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UNHCR reports record displacement in West and Central Africa – DW – 06/20/2025
UNHCR reports record displacement in West and Central Africa – DW – 06/20/2025

DW

time11 hours ago

  • Politics
  • DW

UNHCR reports record displacement in West and Central Africa – DW – 06/20/2025

Nearly 13 million people have been uprooted from their homes in West and Central Africa. The UN Refugee Agency blames migration trends and conflict for creating a "perfect storm" of mass displacement. About 12.7 million forcibly displaced and stateless people are in West and Central Africa, according to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). "From conflict to climate shocks, protection risks are rising — particularly for women and children, who represent 80% of the the forcibly displaced," said Abdouraouf Gnon-Konde, the UNHCR's regional bureau director for West and Central Africa. Gnon-Konde said the UN's data also showed that displaced people are "returning home in increasing numbers where conditions allow." Nigeria, Burkina Faso and Cameroon are home to about 80% of the internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the region. Drought, flooding, and chronic violence and insecurity have forced people to seek shelter in other regions within their countries. According to the United Nations, more than 194,200 internally displaced persons returned to their homes in Mali from April through January 2025, and 64,700 in the Central African Republic UN-sponsored voluntary returns Chad is providing refuge to almost 780,000 people who have fled Sudan's civil war, with another 250,000 expected to arrive by the end of the year. The country also hosts large numbers of refugees from the Central African Republic to the south and Niger to the west. Each group of displaced people faces unique dangers, and Chad is struggling to host all of them. The United Nations has been sponsoring voluntary returns to countries of origin within West Africa. Eleven thousand refugees returned to countries such as Nigeria, the Central African Republic and Mali from January through April 2025. "Humanitarian crises are, first of all, political crises," Alpha Seydi Ba, a UNHCR spokesperson based in Dakar, Senegal, told DW. "Unless we are able to make peace, there won't be a situation where the returns are possible." Ba said repatriations were carried out whenever and wherever possible and on a voluntary basis. As a result, the UNHCR says resettlement departures rose by 34% in 2024 (4,000 individuals). Repatriation often means relative safety has been achieved in refugees' home countries Image: Elena Lauriola/UNHCR "I think it's always good news when people are able to go back home," Ba said. "Exile, it's not a choice. Being a refugee is not a choice, when someone leaves their home and everything behind." "We're seeing those people returning and rebuilding," Ba said. "I think it's one of the best things that can happen in the humanitarian person in his career." 'Migrants become stranded' Though repatriation efforts have yielded some positive results, the UN's regional resettlement quota has been reduced by 64% in 2025. To complicate matters, the UNHCR's regional budget overall has been reduced by 50% between 2024 and 2025. "Our operations are very severely impacted," Ba said. "Meaning less food, less shelter, less health care, less clean water, less gender-based protection, which makes overall protection systems or displaced people more fragile," Ba added. "That's why the UNHCR in the region is at a tipping point." "The number of migrants, be it internally displaced people or migrants, is increasing," Luisa de Freitas, who leads the Regional Data Hub in Dakar for the International Organization for Migration (IOM), told DW. "We are seeing that, overall, more and more people are on the move." Though many people move to foreign countries because of climate disasters, armed conflict or instability, the IOM reports that economic needs are also a key driver of migration. Chad 'opened the doors to all the refugees from Sudan' To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video "Over 70% to 72% of the individuals that we survey at our flow monitoring points in 2024 were there because of labor or economic reasons," de Freitas said. De Freitas said migration routes had become increasingly dangerous as EU nations and their partners within Africa have sought to stem the flow of migration to Europe. However, this has not deterred migrants from attempting to do so. "People move when they feel they have no other option," de Freitas said. "They will take routes that are less and less traveled. So what is happening is that a lot of these migrants become stranded." New strategies needed Simply putting up barriers or investing in forced removals of migrants is not the solution. Instead, de Freitas advised European nations to adopt a different approach that fosters and incentivizes regular migration, benefiting both home and destination countries. "Spain has just launched two initiatives: one to regularize migrants per year, and they've also launched system where Senegalese can apply for temporary travel visas to go and work in Spain," de Freitas said. Many EU countries desperately need workers in sectors such as agriculture, she added. "Circular migration allows migration on a temporary basis to address labor shortages in destination countries, while providing migrants with access to employment and education opportunities. "Basically, try to make migration a win-win situation for both ends," de Freitas said. Edited by: Chrispin Mwakideu

UN General Assembly to vote on Gaza ceasefire
UN General Assembly to vote on Gaza ceasefire

Shafaq News

time12-06-2025

  • Politics
  • Shafaq News

UN General Assembly to vote on Gaza ceasefire

Shafaq News/ On Thursday, the United Nations General Assembly is scheduled to vote on a draft resolution urging an immediate ceasefire in Gaza, the release of hostages held by Hamas, and the opening of Israeli crossings to enable the delivery of food and urgent humanitarian supplies. Drafted by Spain, the resolution includes a strong condemnation of starvation as a method of warfare, describing its use against civilians as a grave violation of international norms. The vote takes place amid a worsening humanitarian crisis in Gaza, where UN agencies estimate that 93% of the population is experiencing extreme food insecurity. Ongoing airstrikes have destroyed farmland, fisheries, and essential infrastructure, further deepening the emergency. Although Israel lifted an 11-week blockade last month, the flow of aid has remained minimal. For the more than two million residents of the territory, conditions remain critical. Diplomatic sources expect the 193-member assembly to adopt the resolution by a wide margin. Israel, however, has urged member states to reject the measure, calling it a 'politically motivated and futile spectacle.' While General Assembly resolutions are not legally binding, they are widely seen as barometers of global opinion and carry symbolic political and moral weight. The vote also comes ahead of an UN-sponsored conference next week, aiming to reenergize global engagement with the two-state solution, as efforts toward resolving the Israeli-Palestinian conflict continue to face significant obstacles. Meanwhile, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich has maintained his refusal to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza, calling for continued military operations targeting Hamas and opposing negotiations over any potential hostage agreement. Smotrich has also dismissed proposals to reinstate direct Israeli control over the enclave, calling them 'nonsense' and urging officials to block any initiative that could lead to renewed political dialogue.

El Salvador holds trial for army killing of Dutch journalists
El Salvador holds trial for army killing of Dutch journalists

Yahoo

time03-06-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

El Salvador holds trial for army killing of Dutch journalists

A former defense minister and two colonels went on trial in El Salvador Tuesday for the killings of four Dutch journalists 43 years ago, an NGO assisting the victims' families said. Koos Koster, Jan Kuiper, Hans ter Laag and Joop Willemsen were killed in 1982 while filming a television documentary during El Salvador's civil war. The accused are General Jose Guillermo Garcia, 91, former police colonel Francisco Antonio Moran, 93, and ex-infantry brigade commander Mario Reyes Mena, 85. In 1993, a UN-sponsored Truth Commission found the journalists had walked into an ambush planned by Reyes, who lives in the United States, and with the knowledge of other officers. The Salvadoran Supreme Court approved an extradition request for Reyes in March, but there has been no progress so far. Garcia and Moran are under police surveillance in a private hospital in San Salvador. The hearing in the northern city of Chalatenango is expected to conclude on Wednesday with a verdict from a five-member jury. If convicted, the defendants face prison sentences of up to 30 years. The trial was closed to the media, but activist Oscar Perez of the Fundacion Comunicandonos confirmed from the courtroom that it was under way. The NGO and the Salvadoran Association for Human Rights hailed the trial as a "decisive step" in the search for truth and justice. "We trust that this trial sets a historic precedent in the fight against impunity," they said in a joint statement. The Netherlands' Costa Rica-based ambassador to Central America, Arjen van den Berg, was in court. The case remained unresolved for decades after the presiding judge received threats in 1988, prompting her to seek refuge in Canada. It was reopened in 2018 after the Supreme Court declared an amnesty law for civil war crimes unconstitutional, but relatives of the victims still had to wait years for the main hearing. Evidence such as a statement from a former US military attache and a military expert's report "directly points" to the defendants' responsibility, said lawyer Pedro Cruz, who represents the victims' families. More than 75,000 people were killed in El Salvador's 1980-1992 civil war pitting the military against leftist guerrillas. cmm/fj/dr/md

El Salvador holds trial for army killing of Dutch journalists
El Salvador holds trial for army killing of Dutch journalists

France 24

time03-06-2025

  • General
  • France 24

El Salvador holds trial for army killing of Dutch journalists

Koos Koster, Jan Kuiper, Hans ter Laag and Joop Willemsen were killed in 1982 while filming a television documentary during El Salvador's civil war. The accused are General Jose Guillermo Garcia, 91, former police colonel Francisco Antonio Moran, 93, and ex-infantry brigade commander Mario Reyes Mena, 85. In 1993, a UN-sponsored Truth Commission found the journalists had walked into an ambush planned by Reyes, who lives in the United States, and with the knowledge of other officers. The Salvadoran Supreme Court approved an extradition request for Reyes in March, but there has been no progress so far. Garcia and Moran are under police surveillance in a private hospital in San Salvador. The hearing in the northern city of Chalatenango is expected to conclude on Wednesday with a verdict from a five-member jury. If convicted, the defendants face prison sentences of up to 30 years. The trial was closed to the media, but activist Oscar Perez of the Fundacion Comunicandonos confirmed from the courtroom that it was under way. The NGO and the Salvadoran Association for Human Rights hailed the trial as a "decisive step" in the search for truth and justice. "We trust that this trial sets a historic precedent in the fight against impunity," they said in a joint statement. The Netherlands' Costa Rica-based ambassador to Central America, Arjen van den Berg, was in court. The case remained unresolved for decades after the presiding judge received threats in 1988, prompting her to seek refuge in Canada. It was reopened in 2018 after the Supreme Court declared an amnesty law for civil war crimes unconstitutional, but relatives of the victims still had to wait years for the main hearing. Evidence such as a statement from a former US military attache and a military expert's report "directly points" to the defendants' responsibility, said lawyer Pedro Cruz, who represents the victims' families.

Hilale Lectures Algeria's Regime on Regional Destabilization, Hypocrisy, and Support of Separatism
Hilale Lectures Algeria's Regime on Regional Destabilization, Hypocrisy, and Support of Separatism

Morocco World

time25-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Morocco World

Hilale Lectures Algeria's Regime on Regional Destabilization, Hypocrisy, and Support of Separatism

Rabat — Omar Hilale, Morocco's Permanent Ambassador to the UN, has reiterated the Algerian regime's direct involvement in challenging Morocco's territorial integrity in a final statement as part of the UN Special Committee on Decolonization (C24). Hilale's statement came in response to Algeria's regime claims, arguing that Algeria is not a party to the Western Sahara dispute. In his response, the Moroccan ambassador recalled his recent statements on Algeria's responsibility in the dispute, noting that what he previously said are 'real and documented facts openly assumed by Algeria.' Earlier this week, Hilale stressed how Algeria has been using the separatist Polisario group as a political tool to challenge Morocco's territorial integrity and sovereignty over its southern provinces in Western Sahara. 'Despite Morocco's commitments and the UN's sustained efforts, the political process to resolve this regional dispute continues to be hindered by Algeria's delaying tactics,' Hilale said, recalling Algeria's repeated attempts to obfuscate its role in the Western Sahara dispute. In response to Hilale's remarks, the Algerian delegation accused Morocco of targeting Algiers during the event and has once again shirked the country's responsibility in the dispute, despite financing, arming, training, and harboring the Polisario Front and backing its independence claims in Western Sahara. Algeria's continued delusions Responding to Algeria's claims, Hilale dismissed the Algerian regime's claims, saying: 'Who created the Polisario? It was Algeria. Where is it located? On Algerian territory. Who finds it? Algeria. Who leads diplomatic campaigns against Morocco? Again, it's Algeria.' Hilale also shut down Algeria's regime observer allegations, noting that the country suffers from an 'incurable schizopehrinic pathology.' 'It claims not to be a party, yet has been blocking the resumption of the political process for the past three years, thus obstructing a political resolution of this regional dispute,' he added. Algeria has been blocking the UN-led political process, frequently renewing its reluctance to engage in UN-sponsored roundtable talks. The Algerian regime prefers to refer to itself as merely an observer, despite its direct involvement in the dispute, declining to engage in UN talks to contribute to finding a realistic and pragmatic solution. Hilale recalled how Algeria's narrative is 'stuck in the year 2000 and completely ignores the major developments of the past 25 years.' 'Why does Algeria never refer to Security Council resolutions since 2000? Because they contradict Algeria's foundational position, having buried the referendum, recognizing the pre-eminence of Morocco's autonomy initiative, explicating assigning responsibility to Algeria, and acknowledging the international momentum behind the Moroccan initiative,' Hilale added. Recently, Minister of Foreign Affairs Nasser Bourita said that over 116 countries now support the Moroccan initiative, in addition to the major recognitions of Morocco's territorial integrity by powerhouses like the US and France. 'Mecca' of destabilization Echoing Bourita's remarks, Hilale debunked the Algerian regime's narrative, noting that if Algeria 'wants to lend credibility to its discourse, it should first grant this right to the people living on its own territory – the Kabyle people – who demand for self-determinations dates back to well before the very creation of the Algerian regime.' He also described Algeria as the 'Mecca' of destabilization, terrorist groups, separatism, and 'all those who take up arms against their own countries.' Hilale's remarks came amid growing appeals from politicians who urge their countries — including the US, UK, and France — to designate the separatist group as a terrorist organization. Tags: Algeria and the Western SaharaAlgeria and Western Sahara

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