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UNHCR forms partnership to address asylum detention issues

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UNHCR forms partnership to address asylum detention issues

The UN refugee agency and the International Detention Coalition agree to strengthen joint efforts in addressing detention issues faced by asylum-seekers and stateless people.
28 June 2013 Also available in:

GENEVA, June 28 (UNHCR) - The UN refugee agency has signed an agreement with the International Detention Coalition (IDC) to strengthen joint efforts in addressing detention issues faced by asylum-seekers and stateless people. The partnership, signed in Geneva last week, seeks to prevent or reduce the use of detention by governments of people seeking international protection.

Seeking asylum is a basic human and legal right. The 1951 UN Refugee Convention provides that asylum-seekers should not be penalized for their illegal entry or stay, including by way of detention.

"UNHCR is concerned about the treatment of people who are forced to cross international borders in search of safety and end up in detention, often in substandard or prison-like conditions," said Volker Türk, UNHCR's director of international protection.

Under the new agreement, UNHCR and the IDC will work together and with governments to improve detention standards, provide technical cooperation and capacity building to authorities on alternatives to detention, carry out research and monitoring of detention facilities and share information on asylum-related detention and alternatives.

The IDC is a consortium of more than 300 non-governmental organizations working in more than 60 countries to defend the rights of individuals detained in mixed migratory flows, including asylum-seekers, refugees and the stateless.

"The IDC is a valuable partner of UNHCR and we look forward to working with them, together with governments, to provide real alternatives to detention. There are now many good examples of workable alternatives to detention that question the heavy and, in some countries, increasing use of detention," Türk said. He added that detention of refugees, asylum-seekers and stateless people should be avoided, be considered a measure of last resort and only be applied according to international standards of necessity and proportionality.

IDC and UNHCR have been working together in areas of capacity building, technical advice and research in different countries where detention is heavily used for newly arrived asylum-seekers. NGOs, under the IDC umbrella, are working with detained people and on migration related detention issues, sharing resources and information to promote greater respect and protection for the human rights of refugees, asylum-seekers and migrants.

To see the agreement, go to http://www.refworld.org/docid/51b86f344.html