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UNHCR opens information centre for Colombians on Ecuador border

News Stories, 26 May 2008

© UNHCR/B.Heger
Colombian refugees wait for information and guidance in Ecuador’s northern border region.

TULCAN, Ecuador, May 26 (UNHCR) The UN refugee agency, in cooperation with the Ecuadorean authorities, has opened an information centre on a key border crossing point to inform Colombian refugees and migrants about their rights while in Ecuador.

During Thursday's opening ceremony at Rumichaca International Bridge, which links south-west Colombia and northern Ecuador on the Pan-American Highway, Pedro Velasco, mayor of the nearby city of Tulcan, said the information centre would allow UNHCR and the government to help those Colombians who needed it most.

"Thousands of people cross this border every year, fleeing from the internal conflict in neighbouring Colombia. We want to be the first to provide guidance and support to these victims who arrive in dire need of help and solidarity," Velasco said.

The bridge is the major crossing point between Ecuador's Carchi province and Colombia's volatile Nariño department. Every year, an estimated 150,000 people use it to cross into Ecuador, including migrants and refugees fleeing violence and persecution in Colombia.

Many of the latter may not know that they can apply for asylum in Ecuador, but the information centre will provide them with information about their rights, including the right to apply for asylum.

"The main problems are lack of knowledge about the existence of an asylum system, people's fear of coming forward, or the concentration of refugees in isolated areas where services and information are scarce or non-existent," noted Marta Juárez, UNHCR's representative in Ecuador. She added that while there are an estimated 180,000 Colombians in Ecuador who have fled their own country, only 16,000 have been formally granted refugee status.

Juárez was among guests at the opening of the information centre, located in premises formerly used by Ecuador customs officers. UNHCR will provide printed information material and audio-visual equipment for the office, which will be manned by two municipal employees trained in international refugee law and related subjects.

Several Colombian refugees also attended the ceremony. They included José, who has been living in Tulcan for the past three years. "This will be a great opportunity for people who arrive from now on because they will be able to know about the possibilities that Ecuador offers," he said, adding: "They will be able to learn that it is possible to request asylum in this country where I have found freedom and optimism."

Susana, who arrived in Tulcan a year ago and has since been recognized as a refugee, also welcomed the opening of the centre, saying it would help other people to gain refugee status. "Thanks to the refugee visa and to the goodwill of the Ecuadorean government, my two children and I know that we are safe."

By Andrea Escalante and Xavier Orellana in Tulcan, Ecuador

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UNHCR country pages

Colombia: Life in the Barrios

After more than forty years of internal armed conflict, Colombia has one of the largest populations of internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the world. Well over two million people have been forced to flee their homes; many of them have left remote rural areas to take refuge in the relative safety of the cities.

Displaced families often end up living in slum areas on the outskirts of the big cities, where they lack even the most basic services. Just outside Bogota, tens of thousands of displaced people live in the shantytowns of Altos de Cazuca and Altos de Florida, with little access to health, education or decent housing. Security is a problem too, with irregular armed groups and gangs controlling the shantytowns, often targeting young people.

UNHCR is working with the authorities in ten locations across Colombia to ensure that the rights of internally displaced people are fully respected – including the rights to basic services, health and education, as well as security.

Colombia: Life in the Barrios

Indigenous people in Colombia

There are about a million indigenous people in Colombia. They belong to 80 different groups and make up one of the world's most diverse indigenous heritages. But the internal armed conflict is taking its toll on them.

Like many Colombians, indigenous people often have no choice but to flee their lands to escape violence. Forced displacement is especially tragic for them because they have extremely strong links to their ancestral lands. Often their economic, social and cultural survival depends on keeping these links alive.

According to Colombia's national indigenous association ONIC, 18 of the smaller groups are at risk of disappearing. UNHCR is working with them to support their struggle to stay on their territories or to rebuild their lives when they are forced to flee.

UNHCR also assists indigenous refugees in neighbouring countries like Panama, Ecuador, Venezuela and Brazil. UNHCR is developing a regional strategy to better address the specific needs of indigenous people during exile.

Indigenous people in Colombia

Panama's Hidden Refugees

Colombia's armed conflict has forced millions of people to flee their homes, including hundreds of thousands who have sought refuge in other countries in the region.

Along the border with Colombia, Panama's Darien region is a thick and inhospitable jungle accessible only by boat. Yet many Colombians have taken refuge here after fleeing the irregular armed groups who control large parts of jungle territory on the other side of the border.

Many of the families sheltering in the Darien are from Colombia's ethnic minorities – indigenous or Afro-Colombians – who have been particularly badly hit by the conflict and forcibly displaced in large numbers. In recent years, there has also been an increase in the numbers of Colombians arriving in the capital, Panama City.

There are an estimated 12,500 Colombians of concern to UNHCR in Panama, but many prefer not to make themselves known to authorities and remain in hiding. This "hidden population" is one of the biggest challenges facing UNHCR not only in Panama but also in Ecuador and Venezuela.

Panama's Hidden Refugees

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