At a time when Latin America becomes the epicentre of COVID-19 and millions of people are confined within their homes, UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, brings World Refugee Day to everyone’s screens in Belize. Jointly with the Department of Youth Services (DYS), UNHCR hosted “A Taste of Central America”, a cooking show featuring a Salvadoran refugee, who tells the world about the stark choices people like her face to save their lives.
“Refugees are forced to leave their home countries as they fear for their lives due to persecution and violence; however, they take their diverse skills and knowledge to enrich the communities who offer them protection,” mentioned Andreas Wissner, Head of Office in UNHCR Belize.
The cooking show can be found on the Department of Youth Services Facebook Page.
The commemoration of World Refugee Day comes at the announcement of a record high of forcibly displaced people worldwide. With a figure of 79.5 million uprooted people until the end of 2019, UNHCR’s annual Global Trends report has shown that forced displacement is affecting over one percent of humanity – 1 in every 97 people. With little chances of them being able to return to their homes.
Central America is no stranger to this situation. Some 790,000 people from northern Central America – Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala – have fled brutal gang violence and persecution, 470,000 across borders. Some 3,000 of them are hosted by Belize.
UNHCR calls upon the world to provide safety for millions of refugees and others displaced by conflict. “I call for greater global solidarity and action to include and support refugees, internally displaced and stateless people as well as their hosts,” Filippo Grandi, UN High Commissioner for Refugees in his remarks on World Refugee Day. “Whoever you are. No matter where you come from. Every one of us can make a difference. Every action truly counts.”
2020 World Refugee Day Statement by UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi
Everyone Can Make a Difference, Every Action Counts
We are marking this year’s World Refugee Day against a backdrop of a dramatic global crisis. Not only are record numbers of people forced to flee their homes – but the world is grappling with COVID-19; a disease that is still very much affecting us all. What started as a health crisis has expanded, and today many of the most vulnerable – refugees and the displaced amongst them – face a pandemic of poverty.
Yet, throughout this challenging time, we have also seen a connectedness that transcends borders. Ordinary people have stepped up to help. Host communities – especially those in low-and middle-income countries where nearly 90 percent of the world’s refugees live – have continued to demonstrate a remarkable welcome.
And refugees themselves are also contributing in significant ways, despite often living in extremely vulnerable conditions. They are, for example, volunteering as front line health workers in Colombia and the United Kingdom; making soap for distribution in Lebanon and
Niger; sewing masks and protective gear in Iran; helping construct isolation centers in Bangladesh; and elsewhere around the world, they are contributing time to help the needy in their host communities.
As we battle COVID-19, I draw inspiration from the resilience refugees have shown in overcoming their own crisis of displacement and dispossession; their separation from home and family; and their determination to improve their own and others’ lives, despite these and other hardships.
On World Refugee Day, I salute and celebrate the fortitude of refugees and displaced people around the world. I also pay tribute to the communities that shelter them and that have demonstrated the universally shared values and principles of compassion and humanity. They have sometimes hosted and protected refugees for years or even generations, and continuing to uphold these values in a time of pandemic is a powerful message of hope and solidarity.
UNHCR is no stranger to challenges. For over 70 years we have been on the frontlines of countless emergencies. Yet this global pandemic is of an entirely new magnitude. Our priority has been and will be, to stay and deliver for the refugees, internally displaced and stateless people we are mandated to protect. But we can’t do it alone.
Mobilizing help and support to prepare and respond to the pandemic has been vital in the past months. And we have seen how countries and communities around the world have included refugees in their own national health responses. It is now equally critical to secure refugees’ and displaced persons’ inclusion in the much-needed socio-economic response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Global Compact on Refugees has laid a strong foundation for this response. We have already seen it in action as bilateral donors, international financial institutions, and the private sector have responded to this crisis with unprecedented levels to support refugees through host governments. Such support must continue and be redoubled so that they have the resources necessary to include refugees and displaced people and ensure that economic and social disparities do not lead to rifts within and between communities. More must also be invested in countries of origin to make the return of refugees a viable option.
On this World Refugee Day, I call for greater global solidarity and action to include and support refugees, internally displaced and stateless people as well as their hosts.
Whoever you are. No matter where you come from. Every one of us can make a difference.
Every action truly counts.