Fourth day of protest

articlepictureFor the fourth day in a row the striking refugees from Choucha stayed at the UNHCR office in Tunis to protest for a durable solution.
The protest is followed by high media attention and the refugees renewed their demands over and over in many cameras and microphones. Even the Tunisian authorities began to show interest to the refugees plights. A delegation invited some refugee-representatives to discuss their demands.

In the updated section articles and reports you will find some of the media responses.

Today also brought solidarity actions in Europe. In Berlin a delegation of supporters visited the local UNHCR office to show their solidarity with the Tunis protest. In a discussion with the local UNHCR representative they underlined their support for the refugees demands.

chouchprotest-unhcr-berlin

Actions like this should take place in many more places – visit your local UNHCR office and show your solidarity for the protesting refugees!

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Third day of protest

articlepicture3Today, Wednesday, is the third day of protest in front of the UNHCR offices in Tunis. The protesting refugees from Choucha continue to stay and sleep in front of the offices to emphasize their demands. The 91 refugees, among them families and children, have now split up in two groups, as to be present at the front and the backdoor of the offices. This gives them the possibility that each UNHCR staff member going to work is being reminded that there is a great number of asylum seekers left without any prospects for their future. Luckily, there has not been any repression bothering the protest. A military convoy passed by in the night from tuesday to wednesday only requesting some information in a friendly manner. Not only journalists have been interested to learn about the protest and the demands, two politicians have visited the protest camp today inviting a delegation for a discussion. Although the protesters were turned down on tuesday by a UNHCR representative, who told the delegation of refugees that there will be no revision of their cases, they say that “WE ARE NOT LEAVING THE PLACE, NOT UNTIL OUR DEMANDS ARE MET”.

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First Night in Tunis

articlepicture2After a succesful first day the Protesters stayed in front of the UNHCR office overnight to continue shouting out their demands the second day in a row.

Monday started with a rally on Human Rights Square. The protesters were accompanied by many tunisian journalists and supporters. Following the rally the group of 100 refugees and supporters made their way to to the district calles “les berges du lac” of Tunis, where the Red Cross, the EU Delegation and UNHCR is situated. The long protest march through Tunis eventually reached this district. Rallies were held in front of Red Cross, EU Delegation and finally the UNHCR office. While the afternoon turned rainy, the protesters did not turn quiet and renewed their demands of a reopening of all the rejected cases, alimentation and medical support for people in Choucha and Resettlement to third countries for all the remaining people in the southern refugee-camp.

 Throughout monday no one from UNHCR showed up to answer to these demands.

 For the night supporters gathered blankets and the protesters rested in front of the unhcr office.

 Tuesday morning brought change: A delegation of Protesters was invited to a meeting with UNHCR representatives. The refugees stated their demands and UNHCR replied as they did so many times before with saying they would not be responsible and the refugees should either go home with IOM, go back to Libya, try to stay illegalized in Tunisia or ask some foreign embassy for protection… Since the refugees are convinced that UNHCR made loads and loads of mistakes while working on their files – they don’t want to let UNHCR get away with withdrawing from their responsability

 The decision is clear: The refugees stay protesting in front of UNHCR until they take responsability and offer solutions for all the rejected asylumseekers in Choucha camp.

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Open Letter to Mr Guterres and Mrs Aboubacar / UNHCR

OPENLETTERPICThis morning an open letter in solidarity with the protest in Tunis was sent to the Tunisian representative of UNHCR, Ursula Schulze Aboubacar, and Mr António Guterres, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, himself. If you still want to sign the letter, direct an email to “choucha[aet]riseup[dot]net”

Below you will find the letter.

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Email and Fax-Campaign

faxcampaignParticipate in the Email and Fax-campaign to support the protesting refugees from Choucha!

To spread the word about the protest of the rejected asylum seekers from Choucha to as many UNHCR offices as possible – and to express your solidarity – you can send the following text with your signature to UNHCR offices in your country, to the office in Tunisia or the UNHCR headquarters in Geneva. It is prepared for you to print out or copy it to an email in english, deutsch, francais !

Below you can find addresses of UNHCR offices.

Read the text here:

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Break the isolation!

About 100 rejected asylum seekers from the refugee camp in Choucha are currently protesting in the Tunisian capital.

protest

 About 100 refugees from the refugee camp in Choucha, which lies on the border between Tunisia and Libya, reached Tunis on Monday 28th January in order to stage a protest that will continue for several days. They had no choice but to live in the desert for two years while the UNHCR negligently worked on their cases, and eventually rejected them as refugees. Since October 2012 they have been denied access to food and medical care. Now the protesters have taken the necessary steps to challenge their isolation and the consequent lack of prospects.

 Idle individuals become activists

The camp in Choucha was established during the Libyan civil war during winter 2011. It offered refugees the opportunity to access an asylum procedure and to travel on to participating states in the framework of the resettlement programme. Over the past two years, daily life in the refugee camp hasn’t had much to offer apart from unbearable periods of waiting while putting up with the heat and sandstorms. This particularly affected refugees who were not recognised as such by the UNHCR.

The camp has to be seen as a part of the externalisation politics of the European Union – it prevented hundreds of people from challenging the EU’s border regime by trying to enter its territory, by embarking on a boat. At the same time, granting access to a limited number of refugees allowed the media to paint a different picture, diverting public attention away from a militarised campaign against migrants. Germany (pop. 82 million) demonstrated its extraordinary generosity by accepting 205 refugees, whereas Tunisia (pop. 10 Mio.) welcomed half a million people during the Libya-crisis. However, only people who hold a refugee certificate are granted access to the resettlement programme. Many of those who the UNHCR did not recognise as refugees have already traveled back to their countries of origin. 230 of them are still in Choucha. They accuse the UNHCR of severe mistakes and negligence in processing their demands for asylum. These errors range from biased and incompetent interpreters, misspelled names of places and families to the cooperation with the government bodies that refugees fled from in the first place.

 The ensuing exclusion and lack of perspectives of this group of about 230 people led to various protests last year and to the most recent demand for an independent review of the rejected cases. In order to make their voices heard, 100 of them traveled to Tunis.

No one is illegal – not even in Tunisia

 The journey to Tunis represents an act of resistance in itself. Because they have been rejected by the UNHCR, the group of 230 refugees are now considered “illegal migrants” by the governent and are not allowed to move freely. That is why they may be arrested, detained and deported at any time if the Tunisian state decides to. Until now the illegalised protesters have only been detained for short periods of time and sent back to Choucha after having been told that the UNHCR is reponsible for them. In this passing on of responsibilities the UNHCR’s most recent course of action is remarkable. Since October 2012 rejected asylum seekers are being denied access to food and medical care. This scandalous and merciless strategy of a reputable humanitarian organisation evidently aims at forcing people to leave.

The refugees keep emphasising that because of persecution and/or war, they cannot return to their home countries – which the UNHCR would have been able to ascertain if it had adequately reviewed their cases. They decisively reject the UNHCR’s cynical suggestion to just go back to Libya1.
This is why two central demands of the current protest are for the UNHCR to resume the supply of food and medicine to the refugee camp, and to allow access to the resettlement programme for everybody who remained in Chocha. The latter demand is also directed at the European Union and all NATO states that caused the current situation by intervening in the civil war in Libya.

To reinforce these demands to the UNHCR and the EU, and to make them accesible to the Tunisian and the international public, the Chocha refugees will stage a protest for several days in Tunis. In order to achieve this, they need support! Please:

* Spread information about the protest via mailing lists, Facebook and by word of mouth!

* Sign the open letter adressed to Ursula Aboubacar, the head of the Tunisian UNHCR, containing the demands of the protesters!

* Participate in the fax campaign and send a fax (english, francais,deutsch) to UNHCR offices in your country, to the Tunisian Representatives and to their headquarters in Geneva.

* Donate money for food, transport and means of telecommunication for the protesters. Transfers can be made to this bank account:

 FFM Berlin
Sparkasse der Stadt Berlin
Account number: 61 00 24 264
Bank code: 100 500 00
Keyword: “Choucha”

* Organise solidarity actions – in front of UNHCR offices all over the world!

Further information you will find at:

http://voiceofchoucha.wordpress.com

http://chouchaprotest.noblogs.org

http://ffm-online.org/

http://afrique-europe-interact.net/

http://www.borderline-europe.de/

Contact Germany: 00491734108642 (deutsch, englisch, francais)

Contact to the Protesters: 004915210453991 (deutsch, english, francais, ‘arab)

1 Libya still does not offer security – black people in particular are constantly threatened by arbitrary arrests and racist violence. Many refugees in Choucha were told about such experiences by people who did return to Libya.

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About this blog…

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This blog will provide you with informations and ressources on the protest of refugees from Choucha refugee-camp in Tunisia. This blog is hosted by supporters from different countries, to coordinate a transnational solidarity campaign for the protest of refugees in Choucha.

You can directly follow the protesters on their blog: www.voiceofchoucha.wordpress.com

 

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