Shelter and services for refugees and displacees
The turmoil of conflict deprives whole populations of their homes,
their livelihood, and their dear ones. The devastation that results is not only
physical but deeply psychological and social as well. A first step to the road
to recovery is refuge and respite from ongoing trauma and destitution. New
refugees fleeing their country en masse, and internally-displaced
persons, need immediate survival support, as well as help to re-build their
shattered lives.
In Tanzania, Jacques Paquette (Canada) recently spent several
months as a UNV Field Officer with the UNHCR Burundi refugee programme in Ngara.
His primary task was to encourage and support the overall coordination with
local authorities and other relief partners involved in the UNHCR Refugee
programme. He was also deeply involved in the continuous preparation work for
the reception of new arrivals., in setting up registration programmes,
monitoring relief administration/distribution activities and control of ration
cards. Keeping relations with the local authorities on an even keel formed part
of his everyday work, along with maintaining professional rapport with other
agencies present in Tanzania and with both the international and local NGO
community. In Liberia, Paul Davis, a UNV specialist from Sierra Leone, has been
working as a UNHCR Field Officer. The operational area for which he has been
responsible lies on the border between Sierra Leone and Liberia. As both
countries are dramatically affected by the war, working conditions are
particularly volatile. While trying to bring malnutrition health hazards and
other related problems under control, with renewed fighting along the border in
Sierra Leone thousands more refugees kept pouring into Liberia and reception
facilities had to be set up to cater for this influx. In November and December
1993 alone, an estimated 8,000 new arrivals poured into this particular border
region.
Paul Davis assessed the need for clinics, wells, sanitation, seeds
and tools and made recommendations to the implementing partners concerned. He
supervises the distribution of food and non-food relief items, ensuring that
they reach the targeted beneficiaries. Monitoring the registration of refugees
and the issuance of ID cards also fell within his working brief. Because the he
is very familiar with the culture of the refugees concerned, he has been
instrumental on several occasions in defusing conflicts between the authorities,
the displaced and refugee communities.
UNV humanitarian relief assignments with UNHCR are usually
field-based, with UNVs often acting as the operational link between refugee
populations and UNHCR administration in the country concerned. Such UNVs assist
with refugee reception, establishment of transit or settlement camps, camp
administration and infrastructure. Direct contact with refugees is usually
required for case assessment and determination of protection issues. UN
Volunteers have now been recruited to assist UNHCR in many countries, for
example in Burundi and Tanzania, in receiving Rwandan refugees.
Togolese refugees sheltered in
Ghana. (Photo: UNV/Caroline Radjabali)
UNVs also work in related technical support to backstop UNHCR
field operations. Mohammad Atique Zaman from Bangladesh recently worked as a UNV
mechanic on UNHCR's vehicle fleets to ensure the successful delivery of vital
emergency relief supplies to displaced populations who had migrated to towns
along the Kenya/Somalia border. Essentially, his work concentrated on four main
areas: mechanics; management of the spare parts depot; training of local staff,
and overseeing the overall running of the vehicle fleets.
Due to the continuing civil war and recent drought in Somalia,
many different Somali clans became refugees in Northern Kenya. In response to
the crisis, UNHCR in 1992/1993 set up reception centres and camps in towns on
both sides of the border such as El Wak, Mandera and Liboi. Rapid availability
of spare parts was an area which the UNV specialist identified as an immediate
problem and he therefore set up several spare parts depots. Furthermore, he
passed on his mechanical skills to twenty local staff. In Liberia, a UNV
specialist from Japan, Keiichi Hara, and one from Ireland, James Shelly, serve
as mechanics in support of the UNOMIL operation. Over the past few years,
mechanics have also played key roles in the mobilisation and maintenance of
convoys in the former Yugoslavia, bringing life-saving supplies to victims on
both sides to the
conflict.