Every human being has a special attachment to his motherland.
He wants to live and grow old among his family and friends and in the place
where he is born. Though migration has its own benefits however it looks very
painful for a person to leave his home whether under duress, coercion, economic
compulsion or political reasons. To become a refugee means to lose your identity
as a citizen and then turning into a rolling stone with no destination to reach.
The lives of refugees in the current world of economic constraints and social
distress are unbearable and dejecting. The pain of separation from their
families and friends is unspeakable. The voices for the rights of refugees are
getting slower and dim. The world conscience has to rise up to the agonies of
millions of refugees across the world. There was a time when majority of states
who were signatories to the 1951 Refugee Convention took great steps to ensure
the refugees their due rights and status, but nowadays almost all are restricted
to only Twitter, Facebook and video conferences to chant slogans for the rights
of migrants. No practical work is done to solve their problems. Many countries,
including the United States, claim sympathies to refugees, but their policies
are such to discourage permanent resettlement. This indifferent attitude has
added to the problems of refugees. Thousands of people around the world die
after being granted refugee status by the UNHCR in the hope of resettlement in a
country where their lives would be safe and would not be persecuted on
religious, ethnic and linguistic grounds. Historically, the United States was
the biggest supporter of the resettlement of refugees however it has failed to
resettle even a single refugee after the Trump regime took over the White House.
The so-called international community and advocates of human rights including
Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and many more European countries with few
exceptions also followed US footsteps and have adopted policies that have
practically made it impossible for refugees to look for peaceful lives in their
countries.The irony for refugees fleeing from war torn areas in Muslim countries
would not be recognized as refugees with equal human rights. Moreover, some
Muslim countries even imposed more strict legislations trying to get cross the
borders to brotherly Muslim countries such as Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait,
Bahrain, Qatar, Malaysia, Brunei, Muscat, Turkey and Morocco. Every year on June
20, International Refugee Day is celebrated with tall claims and commitment to
the refugee’s convention but seldom has been witnessed where words are turned in
to reality. Countries that signed the 1951 Refugee Convention avoid reporting
their progress each year on the number of Refugees resettled. It is like time
has just stopped for the refugees and they are caught in between vicious time
cycle. The democratic countries should play their role in the welfare of
refugees, securing their future and enabling an environment feasible for
adjustment and resettlement. There are hundreds of thousands who are still
stranded on hostile border areas and many more are witnessing this international
refugee day in jails for crime they have never committed. The right groups,
watch dogs and international community must raise an effective voice for such
deprived people. The Refugee Convention protects people fleeing persecution and
trauma. It describes an asylum seeker as someone who is outside the country of
their nationality “owing to a well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons
of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or
political opinion” and “is unable to, or owing to such fear is unwilling to,
avail himself of the protection of that country”. Thousands have lost their
lives in in the Mediterranean Sea and the real figure is likely to be far higher
because so many people disappear without trace. Let’s give them hope who have
crossed Mediterranean Sea or international borders. Their hope elides in our
voice. Let’s raise our voice for the voiceless. The world conscience must
realize that refugees are human beings caught in sufferings not by their own
choice but by different compulsions and they meet special attention and care. I
myself have been a refugee journalist since ten years. I think God made me a
refugee so that I can inform the world about the plight of refugees through pen.
That they open their eyes and learn about the plight of refugees and play their
role in helping them. Any citizen of any country like me can become a refugee at
any time. But in this society, animals are more respected than refugees.
Humanity is gone.