- Lifestyle & Sports
- 23 Jun 23
World Refugee Day will be celebrated in Dublin this weekend at the Fair Play Cup. Earlier this week, on World Refugee Day itself – and against a backdrop of mounting displacement worldwide, and increased casualties, President Michael D. Higgins proposed the use of floating investment funds to assist with the immediate needs of those who have been forced to leave everything at home behind...
World Refugee Day will be celebrated in Ireland this coming Sunday, June 25, with the Fair Play Cup taking place in Blackhall Place, Dublin 7. World Refugee Day is an international day organised by the United Nations, which is designed to celebrate and honour refugees from around the world.
The Fair Play Cup is an initiative of the UNHCR, and it is run by SARI (Sport Against Racism in Ireland) on their behalf.
“We’re really looking forward to the tournament,” Hot Press editor Niall Stokes said. “As an annual event, it is a really lovely occasion, with the tournament, involving people from all over the world, being played in a great spirit of camaraderie and friendship. It is particularly important right now to draw fresh attention to the plight of refugees, and the terrible circumstances that drive people to uproot and flee their home places.
“You don’t have to be following the news closely to know that what has happened in Ukraine over the past year and a half is utterly appalling. The brutally aggressive Russian invasion has seen millions of people forced into exile, with a greater number of refugees arriving in Ireland than ever before. So far, they have been treated relatively well – which is the least that they are entitled to expect.
“But the terrible truth is that, already this year alone, there has also been a huge level of devastation in Sudan, with 2 million people being internally displaced and over half a million leaving the country entirely. Meanwhile, the latest estimation is that are almost 6 million refugees from the ongoing war in Syria. And yet, there is a huge level of anti-migration propaganda being spun out by the far-right across Europe, in the UK – with the open complicity of the Tory Government there – and to a lesser extent by a rump of bigoted, racist thugs here in Ireland.
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“The encouraging thing is that the vast majority of Irish people are kind and generous in their response to people who land here in difficult – and often heartbreaking – circumstances. It is important that everything that can be done is done, at official level, to ensure that this remains the case – and that people, and where relevant tech companies, are held accountable for the lies, disinformation, scare-mongering and incitement to hatred that are pushed out, often via advertising, across social media."
The theme for World Refugee Day 2023 is Hope Away From Home. As defined by the UN, a refugee is someone who fled his or her home and country owing to “a well-founded fear of persecution because of his/her race, religion, nationality, membership in a particular social group, or political opinion.”
Earlier this week, President Michael D. Higgins issued a statement to mark World Refugee Day.
“As the United Nations requests us,” he said, "it is important for us all to have in our minds, on World Refugee Day, the incredible plight which so many of the displaced and migrants are currently placed in.
"Last week’s appalling tragedy off the coast of Greece remind us all of the horrific dangers faced by migrants and the urgency that is required in taking actions to protect the lives of so many people.
"The Secretary General of the United Nations, António Guterres, has asked Member States, and indeed all those concerned, to not simply acknowledge the dark circumstances we find ourselves in, but to make practical contributions and contacts to what might be a resolution, not only in the short term, but in the medium to long term.
"Responding to Secretary General Guterres, it is in that spirit that I offer a number of suggestions as a contribution to what is now an urgent discourse that cannot be ignored any longer given the vast number of lives being lost.
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"As has been cited in reporting in the last week, approximately 51,000 people are said to have lost their lives trying to reach Europe since 1993, while more than 27,000 people have died or gone missing on the Mediterranean since 2014. We must remember too the work of the International Organization for Migration, which has estimated that for every migrant who dies in the Mediterranean, two die in the Sahara trying to reach Europe.
"It is important that we heed the words of the Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights, Dunja Mijatović, who I have received in Áras an Uachtaráin both in 2019 and again last October, who speaking ahead of this year’s World Refugee Day has said, 'I am struck by the alarming level of tolerance to serious human rights violations against refugees, asylum seekers and migrants that has developed across Europe'.
"We must all be grateful to courageous journalists such as Sally Hayden who have stayed with this issue and continue to remind us that we must respond.
"It is important that we draw from the empirical experience and the research of those who have been working and carrying out detailed research amongst migrants.
"I am convinced that a proposal that was briefly considered at the time of the initial movement of Syrian refugees into Turkey and Germany, that a bond be created to issue sufficient funding for a transparent, accountable system that meets with the requirements of the United Nations Charter, is worthy of further consideration.
"What does the research tell us? It tells us that migrants are most likely to first move over the nearest point of their neighbouring country for at least three years and that it remains their aspiration to return to their country. The merit in having appropriate housing, health, education and skill assessments for migrants has already been proven.
"The research shows that in the third year, if they have not been able to return home, and realising that returning home is not the viable option they thought it was, migrants have selected a destination country, one with which they may have had family contacts.
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"In the first phase of the Syrian migration to Germany, which was heavily composed of the Syrian middle class, migrants have made themselves part of the economy within two to three years. The general case is that where migrants have possibilities, their contribution to the point of destination exceeds expenditure within at most four years.
"Given the scale of displacement, which we can now predict for example by consequences of climate change, conflict and fundamentalisms, it is appropriate that we consider a global response to what is now a global problem.
"Given the current position with regard to floating investment funds, it is possible – in an imaginative model that brought together the IMF, the World Bank and different development banks – to create a fund that could deliver in anticipated places of migrant interest a set of structures taking account of all these empirical findings.
"It is the most coherent proposal I can think of to counter illegal trafficking, it has the advantage of being a managed, transparent system, and all of the indications are that it is possible to return the investment in such bonds within 5 years, and certainly before 10 years.
"When the crisis abates, one is left with a set of structures in different continents which provide opportunities for re-training, adaptation to climate change, healing and for international conferences on re-adaptation, possibilities of return and anticipation, well in advance, of difficulties of entry into different cultures.
"I make this proposal with humility,” the President concluded, "in response to Secretary General Guterres’ request that now is the time for us each to put our best foot forward. We cannot continue in the circumstances we find ourselves.”