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  • Safe havens in a hostile world - for 60 years

    Safe havens in a hostile world - for 60 years

    A 1951 UN convention has saved 50 million from torture, death or war.

    By Andrew McCorkell

    http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/politics/safe-havens-in-a-hostile-world-ndash-for-60-years-2319537.html
    Sunday, 24 July 2011

    JUSTIN SUTCLIFFE

    Janos Fisher: A Jewish refugee from Hungary, he came to the UK in 1956



    They came from all corners of the world: Hungary, Cyprus, Uganda,
    Ghana, Kosovo and Liberia. Britain was their sanctuary, a safe haven
    from the violence and persecution that had been visited on them in
    their homelands. They are all beneficiaries of a system designed after
    the Second World War to prevent the persecution of refugees.


    Inspiration for the UN Convention for Refugees, in which British
    lawyers played a key role, were fresh memories of the horror suffered
    by millions fleeing the violence and destruction of the war years. The
    men and women who framed it were determined, when they signed it on 28
    July 1951, that such trauma must never be repeated.

    As the world prepares to celebrate the 60th anniversary of the
    convention on Thursday, pressure is mounting on London to honour the
    spirit of the original convention.

    Campaigners such as Jemima Khan, activist and associate editor of The
    Independent, warned: "The popular political rhetoric of tightening our
    borders must never apply to those fleeing violence and persecution.
    The facts are that the UK currently takes in about 4 per cent of the
    world's refugees out of 14 million worldwide. However, only 4,175
    people were granted official refugee status in the UK last year. The
    Refugee Council faces 62 per cent cuts to support services for asylum
    seekers."

    Few of the delegates from the 26 countries who gathered in Geneva in
    1951 to provide legal protections for millions of people displaced by
    the war could have imagined the bewildering array of refugees, asylum
    seekers, voluntary economic migrants, undocumented migrants, boat
    people, stateless people, internally displaced persons who now rely on
    this aspect of the law to provide shelter from detention, deportation,
    exploitation or violent explosions of xenophobia.

    It was for this reason the 1951 Convention relating to the status of
    refugees has become known as the Magna Carta of international refugee
    law, and the treaty remains a vital mainstay of the safety and
    survival of millions of people across the world. Through it, the UN's
    refugee agency, the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) has
    helped around 50 million people restart their lives.

    Some of the convention's provisions have become fundamental to
    international law, such as the principle of not forcing the return of
    refugees to countries where they may face persecution. The UN says
    there are now 43 million people who are forcibly displaced through
    persecution or conflict, the highest since the mid-1990s.

    Several million are displaced through natural disasters and 27 million
    by conflict in their own countries. They are the "internally displaced
    people". The world's major refugee populations include Palestinians
    (4.8 million), Afghans (2.9 million), Iraqis (1.8 million), Somalis
    (700,000), Congolese (456,000), Burmese (407,000), Colombians
    (390,000) and Sudanese (370,000).

    Children make up around 41 per cent of the world's total, with women
    making up about half of all refugees. Around two-thirds have been in
    exile for more than five years.

    A survey of Britons earlier this year revealed that two-thirds are
    sympathetic to refugees coming to the UK. The Refugee Council poll
    found three-quarters of women and 61 per cent of men were sympathetic
    to those fleeing persecution.

    But the poll also revealed widespread ignorance about refugees: more
    than four in 10 believe 100,000 or more refugees were accepted by the
    UK in 2009 when the correct number was 4,175. While many people
    surveyed confused workers from Poland and Eastern Europe with
    refugees, 82 per cent believed protecting the most vulnerable was a
    core British value.

    Donna Covey, chief executive of the Refugee Council, said: "It is a
    legacy that all British people should be proud of, and should serve to
    remind us that Britain still has an important role to play in offering
    safety to those forced to flee their homes to escape violence, torture
    and war in countries around the world today."

    1950s: Janos Fisher, a Jewish refugee from Hungary, he came to the UK
    in 1956. Now 74, he lives in Bushey Heath, Hertfordshire

    I escaped Hungary with three schoolmates. We realised it was a
    once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to escape - we couldn't see the
    Communist regime would fall. I was 19 and a half and working in a
    rice-shelling mill. It took us two tries to get across the border.
    When I got to England, I went to Lancashire as a miner. I was the only
    one who spoke a bit of English, so I became the interpreter.

    We were there for about six months. I was a big shot because I could
    translate everything. It was my job to compose people's love letters.

    I was a refugee, but it didn't feel like that for long. I consider
    myself British now. I got married in '62. I met my wife here after she
    came over in '57. My parents in Budapest knew an acquaintance of my
    future in-laws and told me to meet up with them in London. I realised
    pretty quickly this was the woman for me.

    After door-to-door selling, I sold handbags and became a wholesaler.
    We used to have shops, but they closed 10 years ago. Now I consider
    myself a pensioner.

    I have two sons. Julian, who's 43, lives in New York now, sadly, and
    my youngest, Daniel, 40, lives in Birmingham. They don't speak
    Hungarian, only English. Hungary was like a prison. It isn't now, but
    I wouldn't dream of going back.

    Freedom - that's the best thing about Britain. You can - and I did -
    go abroad any time. We're going with friends to Calais. It's
    unbelievable that in an hour or two you can be in a different country.
    In Hungary, if you had family in Romania, you couldn't get permission
    to see them. What sort of a place is that?

    1960s: Misak Ohanian, an Armenian refugee, 56, from Cyprus, who came
    to Britain in 1967 to escape violence between Greek and Turkish
    Cypriots. Lives in Ealing


    I was 11 when we became refugees in 1963 because of intercommunal
    fighting. Our house ended up being in the Turkish part of Nicosia. My
    grandfather had already fled the Armenian genocide in 1915 and lost a
    large part of his extended family. Rebuilding in Cyprus but then going
    through it all again was a real tragedy.

    Many Armenians were displaced after the genocide of 1915, all over the
    Middle East, only to become refugees again when problems arose in
    those countries later. Now there are probably Armenian communities in
    100 different countries.

    We came to Britain because I had uncles here, on my mother and
    father's side. There's a long-standing affinity between Cypriots and
    Britain - Cyprus was a former colony. The school I attended taught us
    English, Armenian and Greek.

    I would say my experiences influenced what I do now. We help newly
    arrived refugees settle and make sure they're aware of their rights.
    After 25 years, we have helped thousands settle in this country. When
    we first arrived, it was easy to know what new refugees' rights were;
    now there's little support and it's more complicated.

    Britain as a whole is extremely hospitable - there is an intrinsic
    goodness that comes out in times of need. A lot of aid was given to
    Armenia after the 1988 earthquake, and similarly with famines and
    other disasters. Younger generations especially are a lot more
    accepting and inclusive.

    We still see ignorance about Armenia. People ask us "What is that?
    Where is that?" We joke about it. Years ago, people trying to insult
    us would call us "Pakis" - but that reflected far worse on them.

    Britain has offered us security and the rule of law, which still does
    not exist in many places. Refugees have so much to contribute to this
    country. For example, Ealing has just got its first Armenian
    councillor.

    1970s: Vimla Patel, Ugandan Indian refugee who fled Uganda in 1972
    under Idi Amin's regime. Now 59, she lives in Cardiff


    I was 20 when I came here. Idi Amin said all Asians had 90 days to
    leave. We were shocked. We had no experience of living in the UK at
    all. We were a very wealthy family. My father had owned a sugar cane
    farm and we had to leave all our possessions to come here.

    I was married at 18 and two months pregnant with my first child when
    we came. It was October and very cold. We didn't know where we were
    going. When we arrived at the airport we were given warm coats by the
    Red Cross. We ended up in a camp in Yeovil, Somerset. We were there
    for three weeks, then called into the office and given £2.20. We
    didn't know what benefits were - we felt like beggars.

    The Red Cross helped us find a flat to rent in Cardiff: there were 11
    of us in two and a half bedrooms. My husband went to the job centre
    the next day and got a job cutting onions in a restaurant. He wasn't
    used to making even a cup of tea because we had servants in Uganda.

    Soon he started working 80 hours a week in a petrol station and saved
    enough to run his own. Now he owns several petrol stations in Cardiff.

    I regard myself as Indian, Welsh, Ugandan and British. I've lived in
    Wales for 40 years now, so I suppose I'd best describe myself as
    Indian-Welsh. Britain is the best country for all people. They have
    accepted so many refugees and given everyone a home and a chance to
    raise their voice. The British people really cared about us; whatever
    we lost in Uganda we gained here.

    My children feel British. They are well off and have succeeded
    academically. My daughter and son-in-law still live with me. Our
    children have a good knowledge of Indian culture and religion and,
    going to class and work, they get British culture too.

    I got an MBE for services to the Hindu and Asian communities. When we
    came from Uganda we were all in the same boat and we were all lost,
    with no idea where to go. With a little knowledge from speaking
    English I began being able to help others.

    1980s: Yen Nyeya, came to Britain in 1984 after fleeing political
    persecution in his native Ghana. Now 54, he is manager of the GHARWEG
    (Ghana Refugee Welfare Group) and a member of the Refugee Council


    When I was at university in Ghana, I was very active in left-wing and
    democratic organisations that struggled against military
    dictatorships. After the uprising on 4 June 1979, power was taken by
    the military. We supported the December 1981 coup, but nine months
    afterwards there were internal conflicts. I fled to the north,
    thinking I could return home after two weeks. Some of my friends were
    jailed for three years without trial. So I fled the country.

    I ended up moving between Nigeria, Togo, Burkina Faso ... it was
    unsafe. So I came to the UK in August 1984, through Gatwick airport,
    and was detained for four days. I had friends already here, staying in
    a damp, cold house. The Refugee Council helped us. We got advice and
    better accommodation.

    Ghanaian organisations did not want to help us; they were extremely
    suspicious, thinking we were revolutionaries. So we formed the Ghana
    Refugee Welfare Group, with the Refugee Council's help, so that we
    could support others in the same position.

    My son is 24, and has finished degrees in biomedicine and
    neurosurgery, and my daughter is about to go to university. They come
    back to Ghana with me frequently, but they don't speak the language -
    they have south London accents! But my daughter will celebrate Ghana
    Independence Day, and support Ghana at sport. But when Britain is
    playing against other countries, I support Britain - except when Ghana
    is playing! Britain means a lot to me - in my hour of need, I came
    here and was welcomed.

    I don't think that attitudes have changed much over the years. Tabloid
    newspapers always blame refugees for problems. I don't think that many
    working-class people are exactly enthralled with refugees. There's
    also a lot more asylum and immigration legislation than there used to
    be.

    1990s: Querim Nuredini, expelled from Kosovo in 1999, then sent to a
    refugee camp near Macedonia. Airlifted to Britain, Querim, 36, lives
    in Bristol


    I lived in Pristina, in Kosovo, but in March 1999 we were expelled
    from the house by uniformed men in balaclavas who broke our door down
    and told us to leave, without telling us where or why. The whole town,
    thousands of people, crowded on to trains and buses and lorries.

    We weren't allowed in to Macedonia, so we had to stay in
    no-man's-land. Nato troops built camps, which soon became overcrowded.
    Food ran out, hygiene was poor, so a humanitarian evacuation was
    organsied. By chance, we were flown to Britain.

    We had no passports or plans. We got what was called "exceptional
    leave to remain" for a year. I remember my two little sisters in
    tears, saying "They're going to keep us here for a year!" My parents
    and another brother and sister didn't come - they didn't want to
    leave. We couldn't have stayed - conditions were unbearable. We have
    had very good experiences, as British people were well informed about
    Kosovo and understood why people had come. I have a British partner of
    10 years and two daughters, aged six and two. They speak very little
    Albanian. I feel just as British as I do Kosovan.

    I work with asylum seekers trying to help them to find jobs and
    integrate. We also assist with voluntary return, helping refugees
    return home.

    Attitudes towards refugees have changed dramatically for the worse.
    People are not educated about asylum. People think asylum seekers come
    to take jobs. They don't understand that, for someone to leave their
    home, things have to be awful. I'd never have left my home if I'd had
    the choice.

    Almost everyone we work with has experienced racial abuse. Britain
    accepted 8,000 evacuees from Kosovo: 80 per cent returned home
    voluntarily. Many are lost, unsure if they can stay or not.

    2000s: Akoi Bazzie, originally from Liberia. He came to the UK in 2004
    after the second civil war as part of a UN rescue mission. Now 35, he
    lives in Sheffield

    In 1989 when the civil war started, my father was a clan chief leading
    a lot of towns and villages. He was very influential and he didn't
    agree with the rebel invasions. He was killed by the rebels who then
    came looking for us.

    I was 14 when I fled. Me and my mother were in the jungle for two
    years. She told me to leave her and I got across the border to Guinea.

    The UNHCR were on the border and took me to a refugee camp with 35,000
    other refugees. I stayed in the camp for 12 years. I was not that far
    from the border and people were disappearing all the time.

    I met my wife, Rose, who was also a refugee, in the camp. Because of
    my father's role in the government that was overthrown, we were
    accepted on a relocation programme to the UK.

    When I arrived it was extremely cold. It was March and raining. I'd
    never been on a plane before and I arrived to see big buildings and
    fast-moving cars.

    I've lived in Sheffield for seven years now. When I saw the mountains
    and trees in the Peak District, it felt like home.

    I'm glad my kids are in school here: I didn't have the opportunity. I
    had to go to college and learn English. Looking at my kids, it's so
    different for them. I've got three children now: the first, Michael,
    10, was born in the camp. He speaks better English than I do and he's
    my tutor.

    Having worked for the UN in the camp, I wanted to work with refugees
    in Britain. Now I work with local people helping to raise awareness
    about refugee protection. It's my passion. I wanted to help people
    like me who were going through difficulties.

    Interviews by Emily Dugan and Tara Mulholland


    From: Baghdasarian
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