Showing posts with label Refugees. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Refugees. Show all posts

Friday, November 30, 2007

Third International Conference on Colombia in Bogota

The third gathering of the International Conference on Colombia is taking place today in Bogota. This conference, established in 2003 at the suggestion of the United Kingdom, aims to create a space for open dialogue between the Colombian government and civil society. This year's conference brings together fifty seven international delegates from 34 countries to discuss humanitarian issues, including poverty, illegal drugs, and the international humanitarian crisis taking place in Colombia.

In anticipation of this conference, earlier in the week I received a report from Refugees International that outlines three key measures recommended to improve conditions of Colombia's internally displaced people. Refugees International will present these recommendations to delegates during the conference.

According to the United Nations, displacement in Colombia remains the largest humanitarian crisis in the Western Hemisphere. For over four decades, millions of Colombians have been forcibly displaced because of violence and conflict. While all of Colombian society is affected, displacement is mainly hitting campesino, indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities living in rural areas. Cities are often the final destination of the displaced, who search for safety through anonymity. Upon arrival the displaced face the grim prospect of being unemployed and becoming dependents on outside assistance. Their future is often one of destitution.

In its December 2007 report, "Striving for Better Days: Improving the Lives of Internally Displaced People in Colombia", Refugees International urges the Government of Colombia to take three concrete steps to address the humanitarian crisis of internal displacement in the country. One of these three steps is a call for the Government of Colombia, "to create durable and sustainable livelihoods for displaced communites". This recommendation especially resonates with me since it ties in with my research of how international organizations can most effectively serve and assist Colombia's internal refugees.

Another interesting point that caught my attention in the report is a comment by Refugees International that, "some of the current handout and welfare-based programs carried out by the [Colombian] government are not financially sustainable, and risk quashing the self-initiative of the displaced."

I know from my research on social enterprises, that financial sustainability and self-empowerment are critical for a project's success. Delancey Street Foundation in San Francisco, one of the most successful residential drug rehabilitation programs in the United States, provides a strong example: its success is a result of financial sustainability derived from its seven for-profit businesses, as well as a "staff" made up entirely by the residents it exists to help.

In its report, Refugees International suggests that
"The government of Colombia should redesign programs to invest in income generating activities and vocational training courses to provide skills required by the urban labor market. And, [international] donors must evaluate current interventions in skill training and income generation to offer sustainable livelihoods for displaced households."
When you teach someone to fish, rather than giving a hand-out, you empower them and give them back their dignity. With the millions of displaced people in Colombia, the only sustainable way to improve conditions and to alleviate dependence on outside assistance in the long run is to teach the displaced how to fish.

A vocational training/business model like Delancey Street, combined with access to technology, would greatly benefit internally displaced people in Colombia and provide them with the tools and knowledge needed to play a more active role in an urban, globalized economy.

Aside from this, it seems evident that the only other way to assist displaced people in Colombia is to focus also on the root cause of why they are being displaced in the first place. But I'll save - that - topic for another post.

Today's international conference in Bogota is a positive step, since it keeps Colombia's often overlooked humanitarian crisis of internal refugees on the world's stage.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Invisible Refugees: Colombia


"Internally displaced people in Colombia are subjects of one of, if not the worst humanitarian crisis in the western hemisphere,” and yet they remain “invisible, not only internationally, but even in Bogotá.”
- Kamel Morjane, Assistant United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, 2004

I just learned this past weekend about an amazing organization in Colombia that is working to empower the country's internally displaced people. Fusion Colombia, founded in 2004 by Matthew Alexander, works to alleviate poverty, protect human rights, and promote self-sufficiency among internal refugee communities. Fusion's projects center around education and outreach, job training, and small business development programs.

In the past year, Fusion Colombia reports that it "has implemented projects with partners such as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, the Tejaditos Foundation, and SENA (the Colombian government’s job-training agency). Fusion Colombia currently sits on the United Nations’ Humanitarian Committee of Southern Bogotá and Soacha, where it coordinates humanitarian and development activities with other organizations, local governmental agencies and the United Nations."

As noted by Kamel Morjane, Assistant UNHCR in 2004, Colombia's humanitarian crisis has gone largely unnoticed on the world's stage. As a result of the country's on-going 40 year civil war, there are now more than three million internally displaced people. Even in the capital city of Bogota, these refugee communities "remain [largely] invisible". Fusion strives to bring attention to the plight of these people and their communities.

According to Fusion, the majority of Colombia’s internally displaced persons are poor farmers who have been forced from their homes by right wing paramilitaries or leftist guerrilla groups that battle over Colombia’s resource-rich land. Displaced Colombians typically seek refuge from armed actors in the slums of urban centers, Bogotá being the most popular.

Tragically, most displaced persons living in the cities of Colombia face dire socioeconomic conditions and discrimination in employment, housing, and social services. Although 80% of displaced persons are from rural areas, once they arrive in Bogotá they intend to reside there on a permanent basis. The majority of these displaced people arrive with generally non-transferable job skills, so there is an overwhelming need for the integration services that Fusion provides.

Some alarming statistics in Colombia include:

  • 92 percent of internally displaced persons in Colombia do not make enough money to meet their basic needs and 80 percent live in situations of extreme poverty. (World Food Program, 2003)
  • For the last six years, internal displacement in Colombia has been voted one of the top ten most underreported humanitarian crises in the world by medical relief organization, Doctors without Borders.
  • In the first eight months of 2005, more than 143 youth under the age of twenty were killed by guerrillas or paramilitaries in Ciudad Bolivar, a neighborhood in Bogotá where many internally displaced persons reside.
Colombia is a beautiful, diverse country. It's tragic that there is so little media attention given to the plight of its internal refugees. I hope that soon this trend will change, and dream of the day when each of these refugees will be able to take a more active part on their own to generate awareness about their situation. Maybe through videoblogs, community portals, or their own media stations? With today's new web technologies, these are no longer such outlandish thoughts. And one day, I am certain they will have access to these tools, thereby making these dreams possible.

The good news is that organizations like Fusion Colombia exist now to serve these refugee communities and to bring more awareness about their plight. The educational and training support that Fusion provides to internally displaced communities is critical to the community's ability to help themselves out of poverty and to rebuild their lives.

To learn more about how to help Colombia's internally displaced refugees, please visit Fusion.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

FORGE

“If we all did the things we are capable of doing, we would literally astound ourselves.” - Thomas Edison

One of the most inspiring individuals I have come across in my research of socially driven people and organizations is 24 year old, Kjerstin Erickson, Stanford University student and founder of FORGE, an organization in Zambia that helps 60,000 refugees build better lives.

Kjerstin was 20 years old when she launched FORGE, without a business plan, connections, a revenue plan, or a penny. She mentioned that the only thing she knew for sure was how she wanted the world to look. She had an idea of how to get there, and says that this idea has been ever evolving and improving.

Her story is astounding, and so incredibly inspiring.