19 June 2003
Young Refugees Need Opportunities, UNHCR Says
(Statement comes in honor of World Refugee Day June 20) (650)
The U.N. refugee agency honors the courage and perseverance of the
youngest people uprooted from their homelands on World Refugee Day
2003. The occasion is marked on June 20, according to a statement from
Ruud Lubber, U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Of the almost 20 million refugees in the world, Lubber says about 35
percent are youngsters between 12 and 24. World Refugee Day 2003 is
highlighting the theme "Refugee Youth -- Building the Future" in
tribute to these young people, struggling to build their lives.
"If young refugees are not properly protected and denied opportunities
to learn the skills they need to live productive, independent lives,
they are likely to contribute to the next round of conflict," Lubber
said in a statement issued by the agency.
Further information on World Refugee Day is available at
http://www.unhcr.ch/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home
Following is the text of the Lubber statement issued by UNHCR:
(begin text)
THE U.N. REFUGEE AGENCY
UNHCR
High Commissioner Ruud Lubber's message for World Refugee Day 2003
20 June 2003
This year's World Refugee Day on June 20 is dedicated to millions of
young people whose futures have been jeopardized by war, persecution
and exile. A refugee's life is never an easy one, but it's especially
tough on young people who are robbed of what should be the most
formative, promising and exciting years of their lives. At a time when
they should be full of hope and dreams for the future, they are
instead faced with the harsh reality of displacement and deprivation.
If refugee situations drag on for years with no political solution in
sight, the enormous potential of whole generations can be lost in the
dust of a forgotten camp. This is a real tragedy.
That is one reason why I, as UN High Commissioner for Refugees, am
working so hard to find solutions for the nearly 20 million people of
concern to my office - about 35 percent of them youngsters between the
ages of 12 and 24. These solutions include repatriation, integration
in countries of first asylum or resettlement to third countries.
Achieving such solutions requires the co-operation of the entire
international community - rich and poor, North and South, developed
and developing.
And while we work toward these long-term solutions, we must also
ensure that young refugees are given every opportunity possible to
develop their potential - through a stable environment free of
exploitation, abuse or forced conscription; through education and
skills training to prepare them for the future; through proper
nutrition and health care; and through nurturing the family unit and
ensuring that those who are alone get the special help and protection
they deserve.
If young refugees are not properly protected and denied opportunities
to learn the skills they need to live productive, independent lives,
they are likely to contribute to the next round of conflict.
I have visited many refugee camps and am always struck by the
intensity and enthusiasm of young people studying in what are often
just makeshift classrooms. Despite the many hardships, young refugee
students are driven to learn and to excel because they know that
education may be their only way out. They refuse to give up hope in a
future that still holds promise. We must not deny them this hope,
because their future is also our future. To build on this hope, UNHCR
is working with various organizations including Norwegian athlete
Johann Koss's "Right to Play" as well as Dr. Jane Goodall's "Roots and
Shoots" to provide refugee youngsters with activities that are both
fun and worthwhile.
So on this World Refugee Day, we honor the courage and perseverance of
young refugees and we re-dedicate ourselves to helping them to make
the most of their enormous potential. There is hope out there.
(end text)
(Distributed by the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)
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