Africa's wealth,
and enormous resources are wasted in pursuing war.
There are no effective conflict resolution mechanisms in Africa - on
the contrary, armed groups waging war against governments are often
openly supported by other governments. And inputs to turn war into
peace - and even to consolidate peace when it is attained, as in
Rwanda and Liberia, for example - are very timid and piecemeal: can we
speak of any substantive reconstruction program, like those generously
funded by governments in Kosovo or East Timor, in any African country
today?
The effectiveness of humanitarian action can thus only be limited.
This kind of war offers little opportunity for international
humanitarian law to be promoted and respected. With human displacement
having become a military objective, upholding the rights of refugees
often has unwarranted consequences, because armed groups frequently
infiltrate refugee populations. Clearly, refugee crises cannot be
resolved in a vacuum. I wish to insist on this point. The "Month of
Africa" should be an opportunity for the Council to seek more decisive
measures to address the problems that I have mentioned - the
indiscriminate struggle for resources, the uncontrolled flow of arms,
the lack of conflict resolution mechanisms, and weak support to post
conflict situations.
From UNHCR's perspective, I would also like to insist once more on two
security priorities: the need to build everywhere an effective law
enforcement capacity, and the need to provide systematic support to
regional peacekeeping. I will not elaborate further on these themes,
but would like to remind you of our proposal to develop "middle" level
security measures in the overall available ladder of options of which
I have frequently spoken, and which some governments have decided to
examine. I hope that these initiatives, with the support of the
Council, will yield some concrete results in the near future.
I am not saying that my Office should abdicate its responsibility to
promote the respect of refugees' rights - particularly the right to
asylum - and in assisting refugees in need. It is important that UNHCR
makes efforts at the community level to assist affected populations,
and ultimately to help refugees return home. Helping communities is an
area in which humanitarian work - with its emphasis on vulnerable
groups - can be a valuable complement to conflict resolution and
peace-building efforts. Mr. President, you have seen for yourself that
- even in the absence of large developmental activities - UNHCR and
humanitarian agencies have been able to carry out a substantive
reintegration program in Rwanda, a country where 25% of the population
are recent returnees - many of them women and girls heading large
households. All these efforts, however, will be neither effective nor
durable if they are not complemented at the political level by African
states, supporting governments and developmental institutions.
Therefore, I agree with anyone who argues that refugee crises should
not be allowed to linger; that for humanitarian reasons - and in order
to protect the security and prosperity of areas affected by human
displacement - they should be resolved quickly. But without clearer,
more decisive action by governments, which the Security Council has a
responsibility in inspiring, designing and leading, refugee crises
cannot be resolved - unless we force people back from where they have
fled, violating principles, threatening the security and stability of
entire regions, and ultimately failing to address the root causes of
conflict and human displacement.
The situation is critical in many parts of Africa. Nowhere, however,
war and violence affect millions of exhausted civilians more than in
Central Africa. There are unresolved and closely linked conflicts in
or around at least seven countries - Angola, Burundi, the Democratic
Republic of the Congo, the Republic of Congo (Brazzaville), Rwanda,
Sudan and Uganda. This is an area in which refugee movements have
continued to occur almost uninterruptedly since independence, and have
worsened in the last few years. Armed groups control vast areas in
which security is very precarious and ethnic tensions are being
exacerbated again - witness the attack in North West Rwanda at the end
of December, in which 30 people were killed and 40 were injured.
From the point of view of UNHCR, I would like to draw the attention of
the Council to three Central African countries in particular.
First, Burundi. In the last quarter of 1999 alone, 30,000 new refugees
have fled to Tanzania. The total number of Burundian refugees in that
country is now about 300,000. The number of internally displaced
people has also increased. There are an estimated 300,000 people in
"regroupment" sites - virtually, internally displaced people created
by a government policy. This is an issue of great concern to
humanitarian agencies. Although we understand the government's
security priorities, it is imperative that a number of conditions be
fulfilled for assistance to be provided at the sites: people must be
"regrouped" only on a voluntary basis; access by humanitarian agencies
to "regrouped" people must be granted; and the internally displaced
outside the sites must also be assisted. The government must also give
fuller and clearer guarantees for the security of humanitarian staff.
Most importantly, however, the Arusha peace process must be
revitalized and strengthened. The appointment of Nelson Mandela as
Facilitator is a most welcome development - I hope that his
statesmanship and charisma will allow negotiations to yield positive
results soon. If Arusha fails, we can only expect more violence and -
inevitably - more forced human displacement in Burundi, with
unpredictable consequences for the stability of the entire region.
Second, the Democratic Republic of the Congo. There is a real risk
that the Lusaka agreement will not be implemented. This would have
frightful repercussions - although, from the vantage point of the
refugee agency, the consequences of protracted war are already a
humanitarian tragedy. In my last visit, I was struck by the visibly
deteriorating conditions of the people, in spite of the natural wealth
of the country and the traditional Congolese resourcefulness. On the
one hand, in spite of all difficulties, UNHCR continues to support the
repatriation of Rwandans - 36,000 have returned through Goma in 1999.
On the other, however, over 130,000 Congolese have fled abroad - a
large majority in Tanzania; and a very large number - millions,
probably, although nobody can really estimate their total - are
internally displaced. In spite of their urgent humanitarian needs,
there can be little or no access to those internally displaced unless
hostilities end and peacekeepers are deployed to protect humanitarian
operations.
It is crucial that the Security Council provides more decisive support
to conflict resolution in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. The
priorities are clear: stop conflict, and deploy peacekeepers; obtain
full access to all people with humanitarian needs, particularly the
internally displaced; and start reconstruction and development. The
efforts of Ambassador Morjane, Special Representative of the UN
Secretary-General, to establish UN presence throughout the country,
must be supported.
Third, Angola. The humanitarian crisis there is perhaps the worst in
Africa. Once again, human displacement statistics are an indicator of
the gravity of the situation. There are 370,000 Angolan refugees in
neighboring countries, and the outflow continues. Zambia has already
200,000, and since it also hosts other refugees, particularly
Congolese, it is now one of the largest asylum countries in Africa.
The number of internally displaced people in Angola is very large -
one to two million! - but it is impossible to estimate it precisely,
since access by humanitarian agencies is limited. Security is the main
obstacle. Fighting has resumed in many parts of the country. There are
- perhaps - up to 10 million landmines. The peace process is all but
stalled. Unless peace makes some progress, with concrete and positive
consequences on security on the ground, it is difficult to envisage
the resumption of large assistance programs in Angola, let alone a
rapid solution to the problems of human displacement, including the
return of refugees and internally displaced people.
In all three countries, renewed population movements are therefore a
clear consequence of unresolved, and sometimes worsening conflict.
Everywhere, there is a pattern of growing internal displacement, with
decreasing possibilities of access by humanitarian agencies. This is
of great concern.
UNHCR assists internally displaced people when there is a request by
the Secretary-General, or when the crisis is closely linked to a
refugee or returnee situation. Other humanitarian agencies -
particularly UNICEF, the World Food Program, the International
Committee of the Red Cross, and NGOs - intervene in some situations.
However, there is no established mechanism for the assistance - and
particularly the protection of the internally displaced. Donor
governments are very reluctant to allocate resources for programs in
fragile, insecure areas - UNHCR activities in Angola, for example, had
to be drastically curtailed because of insecurity and lack of funds.
Yet, the presence of internally displaced people throughout Central
Africa is not only a humanitarian problem, but also one of security.
Action needs to be taken urgently to compensate for the lack of
protection mechanisms for internally displaced people. However, I
would like to warn against isolating them as a separate category -
today, the root causes of displacement, be it of refugees or of
internally displaced people, do not fundamentally differ: look at
Kosovo, for example, or at the situation in the North Caucasus. What
is most important is to devise comprehensive mechanisms to protect
people fleeing their homes because of persecution and violence, and
comprehensive, regionally-based solutions to their predicament.
In West Africa, there are more reasons for optimism, although some of
the complex, conflict-related displacement problems persist.
For the 450,000 Sierra Leonean refugees, mostly in Guinea and Liberia,
the objective is voluntary repatriation - this is clearly the solution
of one of the largest refugee problems in Africa, and UNHCR is
tentatively planning for the return of up to 170,000 refugees in the
course of 2000, with organized repatriation - for those who need it -
starting in April. However, conditions in Sierra Leone must improve.
Action must be taken in three priority areas. First, adequate pressure
must be put on the signatories of the Lome agreement to abide by its
provisions - recent episodes of renewed fighting inside the country
are very worrying. Second, peacekeepers and military observers must be
swiftly deployed to field locations. Third, the Disarmament,
Demobilization and Reintegration program must be given the necessary
resources and implemented as swiftly as possible. In all these areas,
the Security Council can play an important role. And from the
humanitarian viewpoint, the rehabilitation and reintegration of
amputees - particularly children - is a very important priority that
needs to be adequately supported.
Concerns about Sierra Leone should not make us forget the situation in
Liberia. The country has received about 330,000 returnees from Guinea,
Sierra Leone, Côte d'Ivoire and Ghana in the last few years, and some
190,000 Liberians remain in exile. UNHCR would like to end the
organized repatriation by mid-2000. The situation in the country,
however, remains fragile. In some areas, like Lofa County, security is
particularly precarious. Because this is a region of return, and also
of refuge for Sierra Leoneans, UNHCR is promoting capacity building
programs for the local administration and police. Broader programs,
however, are needed throughout the country to consolidate peace and
prevent renewed human displacement. Resources for rehabilitation and
development are woefully lacking.
I should also mention the Horn of Africa, where attempts to resolve
refugee problems are conducted against a background of on-going
political tensions, with uneven results. There are many unresolved
conflicts in the region - civil war in Sudan; internal unrest in
Northern Uganda; war between Ethiopia and Eritrea; an unsettled
situation throughout Somalia. In spite of this, UNHCR is working with
governments to try to bring solutions to the plight of hundreds of
thousands of people who have lived - sometimes for decades - away from
their homes.
The situation in Somalia is fragile, but repatriation from Ethiopia to
more stable areas in the North-West continues, and should be
supported. Eritrea has recently agreed to resume the repatriation of
the remaining Eritrean refugees still in Sudan - this is a very
positive development. With respect to Ethiopian refugees, UNHCR is
pursuing the implementation of the "clause of cessation" of their
refugee status, since the conditions that prompted their flight from
Ethiopia do not exist any longer: this is being discussed with host
governments. In Northern Uganda, in spite of many security problems,
we are proceeding with the local integration of refugees from South
Sudan, and we hope to be able to promote the same solution for those
in Western Ethiopia.
Needless to say, these efforts to resolve refugee problems are greatly
complicated by the tension prevailing in the area, within certain
countries and between others. The Horn of Africa is another example of
a situation in which UNHCR's humanitarian efforts on the ground would
be much more effective if they were carried out in the context of
broader political initiatives. I hope that the Security Council will
take the opportunity of the "Month of Africa" to strengthen its
support for the OAU initiative towards the resolution of the
Ethiopian-Eritrean conflict; I also hope that regional efforts to
bring Somalia back into the fold of nations will receive international
encouragement and support.
In spite of some improvements, the situation in West Africa and the
Horn is far from settled. The end of acute emergency situations,
however, should allow the international community to adopt broader,
regionally-based peace-building approaches. In West Africa, UNHCR is
planning to promote such an approach to address, for example, the
negative consequences of refugee movements on the economy and the
environment in some West African countries. And there is a host of
problems which should be tackled through a comprehensive, regional
strategy in both areas, ranging from the need to strengthen
administrative structures to the collapse of civil society
institutions to abuses of human rights. The Security Council should
promote regional initiatives - following for example the model of the
Stability Pact for South-Eastern Europe - that could involve states in
the respective regions, supporting governments, regional and
international organizations, and civil society. Human displacement
being of course a regional problem by definition, my Office would
warmly welcome any such initiative.
There are other refugee problems that I have not mentioned, of course,
such as those concerning the Saharawis; and the refugees from the
Republic of Congo (Brazzaville) in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo and in Gabon. The examples I have given, however, show that
conflicts in Africa continue to have the most serious humanitarian
impact on people's lives, especially when they compel people to flee
their homes.
Let me say once more that humanitarian action alone will not be able
to solve any of the problems leading to forced human displacement; it
cannot substitute for governments, and the Security Council, in areas
for which they have a clear responsibility, such as peacekeeping and
peace-building. The Council has an essential role to play in
preventing, containing and resolving conflicts - and hence refugee
problems - in Africa: by taking clear, strong and united positions; by
supporting more decisively, rapidly and substantively the follow-up to
peace agreements; by promoting the mobilization of resources for
reconstruction and peace-building: in short, by moving from issuing
statements to taking action.
The success of the "Month of Africa" - I am sure you will agree - will
depend on how rapidly and effectively your discussions here in New
York will be translated into concrete action in the field. We must
strive to obtain what we have too often failed to achieve: that what
is discussed and decided here, in the Security Council, actually helps
the lives of women and men in African cities and in African villages
become safer and better. We at UNHCR know very well that solutions are
difficult - that to have a positive impact on situations that have
deteriorated beyond description is a very, very tall order. But we
must make the effort. In your discussions, different approaches will
certainly emerge. This is inevitable. The plight of the Africans has
become so critical that - I hope - the Council will be able to put
aside differences, and devise concrete measures to address it.
This is now dramatically urgent.
Let me go back to where I started - to the African people. Africa - as
the rest of the world - will not be "secure" unless its people feel
secure. Those in particular who are of concern to my Office -
refugees, internally displaced people and returnees - are first and
foremost human beings in need of protection and care. I am thinking
especially of the most vulnerable among them - refugee women and
children exposed to even greater risks than their peers living at
home: rape, AIDS and other epidemics, forced recruitment; and the
elderly, whom I so frequently meet in my field trips, and whose fear,
and despair, and exhaustion, never fail to anguish me. They, above
all, are the victims of the wars that we do not stop.
I agree with you, Mr. President: their plight demands quick solutions.
I have spoken of the support which my Office expects from the Security
Council. Let me conclude on a humanitarian note, by saying that their
plight also demands immediate attention. In spite of all the problems
that I have mentioned, states must continue to uphold the rights of
refugees, and provide asylum when people flee war and persecution.
Donor governments must share the burden of asylum by ensuring an
adequate level of basic assistance in camps and settlements, and for
returnees going back home.
In both areas there has been little, if no progress at all, in the
past few years. What is provided to refugees in Africa, including food
and other basic survival items, is far less than in other parts of the
world. This is unacceptable. I hope that the "Month of Africa" at the
Security Council will prompt the international community to address -
seriously - this grave imbalance in material assistance.
On our side, at the end of the year 2000, we shall observe the 50th
anniversary of the establishment of the Office of the UN High
Commissioner for Refugees. Among other initiatives, we are planning to
launch a special Refugee Education Trust, which would allow refugees -
especially in Africa - to pursue post-primary education during their
exile, an opportunity sadly lacking today. True, it will be impossible
to meet the needs of all refugee students - but I hope that we shall
be able to provide at least some support to the most deserving and
needy.
Amidst so much violence, terror and despair, it will be a powerful
symbol of the willingness of the international community to support
refugees - to help them make a contribution to their host communities,
and prepare themselves for a stable life after their plight is
resolved.
We must give them hope for a better future.
Thank you, Mr. President.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State)



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