GENEVA The UN refugee agency, UNHCR, announced Thursday a set of specific proposals to governments reviewing asylum systems from a security point of view after the September 11 attacks in the United States.
UNHCR said it recognized that "appropriate mechanisms need to be put in place in the field of asylum as in other areas." At the same time, the agency said it is concerned that, in the process of adopting new measures to combat terrorism, governments should make extra efforts to take into account the safeguards that are already built into the 1951 Refugee Convention and other areas of international refugee law.
"The international refugee instruments do not provide a safe haven to terrorists and do not protect them from criminal prosecution," UNHCR said. "On the contrary, they render the identification of persons engaged in terrorist activities possible and necessary, foresee their exclusion from refugee status and do not shield them against either criminal prosecution or expulsion."
In the course of having an asylum claim processed, an asylum-seeker already undergoes much more stringent scrutiny into his or her background than most other international travellers - such as businessmen, tourists or students.
The 1951 Refugee Convention already contains so-called "exclusion clauses", which deny asylum to people who have committed particularly serious crimes. UNHCR has stressed that the Convention also allows states, as a last resort, to expel individuals who have claimed asylum - or have already been recognized as refugees - if they present a genuine threat to national security.
UNHCR is particularly concerned that legislation currently being proposed be framed so as not to have negative repercussions on innocent refugees. This could, for instance, occur if new measures were to deny them access to asylum systems altogether, or if there were insufficient safeguards to ensure that asylum-seekers are not expelled before their asylum claims have been properly examined.
UNHCR's view is that it is much better for all concerned - including refugees and law enforcement agencies - to deal with all asylum claims within the clearly defined international legal framework that already exists, while at the same time tightening any loopholes in national asylum practices that could conceivably be exploited by a terrorist.
UNHCR has circulated a number of concrete suggestions to governments which it believes could help them identify and deal with any terrorist who might attempt to enter a country via the asylum system. Suggestions include:
Story date: 6 December 2001
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