尼日利亚贝努埃州牧民与农民冲突造成的境内流离失所者的社会包容与正义

Rita Iorbo, Sanjeev P. Sahni, Tithi Bhatnagar, D. Andzenge
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Based on interviews with 12 IDPs belonging to the displaced population from Guma Local Government Area of Benue State and interviews with seven humanitarian workers, the paper finds that the IDPs: • Have lost family members, neighbors, farms, churches, health centers, and means of mobility. • Cannot safely return home or access their ancestral lands. • Cannot support themselves. • Cannot attend public school or progress to a university. • Lack access to quality health care. • Live with multiple families in insecure shelters. • Cannot reliably obtain birth registration and replace other destroyed documents. • Can register their names, family relations, and former villages, but not their losses, which might lead to compensation and help them to rebuild their lives. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

内容提要 据政府官员称,牧民与农民的冲突已导致尼日利亚贝努埃州 150 万居民流离失所。境内流离失所者失去了生计、农场、个人财产和社区基础设施。本文重点介绍了他们所经历的社会挑战以及政府和国际人道主义机构(IHAs)对他们的处境所采取的应对措施。根据对贝努埃州古马地方政府地区 12 名流离失所者的访谈和对 7 名人道主义工作者的访谈,本文发现这些国内流离失所者- 失去了家人、邻居、农场、教堂、医疗中心和行动手段。- 无法安全返回家园或进入祖先的土地。- 无法养活自己。- 无法就读公立学校或升入大学。- 无法获得高质量的医疗保健服务。- 与多个家庭生活在不安全的避难所中。- 无法可靠地获得出生登记和更换其他被毁坏的文件。- 可以登记他们的姓名、家庭关系和以前的村庄,但无法登记他们的损失,而这可能会导致赔偿并帮助他们重建生活。本文提出以下建议。- 登记、有效补救和诉诸司法:贝努埃州紧急事务管理局 (BSEMA)、联邦人道主义事务部 (FMHA) 和联合国难民事务高级专员办事处 (UNHCR) 应记录个人和社区的社会经济损失,以确定国内流离失所者遭受的损失程度,从而促进有效补救。司法部、国家人权委员会和联合国难民署应支持国内流离失所者,向他们提供信息和程序,使他们能够获得对其损失的充分赔偿,并安全、永久地解决他们的处境,包括完全融入东道社区、安全和自愿返回家园,或在第三社区重新定居。- 让境内流离失所者成为利益相关者:贝努埃州政府应确保贝努埃紧急事务管理局向国内流离失所者宣传自愿和有尊严地安全返回的可能性。如果无法立即返回,贝努埃州政府应向国内流离失所者提供在其他地方重新安置的途径。- 提供可持续的社会福利设施:联邦紧急事务管理局、联邦民政部和国际人道主义机构 (IHA) 应在国内流离失所者营地内提供可持续的医疗保健、住房、教育、财政援助以及在国内流离失所者营地外获得服务的途径。- 通过建立牧场实现和平:贝努埃州政府和平委员会应解决牧民与农民之间的冲突,通过促进冲突各方和平共处来恢复和平。应向牧民宣传合法征用土地进行放牧的程序,而农民则应能够在其农场遭到放牧牛群破坏时寻求法律补救。联邦紧急事务管理局和联邦人道主义事务部还应为境内流离失所者自愿、安全和有尊严地返回家园或在其他社区重新定居提供便利。- 保护国内流离失所者营地:联邦紧急事务管理局和尼日利亚安全机构应保护官方和非官方的国内流离失所者营地。- 实施包容性政策:联邦人道事务部应与联合国人道主义事务协调厅(OCHA)合作,制定有利于尼日利亚境内所有国内流离失所者的人道主义应急计划,无论其流离失所的原因如何。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Social Inclusion and Justice for the Internally Displaced by the Herdsmen-Farmers Conflict in Benue State, Nigeria
Executive Summary Herdsmen-farmers conflict has displaced 1.5 million residents of Benue State, Nigeria, according to government officials. Internally displaced persons (IDPs) have lost livelihoods, farms, personal property and community infrastructure. The paper highlights the social challenges they have experienced and the response by government and international humanitarian agencies (IHAs) to their situations. Based on interviews with 12 IDPs belonging to the displaced population from Guma Local Government Area of Benue State and interviews with seven humanitarian workers, the paper finds that the IDPs: • Have lost family members, neighbors, farms, churches, health centers, and means of mobility. • Cannot safely return home or access their ancestral lands. • Cannot support themselves. • Cannot attend public school or progress to a university. • Lack access to quality health care. • Live with multiple families in insecure shelters. • Cannot reliably obtain birth registration and replace other destroyed documents. • Can register their names, family relations, and former villages, but not their losses, which might lead to compensation and help them to rebuild their lives. The paper makes the following recommendations. • Registration, Effective Remedies and Access to Justice: The Benue State Emergency Management Agency (BSEMA), Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs (FMHA) and United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) should document personal and community socio-economic losses to ascertain the extent of damage to IDPs in order to facilitate effective remedies. The Ministries of Justice, the National Human Rights Commission, and UNHCR should support the IDPs by providing them with information and procedures that allow them to secure full compensation for their losses, and with safe, permanent solutions to their situations, including full integration into their host communities, safe and voluntary return home, or resettlement in a third community. • Engage IDPs as Stakeholders: The Benue State Government should ensure that BSEMA communicates to IDPs the possibilities for voluntary and dignified safe return. If return is not immediately foreseeable, BSEMA should offer IDPs the means to relocate and resettle elsewhere. • Provision of Sustainable Social Amenities: BSEMA, the FMHA, and international humanitarian agencies (IHAs) should provide sustainable healthcare, shelter, education in IDP camps, financial assistance and the means to access services outside of IDP camps. • Peace through Establishment of Ranches: Benue State Government’s Peace Commission should resolve the herdsmen-farmer conflict and restore peace by promoting peaceful co-existence between the conflicting parties. Herdsmen should be educated on the procedures for legal land acquisition for ranching, and farmers should be able to seek legal redress when their farms are damaged by grazing cattle. BSEMA and the Federal Ministry of Humanitarian Affairs should also facilitate voluntary, safe and dignified return of IDPs or their resettlement in another community. • Safeguard IDP Camps: BSEMA and the Nigeria security agencies should safeguard official and unofficial IDP camps. • Inclusive Policy Implementation: The FMHA in collaboration with the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) should develop humanitarian response plans that are beneficial to all IDPs in Nigeria irrespective of the cause of their displacement.
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