4.4. Environmental Impact of Refugees in Africa: Some Suggestions for Future Actions (Oweyegha-Afunaduula, University of Makerere-Kampala)
Perceptions of the term «environment» differ from one
society to another. For the vast majority of Africans, particularly the very
poor, it is a question of survival. In fact it is a development tool.
Environment should be viewed as consisting of three dimensions: the
ecological/biological; the socio-cultural; and, the socio-economic. All the
problems, issues and challenges of environment and development can be assigned
to these dimensions.
One of the major problems of environment and development which
is also a most glaring indication of environmental and developmental failure in
our time is the refugee malaise in Africa. To be a refugee is to experience a
particularly degrading form of poverty. A refugee typically lacks economic
resources, has been deprived of national identity, and his very right to exist
is called into question. There are far more internal refugees than cross-border
(external) refugees in Africa. Unfortunately excessive attention has been
focused on cross-border refugees at the expense of internal refugees. The issue
of the impact of internal refugees on the environment has not received the
attention it deserves. Neither has that of large concentrations of cross-border
refugees upon rural resources. Yet people forced to move find themselves in
complex and intricate environmental linkages that are increasingly threatening
to squeeze them out of existence. Perhaps no people in Africa illustrate this
better than the Rwandese.
Several factors are responsible for the generation of the
environmental refugee malaise in Africa. These include historical and
socio-political factors; huge capital-intensive development projects; disasters
such as war, drought, famine and earthquakes; desertification; floods;
establishment of reserves and national parks; ill-advised economic policies and
despotic regimes.
New perceptions, thinking and policies that are people-centred,
anticipatory and problem-oriented, and that reflect historical and
socio-political realities in Africa are required urgently. The alternative is
escalating environmental and developmental crises despite huge inflows of
resources to redress them.
In this paper, we examine the environmental refugee malaise in
Africa with specific reference to the Rwandese debacle and its impact on the
environment. Problems, issues and challenges are identified including ecological
stress and political conflicts, and some suggestions for action are given. We
conclude that the people of Africa themselves be empowered to deal with the
refugee problem with backup assistance from the humanitarian community as a
first step towards preventing refugee impacts on the
environment.