• Text size Normal size text | Increase text size by 10% | Increase text size by 20% | Increase text size by 30%

Q&A: OAU Convention remains a key plank of refugee protection in Africa after 40 years

News Stories, 9 September 2009

© UNHCR/S.Hopper
George Okoth-Obbo, Director UNHCR Africa Bureau

GENEVA, September 9 (UNHCR) Exactly 40 years ago this Thursday, member states of the Organization of African Unity (OAU), since renamed the African Union, adopted landmark legislation on refugees. Adopted in a context of decolonization struggles across the continent, the 1969 OAU Refugee Convention is considered the most generous and flexible international agreement on refugee protection. UNHCR Africa Bureau Director George Okoth-Obbo, in written responses to questions from Communications Officer Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba, discusses the key piece of legislation amid growing forced displacement challenges across Africa. Excerpts:

Why is the Convention hailed as a landmark achievement?

First and foremost, the 1969 OAU Convention set down a basis for refugee jurisprudence and practice in Africa to develop in a predictable and asylum-friendly manner. Secondly, in doing so, the Convention cemented in Africa the international refugee framework represented by the 1951 [UN Refugee} Convention, which it incorporated both substantively and in mandating wholesome collaboration with the machinery of enforcement set down in that Convention.

Thirdly, not only did the 1969 Convention thus affirm international refugee law, it also separately made an important contribution to its progressive development. Its most celebrated feature in this respect is the expanded refugee definition. The Convention was, however, also the first international refugee instrument that elaborated the principles relating to voluntary repatriation. It also defined features of international solidarity and burden-sharing in the protection domain that, by comparison, were not fleshed out at all in the 1951 Convention.

Fourthly, the Convention represented a successful battle against a trend that was pulling strongly for a heavily securitarized concept of refugee law in Africa. It reinforced the character of asylum and refugee protection as quintessentially humanitarian, friendly and law-based. Finally, the Convention set down principles which were specific to Africa, including additional exclusion clauses and the prohibition of so-called "subversive activities" within the refugee and asylum context. Some of these provisions have been criticised, but they were necessary.

Who does it protect?

The Convention is a framework for the protection of people who are refugees, according to the definition of a refugee contained in that instrument. The second part of that definition is widely viewed as having been elaborated to cover so-called "massive refugee situations." While strictly speaking this is not correct, it is true that the language of the Convention, and the interpretation which has been placed on it in practice, are much more accommodating of large-scale refugee situations than similar interpretations that have taken root around the 1951 Convention. The 1969 Convention has thus enabled millions of people in need of protection to be covered and helped with greater legal and operational facility in Africa and other parts of the world, where the Convention has inspired similar legal developments or applications of refugee law.

Some refugees in Africa still face problems in host countries. Doesn't the Convention guarantee refugees and asylum seekers basic rights?

Not only the 1969 OAU Convention, but also other regional human rights instruments, such as the African Charter on Human and Peoples Rights, and international conventions provide a full spectrum of refugee protection rights and obligations. However, there have been and continue to be failures of protection of these rights, even though several countries have over the decades demonstrated a solid record of protecting, assisting and finding solutions for hundreds of thousands of refugees.

The failures cannot, in my view, be put at the door of the 1969 Convention itself. Derelict state behaviour is usually the problem, even if there are also cases in which the inability or failure of refugees to access their full legal rights is due to objective, material, social, economic or political factors. National security interests have always been the source of countervailing pressures, and in some instances have grown even worse. However, there is really no evidence to support the contention that refugees are an inherent source of risk to the security of a host state or population. On the contrary, strict adherence to the essential refugee law principles, such as those contained in the OAU Convention, is often an important step in deterring any abuse or misuse of refugee status and the asylum system.

Who protects the growing number of internally displaced Africans?

People forcibly displaced internally by conflict or other factors, of which climate change is emerging as an eminent threat, are the most obvious example of a group that is not protected under the 1969 Convention . . . The primary responsibility is that of states themselves, to ensure that their nationals are protected at home or in second or third countries in which they are forced to seek safety. The international community, often acting through the United Nations, also has important responsibilities. For example, UNHCR, working with sister agencies under the so-called "cluster approach," is involved in protecting and providing assistance to an ever increasing number of internally displaced people (IDP) in Africa. A special summit of the African Union next month in the Ugandan capital of Kampala is expected to adopt a regional convention on internal displacement.

What difference will the new Convention make?

This Convention, the first of its kind in the world, should help systematize the humanitarian responses being delivered for internally displaced people at all levels on the continent. In this context, it is critical that the Convention elaborates the primary obligations of states, ranging from the responsibility to prevent displacement itself to responses which should be activated when and where displacement takes place. The substantive content of the Convention, in terms of applicable standards, rights and responsibilities, is derived from the UN Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, so the Convention will also play a key role in upgrading those principles from their status as "soft law" to conventionally binding obligations.

The role of humanitarian players such as UNHCR, which is mentioned in the draft text, is also a key feature of the Convention . . . This has often been a point of contention in the past, as it involves matters of national sovereignty. UNHCR and other humanitarian actors thus look forward very much to this Convention coming into force.

If the Convention on Internal Displacement is never needed because people are not forcibly displaced in the first instance, that will be the greatest and most important difference for the people of Africa that this Convention could ever bring.

• DONATE NOW • • GET INVOLVED • • STAY INFORMED •

 

Internally Displaced People

The internally displaced seek safety in other parts of their country, where they need help.

Related Internet Links

UNHCR is not responsible for the content and availability of external internet sites

South Africa: Searching for Coexistence

South Africa is one of the few countries in Africa where registered refugees and asylum-seekers can legally move about freely, access social services and compete with locals for jobs.

But while these right are enshrined in law, in practice they are sometimes ignored and refugees and asylum-seekers often find themselves turned away by employers or competing with the poorest locals for the worst jobs - especially in the last few years, as millions have fled political and economic woes in countries like Zimbabwe. The global economic downturn has not helped.

Over the last decade, when times turned tough, refugees in towns and cities sometimes became the target of the frustrations of locals. In May 2008, xenophobic violence erupted in Johannesburg and quickly spread to other parts of the country, killing more than 60 people and displacing about 100,000 others.

In Atteridgeville, on the edge of the capital city of Pretoria - and site of some of the worst violence - South African and Somali traders, assisted by UNHCR, negotiated a detailed agreement to settle the original trade dispute that led to the torching of Somali-run shops. The UN refugee agency also supports work by the Nelson Mandela Foundation to counter xenophobia.

South Africa: Searching for Coexistence

Sri Lanka: IDPs and Returnees

During Sri Lanka's 20-year civil war more than 1 million people were uprooted from their homes or forced to flee, often repeatedly. Many found shelter in UNHCR-supported Open Relief Centers, in government welfare centers or with relatives and friends.

In February 2002, the Sri Lankan government and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) signed a cease-fire accord and began a series of talks aimed at negotiating a lasting peace. By late 2003, more than 300,000 internally displaced persons had returned to their often destroyed towns and villages.

In the midst of these returns, UNHCR provided physical and legal protection to war affected civilians – along with financing a range of special projects to provide new temporary shelter, health and sanitation facilities, various community services, and quick and cheap income generation projects.

Sri Lanka: IDPs and Returnees

Photo Gallery: The Challenge of Forced Displacement in Africa

Africa is the continent most affected by the tragedy of forced displacement. While millions of refugees were able to return to Angola, Burundi, Liberia, Rwanda and South Sudan over the last 15 years, the numbers of internally displaced people continued to grow. At the beginning of 2009, in addition to some 2.3 million refugees, an estimated 11.6 million people were internally displaced by conflict in Africa.

To address forced displacement on the continent, the African Union is organizing a special summit on refugees, returnees and internally displaced people from October 19-23 in the Ugandan capital, Kampala. Heads of state and government will look at the challenges and at ways to find solutions to forced displacement. They are also expected to adopt a Convention for the protection and assistance of internally displaced people (IDP) in Africa, which would be the first legally binding instrument on internal displacement with a continental scope. This photo gallery looks at some of the forcibly displaced around Africa, many of whom are helped by UNHCR.

Photo Gallery: The Challenge of Forced Displacement in Africa

ExCom: Angelina Jolie Addresses Annual MeetingPlay video

ExCom: Angelina Jolie Addresses Annual Meeting

UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie, in a speech to UNHCR's governing Executive Committee, appeals for a stepped-up response to the crisis in the Horn of Africa.
Malta: Angelina Jolie meets asylum seekersPlay video

Malta: Angelina Jolie meets asylum seekers

UNHCR Goodwill Ambassador Angelina Jolie visits an old air force base on Malata and talks to asylum-seekers who have fled North Africa.
Italy: Surviving the High SeasPlay video

Italy: Surviving the High Seas

Thousands have risked their lives to make the sea crossing from western Libya Africa to Italy's tiny Lampedusa Island. Not everyone makes it. Here are some of the survivors.