UNHCR trains judges in refugee law in Pakistan



QUETTA, Pakistan, Dec 20 (UNHCR) ­ Jahangir Durrani roamed in front of the
audience like a television host, mixing the serious and the light,
statements and questions, to draw in those seated around the tables
dotting the ballroom.

But the performance of the UNHCR protection officer was not to entertain
the listening judges; he is at the heart of a concerted effort to increase
awareness of refugee law in Pakistan.

Although Pakistan has hosted one of the world's largest refugee
populations for a quarter century, it has never actually joined the 1951
UN convention on refugees and there is relatively little understanding
among law enforcement bodies or the judiciary of refugee law.

"The government of Pakistan has been tolerating refugees and asylum
seekers on its soil, though Pakistan has not ratified the refugee
convention and does not have domestic legislation on asylum," Guenet
Guebre-Christos, UNHCR Representative in Pakistan, said in opening a
two-day training session last week.

"However, there are still instances where asylum seekers and refugees come
into the loop of the criminal justice system," she said. "Under such
circumstances it is vital for each part of the criminal justice system to
understand the dynamics of the refugee phenomenon, the legal framework
available and the obligation to protect and safeguard the rights of
individuals."

The training session in Quetta, which grouped 25 judges from the province
of Balochistan plus an additional 30 lawyers, was part of a systematic
UNHCR programme that has also involved training Pakistani law enforcement
officials and assisting parliamentarians to frame changes to the legal
code.

During 2004, Durrani and other UNHCR staff have conducted training
sessions on human rights ­ especially refugee rights ­ for police
officers, law enforcement academies, non-governmental organisations and
the Karachi office set up by the Pakistani government to deal with
repatriating refugees.

At present, refugees are in an ambiguous situation. Although Pakistan has
accepted the millions of Afghans who flooded in since the Soviet invasion
of Afghanistan in 1979 as prima facie refugees ­ granted refugee status as
a group without individual assessments ­ they don't actually have any
legal standing in the country.

"There is a huge void regarding the legal status of refugees in Pakistan,"
said Durrani, who is based in Islamabad. "There is no provision in the
constitution of Pakistan for refugees and they are viewed as illegal
immigrants according to the laws. The prevailing Foreigners Act contains
some draconian provisions that render the refugee community extremely
vulnerable to police harassment and persecution."

Durrani has worked with a 55-member Parliamentary Commission for Human
Rights, drawn from all parties in the National Assembly and the Senate, to
draft amendments to the current law that has been proposed for debate in
parliament.

The amendments would incorporate a definition of refugees in Pakistani law
for the first time and would exempt asylum seekers from the punitive
provisions of the Foreigners Act. As well as providing protection to
refugees against arbitrary arrest and harassment, changes to the national
law could be a first step toward getting Pakistan to sign the 1951 UN
convention on refugees.

UNHCR knows this is a process that will take time, and has encouraged a
simultaneous focus on trying to get universities to incorporate training
in refugee law in the courses for law degrees.

"All their institutions teach domestic law and hardly touch on
international law," said Durrani, who before joining UNHCR in Islamabad
was a Pakistani police officer who then studied law. "This is despite the
fact that Pakistan is still hosting one of the biggest refugee populations
in the world."

This year UNHCR began assisting the International Islamic University
Islamabad to introduce a course in refugee law as part of its Master of
Law programme.  More than 100 students are now taking the course. Also in
2004, UNHCR signed an agreement with the Allam Iqbal Open University in
Islamabad to help launch a three-month distance- learning certificate
course on refugee law.

To provide more immediate help to refugees in dealing with the law, UNHCR
has been steadily expanding its network of Assistance and Legal Aid
Centres (ALACs)  through Pakistan. Since 2002 they have operated in
Quetta, Peshawar and Islamabad ­ where there are large Afghan populations
­ and the first ALACs in Karachi and Lahore, the country's two largest
cities, will open in 2005.

This intensive work by UNHCR's protection officers in Pakistan has gone on
as the agency continues its voluntary repatriation programme that has
assisted nearly 2.3 million Afghans to return home since the start of
2002.

The programme of training and reform in Pakistan's legal handling of
refugees is working to a long-term agenda. The goal is change that will
have an impact for all refugees, even after the tripartite agreement
between the governments of Pakistan, Afghanistan and UNHCR draws to a
close in 2006.

By Jack Redden
UNHCR Pakistan

Source: UNHCR website (www.unhcr.ch)




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