June 16, 2005
UN: World Refugee Day Shifts Focus From Politics To People
by Grant Podelco
Many Uzbek refugees fled to Kyrgyzstan after the recent violence
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War. Hunger. Persecution. Ordinary people rarely have to face such challenges, but these grim realities define the daily existence of many of the world's 19 million refugees, asylum seekers, and stateless persons. That's why the UNHCR, the UN's refugee agency, has chosen "courage" as the theme for this year's World Refugee Day, on 20 June. In places such as Chechnya and Uzbekistan, courage is needed to flee war and deadly violence. In Iraq and Afghanistan, refugees must summon the courage to return, not knowing if life will be better than when they left.
Prague, 16 June 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Makhamadjon Qodirov is one of hundreds of Uzbeks who escaped a government crackdown on protesters in Andijon last month by crossing the border into Kyrgyzstan.
Qodirov says he, his wife, and his 22-year-old son first lived in a temporary, overcrowded camp before being transferred to a larger refugee camp at Suzak, in the Jalalabad region:
"We had been living in a camp near the [Kyrgyz-Uzbek] border, where about 50 people stayed in one tent," Qodirov told RFE/RL. "Now it is getting better, and about eight people live in one tent [in Suzak]. There is more room."
Qodirov is one of more than 9 million people classified as refugees around the world. The courage to overcome such hardships is the focus of this year's World Refugee Day on 20 June, sponsored by the UN high commissioner on refugees (UNHCR).
"Of course, it takes enormous courage to flee in the first place, very often just to survive whatever it is that's causing someone to be a refugee -- persecution, war, violence, anarchy, whatever," Rupert Colville, a spokesman for the UNHCR in Geneva, told RFE/RL "For those who come to Europe, it's very often an awful journey. Practically, the only way a lot of people can get here is in the hands of smugglers, who are pretty ruthless and rather short on morals, and people are stuffed in containers and that type of thing. And then, very often when they get to an asylum country, there is this level of hostility. Life is very difficult. They lack a lot of the things the rest of us take for granted."
Provisional figures show the number of refugees and others the UNHCR lists as "people of concern" rose by some 2 million in 2004 to a total of around 19 million. Colville says that for the first quarter of 2005, the 5,078 asylum seekers from Serbia and Montenegro -- including Kosovo -- topped the list of applicants in industrialized nations, mostly in Europe.