Thu, 14:26 27 Nov 2008 GMT17

 
Joel Charny
Joel R. Charny is vice president for policy with Refugees International, a Washington-based humanitarian advocacy organisation. He has extensive experience in Asia for RI, Oxfam America and the U.N. Development Programme. He has managed and assessed emergency response and post-conflict recovery programmes in Cambodia, Sri Lanka and Indonesia.
No Man's Land: Iraqi-Palestinians in Al Tanf Camp
18 Nov 2008 23:33:00 GMT
Author: Joel Charny

Al Tanf camp for Palestinian refugees from Iraq has to be in the top five of worst situated refugee camps in the world. It violates every principle of proper camp siting. In the no man's land between Syria and Iraq, it is within the border zone itself. It is completely exposed on one side to a highway, where trucks alternately speed by or sit idle for hours at a time waiting to make the border crossing. A 20-foot high concrete wall forms a second boundary. The site itself is in a culvert about 10 feet below the highway, making it a flood plain when it rains heavily. Refugees live in tents in the exposed area, forced to endure summer temperatures that climb well over 100 degrees and winter weather that drops near zero. Last winter, tents collapsed under a heavy snow fall.

The only good thing to say about Al Tanf is that it is small --- about 780 people endure life there. They are all Palestinians who fled targeted violence and death threats in Iraq, only to be denied entry to Syria and Jordan. The rationale for the denial is perverse, having to do with lack of travel documents, reluctance to encourage further in-migration of Palestinians, and strict, but empty, rhetorical adherence to the right of return. Most of the Palestinians in Al Tanf are descendants of the original Palestinian community in Baghdad, some 5,000 people who were brought to Iraq in 1948 after they were expelled from their homes during the conflict that erupted from Israel's founding.

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Georgia: Good Humanitarian Donorship Betrayed
04 Sep 2008 20:22:00 GMT
Author: Joel Charny

On September 3rd, the United States announced a $1 billion aid package for Georgia in the aftermath of its conflict with Russia over South Ossetia and Abkhazia. While the exact breakdown of the package is not yet clear, Reuben Jeffery III, undersecretary of state for economic, energy, and cultural affairs, told reporters that the planned two-year program includes humanitarian assistance, reconstruction of physical damage to infrastructure resulting from the fighting, and economic support. No military aid is included. $570 million of the package will be redirected from existing accounts, while the balance will have to be newly appropriated by the U.S. Congress.

Georgias population is 4.6 million. Aid on this scale will make it one of the largest per capita recipients of U.S. foreign assistance --- only Israel, Iraq, Afghanistan and Egypt come to mind as countries that probably exceed it. It also dwarfs the original 2008 aid program for the country, which was budgeted at $64 million, already a significant sum.

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Georgia: The militarization of humanitarian action
20 Aug 2008 15:01:00 GMT
Author: Joel Charny

The United States response to the displacement crisis in Georgia resulting from the conflict with Russia over the status of South Ossetia and Abkhazia is a blatant example of the increasing militarization of humanitarian action. Refugees International has been expressing deep concerns about this trend in Africa, but the Georgia response takes it to a new level.

Humanitarian response is supposed to embody the following principles: humanity (responding where the need is greatest; independence (responding based solely on the vulnerability of the individuals in distress rather than reflecting the priorities of other actors); impartiality (responding without applying political criteria or supporting any particular government or political movement).

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Where are the world's hidden refugees?
19 Jun 2008 09:42:00 GMT
Author: Joel Charny

Picture these iconic refugee images - an African woman, holding a child, gazing stoically into the camera against a backdrop of huts and tents in a barren landscape. A long line of people, men, women, and children - again, usually African - on the move with all their worldly possessions on their heads and their backs. An emaciated African child being examined in a clinic by a Western doctor or nurse in a vest with a red cross emblem.

These images have become iconic because for several decades they have encapsulated the plight of refugees. But this World Refugee Day is an opportunity to reflect on the ways these images don't really to justice to today's realities.

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Burma: Humanitarianism on the rocks?
24 Apr 2008 11:45:00 GMT
Author: Joel Charny

Burma is a place of widespread misery. The indicators are alarming: one in 10 children don't see their fifth birthday, the highest rate outside Africa except for Afghanistan; malaria, a preventable disease, is the country's biggest killer; HIV rates are the highest in Southeast Asia.

Poverty, political persecution and human rights abuses have forced hundreds of thousands to flee their homes. There are an estimated 2 million Burmese in Thailand alone. Thousands of others cross the western border into Bangladesh and India. Although some find their way into refugee camps, the majority live an underground existence due to policies in all these countries aimed at discouraging asylum seekers.

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