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Leaders join UN
refugee agency on fact-finding trip to East Africa
2006-03-15 10:28:16
By Times Reporter
Executives from five of the world’s leading corporations
will accompany a senior official from the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) next week to East
Africa and the continent’s Great Lakes region to see the
agency’s work for hundreds of thousands of people forced to
flee their homes, and to explore closer ties between the
business and humanitarian communities.
UNHCR Deputy High Commissioner Wendy Chamberlin will travel
on a five-day mission visiting refugee camps and UNHCR
projects in Kenya, Tanzania and Burundi, accompanied by
senior officials from Manpower, Nike, Merck, Microsoft and
Pricewaterhouse Coopers.
’The aim of next week’s mission is to give business leaders
an opportunity to learn more about UNHCR’s work in East
Africa and the Great Lakes, as well as to see for themselves
the impact of their involvement on the daily life of
refugees,’ UNHCR Spokesperson Jennifer Pagonis told
reporters in Geneva.
’The five corporations are part of UNHCR’s Council of
Business Leaders, set up last year in Davos to build
additional bridges between the corporate and the
humanitarian communities.’
The Swiss city of Davos is home to the annual World Economic
Forum.
The role of the Council is to advise UNHCR on the best
strategies to capitalize on existing joint projects and to
develop new and innovative public-private partnerships.
The Council also aims to raise awareness of refugee issues
in the business world.
’As well as visiting refugee camps in Kenya and Tanzania,
the delegation will follow a convoy bringing refugees from
Tanzania back home to Burundi,’ Ms. Pagonis said.
There are more than 240,000 refugees in Kenya, the majority
from Somalia and Sudan. Tanzania is home to more than
400,000 refugees from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC)
and Burundi.
In Burundi itself, UNHCR is running reintegration projects
for some 300,000 people who have returned from exile - most
of them from Tanzania - since 2002.
UN High Commissioner for Refugees Ant Guterres returned
from a one-week mission to the Great Lakes region on Monday,
calling on the international community for ’a bigger
engagement in the years and months to come’ in the
impoverished region.
SOURCE: Financial Tim
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