UN agencies underline need for protection of refugees, migrants against pandemic
Palestinian employees at the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) wearing protective masks and gloves prepare food aid rations to be delivered to refugee family homes rather than distributed at a U.N. center, in Gaza City, Tuesday, March 31, 2020. (AFP Photo)


The rights and health of refugees, migrants and the stateless must be protected as the coronavirus pandemic is taking its toll on the globe, four U.N. agencies said in a joint statement Tuesday.

"In the face of the COVID-19 crisis, we are all vulnerable. The virus has shown that it does not discriminate – but many refugees, those forcibly displaced, the stateless and migrants are at heightened risk," they said.

The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, the International Organization for Migration, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), and the World Health Organization (WHO) gathered for the joint statement.

They said that states may need additional financial support to ensure refugees and migrants have adequate access to national health services and asserted that the world's financial institutions can play a leading role in making such funds available.

The new coronavirus has arrived in North Africa and the Middle East late, but the pace of its spread has rapidly increased recently.

The agencies noted that three-quarters of the world's refugees and many migrants are hosted in developing regions where health systems are already overwhelmed and under-capacitated.

"Many live in overcrowded camps, settlements, makeshift shelters or reception centers where they lack adequate access to health services, clean water, and sanitation," they said.

The agencies did not single out any country, but recently U.N. agencies have mentioned concerns for nations such as Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq, Libya, South Sudan, Sudan and Syria.

'Inclusive approach' needed

"The situation for refugees and migrants held in formal and informal places of detention, in cramped and unsanitary conditions, is particularly worrying," the U.N. statement said.

Due to the lethal consequences of COVID-19, they should be released without delay, they urged.

"Migrant children and their families and those detained without a sufficient legal basis should be immediately released," the agencies said.

They noted that the new coronavirus could only be controlled with "an inclusive approach" which protects every individual's right to life and health.

"Migrants and refugees are disproportionately vulnerable to exclusion, stigma, and discrimination, particularly when undocumented," they said.

To avert a catastrophe, governments must do all they can to protect the rights and the health of everyone.

"It is vital that everyone, including all migrants and refugees, is ensured equal access to health services and are effectively included in national responses to COVID-19, including prevention, testing, and treatment," said the agencies.

They said that inclusion will help protect the rights of refugees and migrants, and will also serve to protect public health and stem the global spread of COVID-19.

"While many nations protect and host refugee and migrant populations, they are often not equipped to respond to crises such as COVID-19."