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Global Gains: How Welcoming Refugees Benefits Us All

Saturday, June 21, 2025 | 8:01 PM WIB | 0 Views Last Updated 2025-06-30T16:22:31Z
Gambar terkait Refugee inclusion benefits everyone (dari Bing) 
The headlines surrounding refugees over the past year have been increasingly bleak. The war in Sudan, now in its third year, continues to rage.

It has led to the largest displacement crisis in the world, with over 4 million people seeking safety in neighbouring countries. The conflict in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo has sent more than 140,000 people fleeing across borders since the start of this year. And as violence flares up in South Sudan, thousands more are threatened with exile.

At the same time the region faces a humanitarian funding crisis not experienced in recent memory. International support – once assumed – is now uncertain. Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia and several other countries that have long kept their doors open to refugees -- are left wondering if they have been left to shoulder the responsibility alone.

Read: Sun sets on refugees in Uganda, Kenya as UN body runs out of food and cashThe foundation of international responsibility sharing is fraying. You might think this is no time to mark World Refugee Day: that there’s nothing to commemorate. But I would argue that now is exactly the time to commemorate. To honour the daily act of enduring, with dignity, when there is no other choice. To stand in solidarity with refugees, and the communities and countries that host them.

There are 5.7 million refugees in the East and Horn of Africa and the Great Lakes. They arrive with nothing but the clothes on their backs, and yet they bring everything: skills, hopes and dreams, resolve.

When given the chance – safety and security, a place to sleep, a document to show who they are, the right to work or study – they begin again. Refugees and others forcibly displaced don’t just rebuild their own lives; they enrich the communities that welcome them. Markets grow, classrooms diversify, services expand.

Evidence shows that refugees who are included become neighbours, co-workers, caregivers, employers – people who give back, often many times over.

Read: Sudan bloodshed sparks the worst refugee surge in East AfricaThis is solidarity. And it matters now more than ever - precisely because the world seems to be retreating from finding solutions for what feels like an intractable problem.

With more than 123 million forcibly displaced in the world, one out of 67 people globally, one out of 18 in the region, forced displacement is no longer an emergency. It is the status quo.

Yet, despite the many challenges they face, countries in this region continue to demonstrate great generosity by welcoming refugees. Kenya has launched the Shirika Plan – turning refugee camps into municipalities, where both refugees and their hosts can thrive in a dignified and shared space.

Read: Kenya’s pledge to integrate refugees with locals meets complaints, hostilityUganda, which hosts almost 2 million refugees, keeps its doors open, maintaining its progressive policies. Ethiopia, where I recently attended the High-Level Dialogue on Advancing Refugee Inclusion with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees Filippo Grandi, as well as Rwanda and Djibouti, are advancing inclusive policies, from digital documentation, education, livelihoods to healthcare. Policies that send a clear message: inclusion is not only possible, but benefits everyone.

We see commitments from development partners such as the World Bank, the African Development Bank, and the European Union providing increased support towards medium and longer-term solutions from the start of emergencies.

Over the past year, new sites were established in Ethiopia and South Sudan, where refugees and host communities live together, sharing public services. This replaces the old model of separate, costly refugee camps and helps build stronger, more connected communities.

Private-sector partnerships are growing as well, such as with the Mastercard Foundation, which recently announced significant investments in refugee-hosting areas in areas of education and livelihoods, focused on building better futures for young people.

The best solution to displacement remains peace – the chance to return home. But peace is elusive, and for most, that hope is out of reach.

In places like South Sudan, we strive to help refugees who have made the difficult choice to go home on their own. In Burundi, we have been able to facilitate voluntary returns. Elsewhere in the region, however, going home remains a dream postponed by conflict and uncertainty.

Read: Over 130,000 newly displaced in Congo’s North Kivu Province: UNShowing solidarity with refugees by ensuring they have access to life-saving assistance, opportunities for self-reliance, and a pathway to solutions is crucial to the security and stability of the region, and beyond. We must continue to invest in resilience, in coexistence, in the long road towards solutions.

This region has a long, proud tradition of standing by our African brothers and sisters who have been forced to flee – a tradition that I hold with great pride. Here, solidarity is more than a sentimental slogan; it is a responsibility carried out with pronounced commitment.

So, this World Refugee Day let’s be clear: Solidarity with refugees is not just compassion. It is the thread that holds us all together.

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