Group of Manus Island refugees opt to move to Nauru

The Refugee Brief, 29 November
 
By Kristy Siegfried @klsiegfried   | 29 November, 2018
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
Group of Manus Island refugees opt to move to Nauru. The Guardian reports that at least eight men were due to depart the immigration facility on the Papua New Guinea island for its equivalent in Nauru this morning. The transfers are voluntary. One man reportedly said that he didn't know if Nauru would be any better but after more than five years on Manus he needed a change. Their move comes as Dr Kerryn Phelps, the new independent MP for Wentworth in Australia, prepared to introduce a private members bill that would allow critically ill refugees and asylum-seekers in Nauru and PNG to be urgently transferred to Australia. UNHCR said today that it supports the draft bill , noting that Australia’s off-shore processing policy “continues to exacerbate the dire health condition of vulnerable men, women and children alike”. The agency is appealing to all of Australia’s parliamentarians to support the bill.
Italy adopts immigration and security decree amid criticism. The bill, which ends two-year residency permits on humanitarian grounds and allows for the withdrawal of international protection for those considered “socially dangerous” or convicted of serious crimes, was passed in Italy’s lower house of parliament by a vote of confidence. The Senate had already given its green light to the bill’s measures earlier this month. UNHCR has said that the new law could negatively impact asylum-seekers’ and refugees’ access to protection and rights in Italy. The agency expressed particular concern about new measures for administrative detention and fast-track expulsions, as well as changes to the reception system.
WHAT’S ON OUR RADAR
Asylum-seekers in UK ‘too afraid’ to seek care, report finds. A report by the Equality and Human Rights Commission has found that asylum-seekers have been going without medical care since the government introduced upfront charges for migrants and refused asylum-seekers. According to the Guardian, the report found that even those asylum-seekers who were eligible for free care, were sometimes too scared to seek it due to fears their data would be shared with the UK Home Office. Asylum-seekers’ minimal state support also meant they often could not afford travel to healthcare appointments or the cost of prescriptions. The report comes amid mounting calls for asylum-seekers to be given earlier access to the right to work.
Sick Venezuelans and Colombians get treatment aboard US ship. Reuters reports from the USNS Comfort, a US naval hospital ship currently docked in Colombia’s Caribbean port city of Riohacha. Although most of the ship’s patients are Colombians, some are Venezuelans who were unable to access treatment and medicines back home, where the health-care system is in a state of collapse. More than three million people have left Venezuela since 2015, with about one million settling in Colombia. Speaking at a conference on Tuesday, Colombian Vice President Marta Lucía Ramírez said her country could not manage another million new arrivals alone. “We need more and more timely international help,” she said.
The perils of being pregnant in war-torn Yemen. Um Walid lost her unborn child after fleeing her home town of Al-Hudaydah and making a difficult journey to the capital, Sana’a, in search of medical help for her severely malnourished son. Walid told Elle she can’t afford an operation recommended by her doctor to remove leftover pregnancy tissue. According to the UN sexual and reproductive health agency, UNFPA, Walid’s predicament is far from unique . Fighting has destroyed nearly half of all health facilities in Yemen, cutting pregnant women off from emergency obstetric care. In Al-Hudaydah, the situation is particularly critical, with the main hospital directly impacted by ongoing fighting. 
EU’s refugee resettlement plan failing to meet goals. Deutsche Welle reports that EU Member States are not on track to meet a goal set by the European Commission last year of resettling 50,000 refugees to Europe by October 2019. The plan had indicated a deadline of October 2018 to meet 50 per cent of the target but, according to figures supplied by the European Commission, as of mid-October, only 15,900 people had been resettled. DW reports that only a handful of countries have reached the 50 per cent mark. The European Commission’s resettlement programme calls for a particular focus on resettlement from North Africa and the Horn of Africa in support of UNHCR’s emergency evacuations from Libya.
GET INSPIRED
World War II veteran, author and activist Harry Leslie Smith died yesterday at the age of 95. UNHCR’s Lorey Campese was one of the many people who learned about Harry’s inspiring life and his last stand with refugees through his active presence on social media. “Harry’s last stand may have come to an end,” writes Campese. “But the things he stood for are timeless.”
DID YOU KNOW?
Since 2015, EU resettlement programmes have helped bring 38,000 refugees to Europe.
 
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Produced by the Communications and Public Information Service. 
Managing Editors: Melissa Fleming, Christopher Reardon and Sybella Wilkes
Contributing Editor: Kate Bond
Subscribe to The Refugee Brief or view recent issues


HQP100 P.O. Box 2500 CH-1211 Geneva 2
Tel +41 22 739 85 02   |   Fax: +41 22 739 73 14


Views expressed in reports highlighted in this newsletter
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‘Marshall Plan’ for Central America needed, says Mexico’s incoming foreign minister

The Refugee Brief, 28 November
 
By Kristy Siegfried @klsiegfried   | 28 November, 2018
WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
‘Marshall Plan’ for Central America needed, says Mexico’s incoming foreign minister. Marcelo Ebrard has said that a major investment similar to the Marshall Plan, which helped rebuild Western Europe after the Second World War, was needed in Central America and southern Mexico to address conditions pushing migrants and asylum-seekers north. Ebrard, who is due to meet US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo on Sunday to discuss the border and migration, said estimates were still being prepared to determine just how much funding would be needed to develop the region. Meanwhile, US president Donald Trump’s administration has suggested that thousands of Central Americans in Tijuana and elsewhere along the border should be kept in Mexico while their asylum claims are processed, but Mexican officials say the strain on overcrowded city shelters is already causing a humanitarian crisis. At a media briefing in Geneva on Tuesday, UNHCR spokesperson Babar Baloch said, “any person whose life is at risk in their country of origin must be able to access territory and request asylum in a safe country”. He added that UNHCR has repeatedly called on US authorities “to grant access to the territory and to asylum procedures to those who are fleeing persecution and violence".
Search for solutions to Afghan displacement ‘must be intensified’, says UNHCR chief. UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi told a high-level panel at the Geneva Conference on Afghanistan on Tuesday that solutions to Afghan displacement are “central to any debate about the future of Afghanistan”. Grandi said six million Afghans were living in neighbouring countries and beyond, while two million were displaced within the country’s borders. The needs of millions of Afghan returnees are high on the agenda of the conference taking place this week, although the pace of returns has slowed in recent years amid security concerns. Addressing the panel, the Chief Executive of Afghanistan’s National Unity Government, Abdullah Abdullah, said that “much work remains to be done to create an environment that is conducive to return in safety and dignity.” Al Jazeera reports that the Afghan government signed an aid agreement with the European Union on Tuesday worth €37 million, which will be used to help Afghanistan address migration and forced displacement challenges.
WHAT’S ON OUR RADAR
Report details devastating toll of Syrian conflict on children. More than 7,000 children have been killed or maimed during nearly five years of conflict in Syria, according to a report released by the UN Secretary-General which monitored violations against children between November 2013 and June this year. Commenting on the report on Tuesday, the UN’s humanitarian coordinator for the crisis, Panos Moumtzis, said it documented “a devastating increase in grave violations against children each year by all parties to the conflict”. He added that the figures represented “only the tip of the iceberg”, as it was not possible to capture and verify all casualties. About 42 per cent of Syria’s 6.2 million displaced people are children. “The suffering endured by children and documented in this report is unprecedented and unacceptable,” said Moumtzis.
Germany launches campaign to boost voluntary returns of asylum-seekers. Posters headlined "Your country. Your future. Now!" have appeared around the German capital recently, written in several languages. They are part of a campaign to promote a repatriation programme through which asylum-seekers can qualify for additional assistance if they apply to leave before 31 December. Qualifying returnees can receive housing assistance worth up to €3,000 for a family or €1,000 for a single person. Euronews reports that the campaign has “raised some eyebrows”, with some denouncing it as cynical and others suggesting that the poster’s wording does not make it clear that it’s aimed solely at asylum-seekers.
Elephant task force saving refugees’ lives in Bangladesh, but elephants still at risk. National Geographic reports on the predicament of 38 endangered Asian elephants that have been hemmed into the forest adjacent to Kutupalong settlement for Rohingya refugees in Bangladesh. Efforts by UNHCR and the International Union for Conservation of Nature to teach refugees how to cope with elephant encounters and the establishment of an elephant response team have helped prevent deaths, but Ehsanul Hoque, an assistant environment officer for UNHCR in Bangladesh, says the approach is a temporary solution. As the settlement grows and people clear more forest, the elephants’ habitat will continue to shrink. The long-term solution is to re-establish a migration corridor for the elephants, but it would involve relocating 100,000 people and negotiating with neighbouring Myanmar.
Refugees adrift in Libyan coastal town. Deutsche Welle reports from Zuwara, once a major launching point for migrants and refugees attempting sea crossings to Europe. A crackdown by the Libyan authorities and a lack of NGO rescue boats operating in the Central Mediterranean means a sea crossing is now “next to impossible” and local authorities have been left to deal with the refugees and migrants stranded in the city . While some have agreed to voluntary repatriation to their home countries after being taken to the local detention centre, others feel they can’t return to war-torn countries such as Yemen. In a statement on Friday, UNHCR called for alternatives to detention and more international support for evacuations of refugees and asylum-seekers from Libya.
GET INSPIRED
This festive season, shoppers have the option of buying real gifts for refugees at two pop-up stores in London and New York. The Choose Love stores, created by the charity Help Refugees, contain practical items like tents, nappies, solar lamps and sleeping bags. But instead of taking them home, shoppers purchase a similar item for people who really need them. If you’re not in London or New York, you can shop for the same items on the Choose Love website.
DID YOU KNOW?
Some two thirds of Syrian children are thought to have lost a loved one, had their house damaged or suffered conflict-related injuries.
 
Follow UNHCR
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Produced by the Communications and Public Information Service. 
Managing Editors: Melissa Fleming, Christopher Reardon and Sybella Wilkes
Contributing Editor: Kate Bond
Subscribe to The Refugee Brief or view recent issues


HQP100 P.O. Box 2500 CH-1211 Geneva 2
Tel +41 22 739 85 02   |   Fax: +41 22 739 73 14


Views expressed in reports highlighted in this newsletter
do not necessarily reflect those of UNHCR.

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