We must tackle causes of refugee problem
Today is World Refugee Day. Sadly it is marked by new figures which show the number of people all over the globe fleeing war, persecution and conflict exceeded 70 million at the end of last year, the highest level ever recorded by the UN Refugee Agency.
This year the focus of World Refugee Day is Africa and finding solutions to forced displacement on the continent. Having worked in Ethiopia with Goal supporting refugees for eight years, my wish is that this date serves to somehow spark action to tackle this unacceptable humanitarian crisis.
According to new figures from the UN, at the end of 2018 there were 70.8 million forcibly displaced people worldwide. 41.3 million were internally displaced. Some 25.9 million were refugees. Every second refugee was a child, many alone and without their families. Almost two-thirds were from South Sudan, Afghanistan and Syria.
Refugees and displaced communities do not choose to leave their homes and homelands. Invariably they are fleeing persecution, conflict, war, and natural disaster. They are forced from their homes due to circumstances outside of their control.
Goal has been working in Ethiopia since the early 1980s, when we initially responded to a famine that ultimately claimed the lives of nearly one million people. Today we operate a countrywide humanitarian and development programme, focusing on alleviating poverty and responding to sudden and protracted humanitarian crises affecting the most vulnerable communities and groups.
Since August 2011, I have been working with Goal’s Refugee Programme in Ethiopia, initially supporting Somali refugees in Buramino refugee camp in Dollo Ado in the south-east of the country. Today, with funding from Irish Aid, the European Commission’s Humanitarian Office (ECHO), the US State Department (BPRM), UNHCR, Unicef, and the World Food Programme, Goal Ethiopia is supporting more than 100,000 across four refugee camps – two in Gambella in the south-west, and two in Afar Region in the north-east.
The picture is bleak. All the camps are situated in marginalised, remote, underdeveloped locations. The refugees are completely dependent on aid, and there are very few livelihood opportunities. They lack proper shelter, clean water, fresh food, health support, and fuel for cooking.
But the biggest issue facing them is malnutrition, with 5.9 million children and women expected to require life-saving treatment for acute malnutrition in 2019.
Figures show that anaemia among children and women of reproductive age is a serious problem.
In one of our refugee camps, Kule, the anaemia rate is 40.8pc in children aged between six months and five years. This is considered a public health emergency.
To support nutrition needs, Goal is providing supplementary feeding for moderately malnourished children under five, and pregnant and lactating women.
We are particularly proud of our C-MAMI programme, (Community Management of At-Risk Mothers and Infants) which is run in Gambella refugee camp and which attempts to identify and support infants at risk of acute malnutrition within the first six months of life.
Our C-MAMI programme in Gambella has had lots of success stories. But the need is so huge.
Looking ahead, we are supporting the Government of Ethiopia’s nine pledges relating to improved rights and service delivery for refugees.
We are working towards adopting a community approach and investing in capacities to build and sustain solutions locally.
But the problem of refugees and displaced people needs to be managed. Unless the root causes behind people fleeing their homelands are addressed, the numbers will continue to grow. As long as refugees and the displaced are treated as a stand-alone problem, there will be no solution.
A greater global effort is needed to minimise the chances of natural disasters by the implementation of tougher climate change policies; by working harder to bring wars to an end, and by tackling religious, ethnic and tribal divides.
There will be no end to the millions of innocent people fleeing for their lives until this happens.
Mary T Murphy is the Refugee Programme manager for Goal in Ethiopia
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