Disabilities among Refugees and Conflict-affected Populations
Ambassador Jean Kennedy Smith, a longtime advocate for people with disabilities, hosted the launch of the Women's Commission’s report.
Women's Commission for Refugee Women and Children releases the first major report to address the critical needs of this all-but invisible population
The Women's Commission has released the first major report to address the
critical needs of refugees and people displaced within their own countries
who suffer from physical, sensory or mental disabilities.
The World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that between 7 and 10 percent
of the world's population lives with disabilities. It can therefore be calculated
that between 2.5 and 3.5 million of the world's 35 million displaced people
are disabled. In fact, the number of people living with disabilities may be
even higher among those who have fled civil conflict, war or natural disasters.
Yet sadly, people with disabilities remain among the most hidden, neglected
and socially excluded of any population in the world today. They are often
not counted in refugee registration drives or identified in data collection.
Because of physical and social barriers, they are unable to access mainstream
assistance programs offered to other refugees. Their potential is seldom recognized.
They are often seen as a problem for their families and communities, rather
than a resource. What’s more, the loss of traditional caregivers—extended
families, neighbors—during displacement can leave them extremely vulnerable.
Report finds serious problems, and some bright spots
The report “Disabilities
among Refugees and Conflict-Affected Populations” is the
culmination of a six-month project led by the Women’s Commission and
co-funded by the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). It
is based on fact-finding missions in Ecuador, Yemen, Jordan, Thailand and
Nepal (as well as significant field input from Darfur and Kenya), interviews
with United Nations agencies and local organizations in refugee settings,
and focus group discussions with refugees and others uprooted from their homes.
The situation of Colombian, Somali, Iraqi, Burmese, Bhutanese and Sudanese
populations was studied in refugee camps and urban environments, in both emergency
and protracted situations, with a particular focus on women, children and
adolescents.
The report notes serious problems with the physical layout and infrastructure
of the camps—few services are accessible to people with disabilities,
including toilets, shelters and health facilities. In general, no special
accommodations are made for getting food and other supplies that refugees
with disabilities need on a daily basis. Many are housebound, rarely leaving
their shelters. Not surprisingly, their voices go unheard in decision-making
activities for their communities.
“Disabilities among Refugees and Conflict-Affected Populations”
also reveals a disparity between refugee camps and urban areas: in camps there
is a greater awareness about the needs of the disabled and better services
than in urban environments, where refugees with disabilities are unable to
access services offered by the host government and virtually no one is providing
special assistance to them. The Women’s Commission also found greater
discrimination and stigmatization towards the mentally disabled population;
assistance programs, when available, tend to focus on those with physical
and sensory disabilities.
Yet, key findings also include a few positive developments, in particular with regard to children in refugee camps. Many children with disabilities are attending primary schools, some of which have special education teachers. For the parents of the disabled, some camps offer support groups as well as home visits for instruction in sign language, Braille and rehabilitative exercises.
Resource kit for humanitarian workers
To reinforce the report’s findings and improve protection and services
for refugees with disabilities, the Women’s Commission has created a
resource kit to provide
practical guidance for UNHCR and humanitarian agency field staff. Major recommendations
include making refugee camps accessible to people with disabilities and ensuring
that they have full and equal access to the mainstream services that other
refugees receive.
Media coverage
Read "Displaced, disabled, and in need of our care," a June 25 op-ed by Jean Kennedy Smith in the Boston Globe.
CNN International’s “Inside Africa” featured highlights from the Women’s Commission’s new Refugees with Disabilities report and an interview with Abdi Salah, a Somalian refugee who lived with a disability in Kenyan camps.
Additional media coverage can be found here.
