Rights refused: 5 fundamental needs denied to refugees

Like Jamal, 23, from Somalia, thousands of refugees and migrants face kidnap, slavery, torture or sexual violence in Libya before crossing the Mediterranean. Photo: Pablo Tosco/Oxfam

Like Jamal, 23, from Somalia, thousands of refugees and migrants face kidnap, slavery, torture or sexual violence in Libya before crossing the Mediterranean. Photo: Pablo Tosco/Oxfam

The reality of being a refugee is inconceivable to most of us. All around the world, war, violence, poverty, famine and extreme weather disasters force ordinary people from their homes every day, often facing treacherous journeys before they reach a safe haven.

Families are ripped apart and many end up living in squalid conditions with not enough food, clean water or proper sanitation. Some people spend decades as refugees with no prospect of formal work or a decent education.

All refugees and internally displaced people have the right to receive assistance, the right to protection from abuse and the freedom to seek asylum, regardless of who they are or where they come from.

And yet, their rights are hardly ever respected, and their most essential needs almost never met.

Be protected against violence

Fatana was abducted when Boko Haram burst into her village in the middle of the night and killed her husband.

In the Lake Chad Basin region of West Africa, a violent seven-year conflict originating in Nigeria is causing untold misery and suffering for millions of people, with alarming levels of human rights abuses including killings, torture, abductions, and forced recruitment. Across the region, people are on the move in search of safety and protection, trying to escape threats to their lives.

Women and girls are especially vulnerable. They are subjected to grave violations including forced marriage, sexual violence and exploitation. Since the conflict began, over 2,000 have so far been abducted. In North East Nigeria, nearly one in three women report having experienced sexual violence.

Fatana* (pictured above) was abducted when Boko Haram burst into her village in the middle of the night and killed her husband. She was taken as a sexual and domestic slave, but she managed to escape and arrived at Muna Garage, a displaced people's camp on the outskirts of Maidiguri, home to 20,000 people. (Photo: Pablo Tosco/Oxfam)

Have enough water and food

Nigerian refugees in Sayam Forage, a UN administered refugee camp in Diffa region, south-east Niger. Nigerian refugees in Sayam Forage, a UN administered refugee camp in Diffa region, south-east Niger. It is in the middle of the desert, isolated from the city. Water is scarce, there’s no work or easily accessible market. Photo: Corrie Sissons/Oxfam

Violence and displacement takes a toll on people’s livelihoods. The Lake Chad Basin conflict has caused widespread destruction of vital infrastructure, such as hospitals, schools, roads, markets and farmland. Insecurity is preventing people from farming, fishing and trading across borders. Many farmers have not cultivated their lands for three consecutive years.

The conflict has caused a devastating food and water crisis. More than 10 million people are in need of immediate humanitarian assistance, surviving only on what they can find to eat. The lack of safe water is increasing the threat of cholera and spreading other water-borne diseases such as diarrhoea.

Live in a safe house

Malik, 7, from Raqqa in Syria, stands barefoot amid the mud, in an informal settlement for Syrian refugees in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley.Malik*, 7, from Raqqa in Syria, stands barefoot amid the mud, next to a huge pile of firewood that is used for cooking and heating, in an informal settlement for Syrian refugees near the town of Baalbek in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, January 2016. Photo: Sam Tarling/Oxfam

As the Syrian civil war is in its 7th year, there are currently 1.02 million Syrian refugees in Lebanon according to UNHCR. The Lebanese government is very wary of any formal refugee camps, afraid that people will feel too comfortable and stay indefinitely. Instead of proper and safe shelter, many refugees are forced to live in ‘informal tented settlements’, constantly at risk of eviction by the landowners from whom they rent the land.

Those makeshift settlements - without running water and electricity - are constructed from every scratch of material that could be collected. Sometimes, all that shields refugees from the harsh elements is little more than some sheets of plastic.

Keep family united

South Sudanese refugee Amina and her eldest son Charlie who was missing for 9 months. South Sudanese refugee Amina and her eldest son Charlie* who was missing for 9 months. Photo: Kieran Doherty/Oxfam

Forced displacement drives many families apart, wrenching children from their parents and grandparents, separating siblings, and destroying extended family networks.

Amina lives in the Imvepi refugee settlement, in Uganda. She fled South Sudan when the fighting started in her village, her husband was arrested and six of her family members were killed. Amina first ran to Congo. On the way, she became separated from two of her young children. One was 12 years old and the other was eight.

Upon arriving in Uganda she desperately searched all the reception centres and settlements for them. After nine months, her eldest son turned up in Imvepi, the day before we met her. Her second child was also found safe in a neighbouring town shortly after.

Find a decent job

Ayman and his wife Susan fled Syria with their 3 children after violence broke out in their hometown of Zabadani 6 years ago.

For Syrians seeking refuge in neighbouring countries, the continuous worry of arrest or possible deportation due to the lack of valid residency documents as well as work permits is affecting every aspect of their lives, while the limited access to education is impacting their children’s future.

Ayman (picture above) and his wife Susan fled Syria with their 3 children after violence broke out in their hometown of Zabadani 6 years ago. In Lebanon, the family lives in distress and can hardly make ends meet. Ayman is in a constant search for a job, doing odd jobs here and there, but he is not paid well.

The oldest son, Ahmad, 16, has severe muscular dystrophy and needs special medical care. He has been out of school since he arrived in Lebanon. His sister, Aya, 14, also had to drop out of school as the father was no longer able to afford her education. The family was selected to go to Italy through the Oxfam supported humanitarian visas programme and hopes this opportunity will allow them to live in dignity. (Photo: Pablo Tosco/Oxfam)

* Name changed to protect identity

You can help

Millions of people have fled their homes because of violence, disasters, or in search of a better life. They are in desperate need of assistance, having experienced unimaginable horrors and risked their lives to reach safety.

By donating now, you will support Oxfam’s work with vulnerable communities and help us to protect the lives of people on the move.