Recommendation 1631 (2003)1
Internal displacement in Europe
1. The Parliamentary Assembly is concerned at the high
numbers of internally displaced persons (IDPs) resulting from various armed
conflicts and human rights abuses which have occurred since the early 1990s in
more than ten Council of Europe member states.
2. The
precise number of the internally displaced population is difficult to
determine as governments often do not keep any record of internal movements of
their own populations. However, in 2002, it was estimated at between 3.2 and
3.7 million in Europe. In particular, there were approximately one million
IDPs in Turkey, 570 000 in Azerbaijan, between 288 000 and 480 000 in Serbia
and Montenegro, approximately 375 000 in Bosnia and Herzegovina and between
300 000 and 500 000 in the Russian Federation.
3.
Unfortunately not all the conflicts that have caused internal displacement
have been resolved; some of them have been suspended but interethnic
tensions continue to exist; new flows of internal movements cannot be excluded
until lasting political solutions are found.
4. IDPs
constitute a specific category of people in need of assistance, protection and
development aid which is not always recognised by the governments concerned.
Their legal status is not always clear, their specific rights are often poorly
defined, their fundamental freedoms are sometimes violated and their
humanitarian situation is mostly precarious. The issue of internally displaced
persons has both humanitarian and human rights dimensions.
5. IDPs
as such, contrary to refugees, who are protected by the 1951 Geneva Convention
relating to the Status of Refugees, are not protected by any international
legally-binding instrument and their fundamental rights are not safeguarded at
international level by any specific instrument. The issue of IDPs is often
regarded as an internal matter of the country concerned and attracts much less
attention from the international community than the issue of refugees.
6.
Although existing international legal instruments afford a broad measure of
protection for displaced persons, there are significant gaps when it comes to
meeting their specific protection and assistance needs. These gaps exist in a
number of areas including legal, social, economic and political rights, access
to health care, arbitrary detention and discrimination.
7.
Moreover, the Assembly deplores the fact that the governments concerned
sometimes refuse to recognise a problem of displacement existing within their
borders. It is essential to recognise the vulnerability and the specific needs
of displaced persons and their right to be protected, assisted and receive
development aid, and to undertake necessary measures to ease their hardship.
8.
Furthermore, even in cases where a national normative framework concerning
displaced persons has been developed, the legislation enacted and in force
tends not to be implemented properly. For example, tax benefits and basic
social services, such as free access to health and education are not applied
in practice to displaced persons in some countries.
9.
Although the primary responsibility for protecting IDPs lies, without doubt,
with the governments and local authorities concerned, the international
community -
particularly the Council of Europe
- has an important
role to play in this respect.
10. The
Assembly welcomes the commitment of the Representative of the United Nations
Secretary-General on Internally Displaced Persons and the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) Internal Displacement Unit in
responding to the specific needs of the internally displaced.
11. The
Assembly expresses its appreciation of the decisive role played by the
Representative of the United Nations Secretary-General on Internally Displaced
Persons in the development of the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement.
These principles constitute a standard for governments and other responsible
authorities and intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations, and are
an important tool in their work for displaced persons.
12. The
principles should be widely promoted and disseminated and Council of Europe
member states should be urged to observe them and incorporate them into their
domestic laws.
13. The
Assembly notes with satisfaction that many national authorities have
introduced socio-economic programmes to rebuild and develop war-torn regions
with a view to facilitating the return of displaced persons. The support of
the international community is essential for these schemes to succeed.
14. The
Parliamentary Assembly therefore recommends that the Committee of Ministers:
i.
instruct the appropriate committee to examine the situation of displaced
populations in member countries concerned, paying particular attention to
compliance of the national legislation in force with the Guiding Principles
on Internal Displacement;
ii.
contribute to the promotion of the Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement at European level;
iii.
support the establishment of a worldwide information system on internally
displaced persons.
15. The
Assembly also recommends that the Committee of Ministers urge its member
states concerned, and in particular Turkey, Azerbaijan, Serbia and Montenegro,
Bosnia and Herzegovina, the Russian Federation, Georgia, Cyprus, Armenia,
Croatia, Moldova and the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia to:
i.
review their legislation with a view to bringing it in line with the Guiding
Principles on Internal Displacement;
ii.
promote, disseminate and implement the guiding principles at national,
regional and local level;
iii.
ensure that the legislation in force relating to displaced populations is
fully implemented, in particular at local level;
iv.
systematically use the guiding principles as a basis for their present and
future policies and programmes in support of internally displaced persons;
v. fully co-operate, if this is not already the case, with the international
community, and in particular with the Representative of the United Nations
Secretary-General on Internally Displaced Persons and the OCHA Internal
Displacement Unit, with a view to improving the situation of the IDPs by
recognising the problem and removing any obstacle likely to hinder
humanitarian action, such as denying international organisations access to
the areas of displacement; cumbersome bureaucratic and administrative
procedures; and lack of
security.
1.
Text adopted by the Standing Committee, acting on behalf of the
Assembly, on 25 November 2003 (see
Doc. 9989,
report of the Committee on Migration, Refugees and Population, rapporteur: Ms
Stoisits).