Working Environment - : in 2011, UNHCR's Working Environment in Sub-Saharan Africa Was
Working Environment - : in 2011, UNHCR's Working Environment in Sub-Saharan Africa Was
Working Environment - : in 2011, UNHCR's Working Environment in Sub-Saharan Africa Was
In 2011, UNHCRs working environment in sub-Saharan Africa was dominated by emergencies in the East and Horn of Africa and in West Africa. Armed conflict, persecution and natural disasters have forced large and growing numbers of people to flee their homes in search of safety and protection. While it is expected that some refugees from Cte dIvoire and internally displaced persons (IDPs) within that country will be able to return to their homes in 2012, more displacements can be expected, if violence and famine persist in Somalia, and tensions along the border region between Sudan and South Sudan increase. One of the worst humanitarian crises in decades continues to unfold in Somalia and the region. Fighting in the southern and central parts of the country, coupled with widespread famine and drought, has forced a quarter of a million Somalis to flee their country during the first nine months of 2011. UNHCR has registered more than 917,000 Somali refugees in the region; and more than one-third of the entire refugee population in sub-Saharan Africa is of Somali origin. The Somali influx into Ethiopia and Kenya has put a heavy strain on services and facilities in refugee camps in these countries. However, efforts are under way to open new camps to meet the growing needs. Inside Somalia, UNHCR has scaled up its presence along the border regions and in Mogadishu in order to protect and assist IDPs, who number some 1.4 million. West Africa continues to recover from the post-election political crisis in Cte dIvoire, which resulted in the internal displacement of an estimated 500,000 Ivorians, and saw at least 200,000 more seek protection abroad, particularly in Liberia and Ghana. While returns in Cte dIvoire have since begun, the situation remains fragile and requires close monitoring. The largely peaceful referendum on the independence of South Sudan has since been followed by armed conflict in the border area between the new country and Sudan, triggering significant displacement both within the two countries and across borders. Concerns also remain about the possible loss of nationality among tens of thousands of individuals on both sides of the new border. In Darfur, ongoing inter-tribal fighting and clashes between the Government and rebel movements are causing fresh displacement. Armed conflict continues unabated in parts of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, where UNHCR continues to respond to the needs of the displaced, in particular women who have been victims of sexual and gender-based violence. The extension of the mandate of the United Nations Stabilization Mission (MONUSCO) through 30 June 2012 will help to mitigate the risk of a deterioration in the security situation before and after presidential elections in November 2011. Planning is already under way, however, to respond to increased displacement should violence nonetheless erupt.
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Refugees from Cte dIvoire and their belongings are transported across the Cestos River into Liberia.
UNHCR / G. GORDON
Africa
While southern Africa has remained peaceful, the effects of conflict, drought and poverty elsewhere on the continent, especially in the East and Horn of Africa, have resulted in growing flows of refugees and migrants. For the third year in a row, South Africa has been the recipient of the highest number of asylum applications worldwide. Governments have reacted to the increase in these movements by imposing more restrictive entry measures including stringent border checks, returns to former countries of transit and denial of access to asylum-seekers from third countries. updated strategy to deal with such violence will guide its prevention and response efforts. Key priorities with regard to the protection of children include registration and documentation of displaced children at birth; equal access to education, especially for girls; completion of Best Interest Determination (BID) for unaccompanied, separated and at-risk children; and reduction of malnutrition and mortality through the provision of greater access to health care, supplementary nutrition and therapeutic feeding. The prospects are strong for the 2009 African Union Convention for the Protection and Assistance of Internally Displaced Persons in Africa to come into effect in 2012, providing an important new international legal framework for the protection of IDPs in Africa. UNHCR will focus its efforts over the coming year on assisting States to incorporate their obligations under the treaty into national laws and policies. In the area of statelessness, much remains to be done to ensure that all people in the region enjoy the rights and protection that come with having a nationality. As of October 2011, only eight countries in sub-Africa were party to the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness while thirteen had signed and ratified the 1954 Convention on the Status of Stateless Persons. The commemorations related to the 50th anniversary of the 1961 Convention on the Reduction of Statelessness helped raise awareness of this issue and provided a platform for future action. In the coming year, UNHCR will continue to urge States to ratify the two conventions on statelessness, as well as assist States to identify stateless or potentially stateless people within their borders and to formulate laws and policies to prevent or reduce statelessness in general.
Africa
and refugees in urban areas. Refugees now also have access to city health clinics, with referrals for secondary and tertiary treatment possible to designated health clinics. In early 2012, UNCHR will be completing a survey that will facilitate the design and implementation of livelyhoods strategies and programmes in Nairobi.
SOUTHERN AFRICA
Population size
4,000,000 2,000,000 400,000
Refugees Asylum-seekers Returnees (refugees and IDPs) Stateless people IDPs Others of concern
Financial information
The introduction of budgets based on the comprehensive assessments of the needs of people of concern to UNHCR has resulted in a significant increase in financial requirements for operations in Africa, while at the same time the level of contributions for Africa has stagnated over the last few years. At the beginning of 2011, the comprehensive budget for Africa as approved by UNHCRs Executive Committee stood at USD 1.5 billion. The crises in West Africa and the East and Horn of Africa resulted in significant additional requirements which were presented in several supplementary appeals. At the start of the fourth quarter of 2011, the total requirements for sub-Saharan Africa amounted to USD 1.83 billion. The 2012 comprehensive budget for Africa stands at USD 1.64 billion, while the requirements for 2013 are estimated at USD 1.52 billion. The gap between needs and available resources remains large. Without adequate funding, UNHCR will be unable to meet even the most basic needs of many of those it is meant to assist. Life-saving services, such as health, water, shelter, nutrition and sanitation, will be jeopardized, as will protection and other activities intended to ensure the safety, dignity and basic rights of the people UNHCR serves. Assistance to the communities that host displaced people will also suffer, risking a rise in tensions and conflict.
displacement, while also ensuring that funding mechanisms and deployment arrangements are in place to respond to emergencies as they occur. Sudan and Somalia remain countries of particular concern and will require close monitoring over the coming year. UNHCR is also preparing itself for eventualities that may arise from the upcoming election in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
capacity, UNHCR will also undertake concerted efforts in 2012 and 2013 to train its partners in Africa. Ensuring staff security, including full compliance with the UN Minimum Operating Security Standards, will remain another key priority.
| Challenges |
Asylum fatigue, once considered a defining feature of industrialized countries, is increasingly evident in sub-Saharan Africa. Restrictive asylum polices in countries of transit and destination, as well as efforts to create refugee-free zones at the national and/or subregional level, are evidence of a growing reluctance to provide protection and to keep borders open. Security concerns contribute to more restrictive asylum policies and to undermining support for asylum. When delivering protection and assistance in conflict zones, UNHCR and other humanitarian actors face the challenge of defining the parameters of engagement with military actors, be they national forces, nonState armed actors, or peacekeeping missions. UNHCR must strike the right balance between engagement, to ensure access to populations of concern, and distance, to maintain the humanitarian character of its activities. Ensuring the security of humanitarian personnel in both conflict and non-conflict environments remains a major challenge for UNHCR, sister UN agencies and NGO partners. Attacks against aid workers continue, resulting recently in the death of a World Food Progamme (WFP) staff member in southern Sudan. The attack on the UN House in Abuja, Nigeria, in August 2011 by a terrorist group, which resulted in the death of 23 people, including 11 UN staff members, already tragically highlighted the extent to which humanitarian workers are seen by some as legitimate targets of violence.
Strengthening partnerships
With the growing multitude of actors responding to displacement crises in Africa and elsewhere, the need for clear and predictable coordination between government, UN and NGO actors has become very apparent. UNHCR, as the agency mandated to provide protection to refugees, as well as the lead agency in the protection, camp management and emergency shelter clusters in IDP situations, will continue to engage with partners in the Field and in New York and Geneva to ensure that coordination mechanisms are effective and efficient. The organization will also work closely with both international and national NGOs in Africa as operational or advocacy partners, to improve their capacity to respond to displacement challenges in their regions, and to mobilize funds to support their operations.
2011 2012
2013
2011
2012
PILLAR 1 PILLAR 2 PILLAR 3 PILLAR 4
Operations
Refugee programme
Stateless programme
Reintegration projects
IDP projects
2013
Total
416,551,285
241,550,039
3,337,931
81,606,465
55,131,911
381,626,347
313,261,846
1,091,158,347
818,674,109
9,720,178
3,388,411
165,167,472
996,950,170
958,323,572
west africa
Cte d'Ivoire Ghana Guinea Liberia Senegal Regional Office
Subtotal
47,212,208 14,935,725 8,122,003 90,945,253 65,092,494 9,591,089 10,297,161 4,658,142 64,304,327 47,387,883 3,748,462 0 0 0 717,761 4,997,424 1,289,055 1,435,009 5,045,353 2,293,021 13,005,332 0 0 0 0 31,342,307 11,586,217 6,093,151 69,349,680 50,398,665 26,396,000 9,017,381 6,000,000 65,024,668 49,852,287
226,307,683
136,238,603
4,466,223
15,059,863
13,005,332
168,770,020
156,290,336
southern africa
Angola Botswana Malawi Mozambique Namibia South Africa Regional Office Zambia Zimbabwe
Subtotal Total
1
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1,986,354
91,261,755 1,825,279,070
84,037,551 1,280,500,303
2,965,297 20,489,630
0 100,054,740
1,986,354 235,291,069
88,989,203 1,636,335,741
88,904,221 1,516,779,975
Sudan operations have been separated into Sudan and South Sudan as of 2012.