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Archive for January 26th, 2012

Some governments do not quite meet the benchmarks,” for adequate protection of IDPs, UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of IDPs Chaloka Beyani

Posted by African Press International on January 26, 2012

by api

DISPLACEMENT: Governments falling short on R2P, says new study

Badbado camp, Mogadishu

GENEVA,  – The governments of 15 countries most affected by internal displacement have failed to adequately protect internally displaced persons (IDPs), and in many cases have themselves been perpetrators of violence or abuses that led to the displacements, according to a Brookings-London School of Economics study.

“The key finding in this study is that the governments do not quite meet the benchmarks,” for adequate protection of IDPs, UN Special Rapporteur on the Human Rights of IDPs Chaloka Beyani told IRIN.

Yet, much more could be done, said Elizabeth Ferris, one of the authors of the study of 15 countries which account for 72 percent of the world’s 27.5 million people internally displaced by armed conflict, ethnic strife and other forms of violence.

“If you take IDPs seriously here are a lot of things you can do to make their lives better that won’t cost you a lot of money. It’s all about being determined and having political will,” she said on the sidelines of a meeting in Geneva where she presented the study entitled From Responsibility to Response: Assessing National Approaches to Internal Displacement.

While the study does not rank the performance of the governments, Ferris said Colombia, Georgia, Kenya and Uganda clearly were heading in the right direction, while the Central African Republic, Myanmar and Yemen would get the worst marks. The other countries looked at in the study were: Afghanistan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Iraq, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka, Sudan and Turkey.

Nearly half the countries surveyed have adopted some preventive measures on paper, “but all 15 have fallen short of actually preventing displacement in practice,” the report says. “Moreover, many national authorities themselves have been the perpetrators of violence or human rights abuses that have led to displacements, and many states foster a culture of impunity for alleged perpetrators of human rights violations.”

Under international law, states bear the primary responsibility to protect persons within their borders and must provide special protection for IDPs because of their particularly vulnerable condition. The Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement provide an advocacy and monitoring framework for the assistance and protection needs of IDPs.

The October 2009 African Union Convention for the Protection and Assistance of IDPs in Africa (also known as the Kampala Convention) aims, among other things, to “promote and strengthen regional and national measures to prevent or mitigate, prohibit and eliminate root causes of internal displacement as well as provide for durable solutions”.

''Ultimately only the state can provide lasting protection for IDPs''

“Ultimately only the state can provide lasting protection for IDPs,” the study says.

“The state’s exercise of its national responsibility for IDPs, therefore, must be the basis for an effective response to internal displacement. It is not a matter of navigating around the principle of national responsibility but of being guided by that principle and consciously gearing all efforts to achieve an effective response.”

While “Responsibility to Protect” (R2P) is often discussed in terms of the role of the international community, the report says R2P emphasizes “first and foremost” the responsibility of governments to protect the populations within their borders.

“If national governments satisfy their responsibility to protect IDPs then R2P is being met at the national level. This study brings the linkage of R2P and IDPs to the fore,” said Beyani, who is also co-director of the Brookings-LSE project on internal displacement.

Lack of capacity, political will

“While there is broad consensus on the principle of national responsibility, governments may lack the capacity to address internal displacement, or the political will to respond effectively; and in many cases deliberately trigger internal displacement or at least condone the actions that cause it,” the study says.

“In Sudan, government forces, militia and rebel groups have committed egregious human rights violations, including against those already displaced, and have mounted attacks that have resulted in massive displacement.”

A government’s public acknowledgement of a displacement is a key first step in protecting and assisting IDPs, but is not always forthcoming, the report says, citing the case of Myanmar, where “the government does not acknowledge the existence of conflict-induced displacement”.

In Turkey, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and Nepal, the governments “have been reluctant at certain points to highlight the fact that their military operations had displaced large numbers of people or that they had been unable to prevent other armed actors from displacing large numbers of people.”

Collecting detailed data on displacements can play a key role in getting governments to act, said Kate Haiff, who heads the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre at the Norwegian Refugee Council.

“In many situations, governments will not acknowledge displacement is taking place. With core data, with evidence you can open doors. It’s about getting evidence that we have displacement – these are the numbers and these are the issues people are faced with.”

Recommendations

The study recommends that governments make the issue of IDPs a political priority, designate an institutional focal point to provide assistance to IDPs, amend or adopt relevant legislation, devote sufficient funds, support the work of national human rights institutions engaging in IDP issues, ask for international assistance where necessary, and search for durable solutions with the participation of IDPs.

Of the 27.5 million IDPs uprooted by conflict and violence in more than 50 countries as of the end of 2010, 11.1 million were in Africa – including 4.5-5.2 million in Sudan, and 5.4 million in the Americas – mostly in Colombia. In South and Southeast Asia there were more than 3.5 million, in the Middle East, 3.9 million and in Europe and Central Asia 2.5 million. Millions more have been displaced by natural disasters of development projects.

pfm/cb
source www.irinnews.org

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“The talks are the very first step in negotiations for a ceasefire,” says Karen National Union (KNU) vice-president Saw David Thakabaw

Posted by African Press International on January 26, 2012

MYANMAR: High hopes for Karen peace talks

Zipporah Sein, general-secretary of the Karen National Union

CHIANG MAI,  – Karen leaders are cautiously optimistic about the possibility of peace after more than 60 years of fighting Burmese security forces as they prepare for meetings with the government on 10 January.

A Karen “peace committee” – formed in November – has arranged a two-day meeting in the state’s Pa Ang District for what is hoped will lead to a permanent end to the armed conflict that began in 1949 and has left the civilian population devastated by decades of instability.

“The talks are the very first step in negotiations for a ceasefire,” Karen National Union (KNU) vice-president Saw David Thakabaw told IRIN.

“We have to begin with a ceasefire and then proceed to negotiations, with political dialogue taking place later.”

The Karen, a largely Christian community in eastern and southern Myanmar, have effectively been at war with Myanmar’s central government since the country gained independence from the UK.

Federal system

The KNU seeks a genuine federal system giving Myanmar’s individual ethnic states greater autonomy.

In 2011, the KNU joined an umbrella alliance of ethnic parties and groups – including the Mon, Shan, Karenni, Chin, and Kachin people – to form the United Nationalities Federal Council in an effort to bring unified strength to the negotiating table.

“It’s been very difficult in the past. We’ve met five times already with the successive regimes in power and now it will be the sixth time. We hope this time will be different because of the changes in the geo-political situation,” said Saw David Thakabaw.

The news comes as Myanmar’s nominally civilian government appears more open to international dialogue following the visit of US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton last November and UK foreign minister William Hague in January.

“We think now is an ideal time to open talks to reform the political problems during the negotiations,” explained KNU general-secretary Zipporah Sein. “But we will not sign a ceasefire for peace unless there is a guarantee that it will lead to political dialogue and long-lasting peace.

“One of the main problems is the security for the civilian population because many of them are still living in IDP [internally displaced persons] areas and they cannot go back to their villages.

“Despite the talks, the Burmese are still sending supplies and troops into the area and we are afraid that they will use their military power against us again,” said Zipporah Sein.

According to the Thai Burmese Border Consortium (TBBC), an umbrella group of NGOs working along the border to supply aid to 10 refugee camps – at least 112,000 people were forced to leave their homes in southeast Myanmar between August 2010 and July 2011.

These rates are the highest in a decade, underlining the escalation in fighting since the 2010 elections.

And while many of the displaced have returned home, others have moved to refugee camps; about 20,000 live in makeshift camps inside Karen state, the TBBC reported.

Cultural issues

“The education of the Karen and other ethnic groups has been destroyed over the years so we need the right to an education for our next generation, especially to learn our culture, our history and our language,” said Saw Mort, spokesperson for the Karen Student Network Group.

Karen Women’s Organization spokesperson Knaw Paw stressed the need for women’s issues to be addressed in the peace process but said that initially, what was most important was basic human rights for civilians caught up in the conflict.

“The people in the camps listen to the radio and they know about what’s happening in the capital but I think the majority of them are still struggling with their hardships and just trying to carry on with their lives and survive,” Knaw Paw says.

ss/ds/mw source www.irinnews.org

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Pleased at release of political prisoners in Myanmar

Posted by African Press International on January 26, 2012

Minister of Foreign Affairs Jonas Gahr Støre commented, “I am very pleased that a considerable number of political prisoners have been released in Myanmar. This is an important step forward on the country’s path to democracy, peace and reconciliation.”

Several prominent prisoners of conscience, including leaders of the 88 Generation, monks and journalists, were released on Friday.

“The release of these prisoners of conscience is important for our confidence in the country’s civilian Government,” said Mr Støre.

The release of these prisoners is the latest in a series of positive developments that have recently taken place in Myanmar. On Thursday, the Government agreed on a ceasefire with the guerrilla group Karen National Union (KNU), which brings to an end the country’s longest civil war.

Mr Støre will visit Myanmar in the near future.

Source: Minister of Foreign Affairs, Norway

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