The Refugees Among Us

ByABC News
June 19, 2006, 1:07 PM

— -- Fleeing persecution and conflict, often with nothing more than the clothes on their backs, millions of refugees around the world today are separated from all that is familiar, from family, friends, work, community and culture. Faced with an uncertain future in a strange land, their sense of loss and alienation can be overwhelming.

Yet, despite losing just about everything, refugees never lose hope of rebuilding their lives. The fact that they maintain that hope against all odds should be an inspiration to all of us. That's why we at the UN refugee agency have selected hope as the theme for this year's World Refugee Day on June 20.

In more than 100 countries around the world, staff of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees are working to protect, assist and find lasting solutions for nearly 21 million refugees and others of concern. For UNHCR and its partners, there is no more important work than supporting refugees in their courageous struggle to pick up the pieces of their lives and start anew. Over the past 55 years, we have helped more than 50 million people do just that.

The vast majority of them returned to their own, often devastated, homelands. Refugees desperately want to go back home, a sentiment we have seen dramatically played out in places as diverse as Afghanistan and Angola, Kosovo, Sudan and Liberia. Over the past four years, UNHCR has helped more than 6 million refugees go home, contributing to a 31 percent decline in global refugee numbers since 2001.

But what about those who can never go home? What hope do they have for a better future?

For them, we seek one of two solutions: integration in countries of first asylum or, if that is not possible, resettlement to a third country. In both situations, the ultimate aim is to enable refugees to resume their lives, albeit in a new country. This requires real generosity and burden-sharing by asylum countries, often poor themselves, and by the relatively small number of predominantly developed nations that accept the bulk of resettled refugees.