Archive for ‘Migrants and Refugees’

14/07/2023

Bangladesh: Spiraling Violence Against Rohingya Refugees

Human Wrongs Watch

By Human Rights Watch*

Protect Community From Killings, Abductions, Torture

202307asia_bangladesh_rohingya_kutupalong_refugee_camp.jpg

  • Bangladesh authorities are failing to adequately protect Rohingya refugees from surging violence by armed groups and criminal gangs, with layers of barriers to police, legal, and medical assistance.
  • Authorities have been forcing Rohingya leaders to serve as informants, putting them at grave risk of being abducted or killed, without access to protection.

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14/07/2023

Unaccompanied Child Migrants Traversing the Eastern Route for Work 

Dire Dawa, 10 July 2023 (IOM)* – Sixteen-year-old Abel Ahmed* has never been to school. Originally from Dera, Oromia Regional State, North Shoa Zone in Ethiopia, his family could not afford to send him to school. Instead, he was supporting his family’s small-scale farming on their piece of land where they planted sorghum. 
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“My family has problems with money. I had a plan to go to school but I could not,” he explains.

One month ago, he left home with his peers and friends to look for work, having heard of stories from family members who managed to succeed in finding work in Yemen.

A study by the International Organization for Migration (IOM) reveals that children from Habru, Dire Dawa, Bedeno and Sigmo parts of Oromia in Ethiopia reported having been subjected to forms of child labour, including hazardous work in farms in Yemen.

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14/07/2023

Mothers of Srebrenica: ‘Sadly, the killing continues in the world’

(UN News)* — The pointe shoes were a testament to unfulfilled hopes. They belonged to a young ballet dancer from Bosnia and Herzegovina whose life was forever changed by the brutal conflict that broke out in the heart of Europe at the end of the 20th century and were on display at the UN Headquarters in New York to educate visitors about the horrors of war and genocide.
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Kada Hotić holds photographs of her son, husband, and two brothers, who were lost in the Srebrenica genocide.
UN News/Hisae Kawamori
Kada Hotić holds photographs of her son, husband, and two brothers, who were lost in the Srebrenica genocide.

Among the exhibit’s visitors were members of the Mothers of Srebrenica, an association that united thousands of people – mothers, sisters, and wives – who have lost loved ones in the massacre in their city.

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12/07/2023

Scourge of Racism Haunts Black Women and Girls Seeking Healthcare

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN News)* — Women and girls of African descent face a “systemic and historical pattern” of racial abuse in the health sector in countries across the world, leaving them at increased risk of death during childbirth, the UN’s sexual and reproductive health agency said on Wednesday [].

A mother cuddles her newborn baby. (file)
© UNICEF/Zahara Abdul | A mother cuddles her newborn baby. (file)

“The scourge of racism continues for Black women and girls in the Americas, many of whom are descendants of the victims of enslavement,” Natalia Kanem, Executive Director of the UN Population Fund (UNFPA), said in a news release.

“Too often, Afrodescendent women and girls are abused and mistreated, their needs are not taken seriously, and their families are shattered by the preventable death of a loved one during childbirth. “Justice and equality will only be possible when our healthcare systems see these women and provide them with respectful, compassionate care.”

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12/07/2023

‘Those Who Burned the Quran [in Swedish Capital] Most Likely Did So “to Express Contempt and Inflame Anger” – UN Human Rights Chief

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN News)* — The UN’s top human rights official urged respect for religious tolerance on Tuesday [] as Member States gathered in Geneva in response to the recent burning of the holy Quran in the Swedish capital.

Men pray at a mosque in Afghanistan.
UNAMA/Barat Ali Batoor | Men pray at a mosque in Afghanistan.

Addressing the Human Rights Council, UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Türk noted that the tome was the “core of faith” for well over one billion Muslims.

Those who had burned the Quran most likely did so “to express contempt and inflame anger”, Mr. Türk said, as he warned that these acts also aimed “to drive wedges between people”, to provoke and transform differences into hatred.

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12/07/2023

Sudan Crisis: ‘You Don’t Dare Ask Refugees Where the Men Have Gone’

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN News)* — As conflict continues to rage in Sudan, UN humanitarians expressed alarm on Tuesday [] at a surge in the number of people fleeing across the border to Chad.

A Sudanese family take shelter at a refugee entry point close to the Chadian border with Sudan.
© WFP/Eloge Mbaihondoum | A Sudanese family take shelter at a refugee entry point close to the Chadian border with Sudan.

Speaking to journalists via Zoom from the Zabout refugee camp in Goz Beida, Mr. Honnorat described desperate scenes: “We can see that they have suffered, many lost family members, and we don’t even dare ask them, ‘Where are the men?’ The answer from the mothers is often that they were killed. So, you just see many women, many children.”

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11/07/2023

Temperatures Off the Charts, But More Records Imminent: World Meteorological Organization

Human Wrongs Watch

(UN NEWS)* — Global sea surface temperatures reached a record high in May, June, and July – and the warming El Niño weather pattern is only just getting started – experts at the UN World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said on Monday [].

Global sea surface temperatures were at a record high in May and June 2023.
Unsplash/Rafael Garcin
Global sea surface temperatures were at a record high in May and June 2023.

Alarm bells have been rung at the UN agency in particular because of an “unprecedented peak” in sea surface temperatures in the North Atlantic.

10/07/2023

Extremist Ideology in Europe: ‘Leave Everyone Behind’ (Except Us)

Human Wrongs Watch

MADRID, Jul 10 2023 (IPS)* – A quick glance at the current European political map would clearly show how far the extremist ideology has been installed in European countries –those who still wave the French Revolution’s flag of “Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité.”

Credit: United Nations

According to the Napoleonic French Revolution’s three pillars, Liberty means freedom for an individual to do what he/she wants to do without harming others’ Liberty. Equality means equal opportunity to all the citizens irrespective of their caste, religion, race, gender.

Fraternity means an environment of brotherhood among the citizens of a nation.

“Not true” that “all humans are equal”

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10/07/2023

As Drought and Floods Threaten Millions in Ethiopia, Midwives Are a Lifeline for Pregnant Women and Newborns

DUDUMACAD, Ethiopia, 7 July 2023 (UNFPA)* – “Saving the life of this baby was a miracle and a blessing for my family. I am immensely grateful,” said Amino Bashir, 25, as she held her newborn.

In Ethiopia’s Somali region, a camp in the village of Gabi’as shelters hundreds of households displaced by drought. Over 260,000 women are currently pregnant in the Somali region alone, many of them internally displaced from recurrent, multiple crises and at dire risk of acute undernourishment, without access to even the most basic health care. © UNFPA Ethiopia/Paula Seijo

Ms. Bashir lives in Dudumacad in the Somali region of Ethiopia – one of the areas devastated by a gruelling drought across the Horn of Africa that has affected more than 36 million people so far.

10/07/2023

Nearly 3 Million Displaced by Conflict in Sudan in Less than Three Months

People fleeing the ongoing fighting in Sudan arrive in Chad. Photo: IOM/F. Ada Affana

In addition to the more than 2.2 million internally displaced persons (IDPs), nearly 700,000 others have fled into neighbouring countries, according to the latest figures by the International Organization for Migration’s (IOM) Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM).

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