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Congolese Refugee Woman, Mbela Nzuzi, Receives
Recognition from UNHCR
UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Geneva, 17 June 2002
Five years ago, Congolese refugee Mbela Nzuzi would never have thought
of herself as a leader. Today, she is not only a refugee leader
in Bucharest, Romania, but also the lead singer in an African band
there.
"I used to be a simple African woman," said Nzuzi. "I
thought what was best is to have a household, a child, a husband
to bring me income and take care of the family. School, university,
work - [these were] much too complicated!"
In 1997, the 26-year-old fled the turmoil in the Democratic Republic
of Congo and arrived in Romania, which hosts some 2,000 refugees.
"In this country I have learnt that I, too, can be a modern
woman, that I have a lot to offer other people," she said.
She is now President of the Refugee Women's Organisation (RWO) in
Bucharest.
Her work has not gone unrecognised. On June 17, Nzuzi received a
certificate of appreciation from the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees, Ruud Lubbers, for her efforts to improve the situation
of refugee women in Romania. In tune with this year's World Refugee
Day theme of refugee women, she sang at the presentation ceremony
in Geneva to celebrate the resilience of her peers all over the
world.
In Romania, Nzuzi has helped to integrate refugee women into society,
encouraging them to participate in community activities and organising
cultural events where they interact with Romanian women. "This
has been a means of presenting the refugee women to the Romanian
society," she explained. She added that many refugee women
have skills but cannot speak English, which prevents them from working
and improving their situation and that of their families. So this
year, Nzuzi and her colleagues started English-language classes
for them. The Kinshasa-born refugee herself speaks English, French
and Romanian and uses her trilingual abilities as proof to other
refugee women that they too can pick up another language.
Besides Nzuzi, Ruud Lubbers also gave awards to four nominees for
their work with refugee women and girls around the world. One of
them was Julia Kharshvili, a refugee who fled the conflict in Abkhazia
for Tbilisi, Georgia in 1993. Kharshvili, who now heads the displaced
women's organisation in Georgia, realised that because women take
great risks to protect their children, their own protection cannot
be achieved if their children are unsafe and unable to attend school.
"As one of the main priorities for IDP [internally displaced
people] women is an improvement of life conditions, security and
education for their children, we tried to focus also on children's
problems," wrote the 47-year-old physicist.
"One of the most famous of our programmes became the peace
camps, in which children and teenagers from conflict zones - first
only from Georgia, and later also from Armenia and Azerbaijan -
can meet, live and learn together." Since the programme's inception
in 1996, several hundred children have participated in the camps
offering training and recreational activities. Kharshvili's organisation
also provides vocational training, civic and human rights education
for displaced women in Georgia, which has more than 270,000 displaced
people.
Another award recipient was Turkish women's rights advocate Ferda
Cilalioglu, who has worked to establish safe houses for abused women
in the Turkish city of Van. The safe house provides sanctuary to
women from Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan fleeing domestic abuse, trafficking
and other forms of violence. Also receiving kudos was Maria Olandina
Alves-Caieriro, who founded East Timorese Women Against Violence
(ETWAVE), a non-governmental organisation that aims to build women's
skills and fight domestic violence in the newly-independent state
of East Timor. Interestingly, the Men's Association for Gender Equality
(MAGE) was also honoured by UNHCR for rallying refugee men around
programmes to combat gender-based violence against women living
in refugee camps in south-eastern Guinea.
Founder Alfred Dunbar, a former refugee who recently returned to
Sierra Leone from Guinea, started the programme in refugee camps
in Kissidougou to promote gender equality and increase the number
of women in leadership and management committees throughout the
camps. Together with Fode Baba Conde, a Guinean working for UNHCR,
he has helped refugee communities in the Kissidougou camps to listen
more to women and to involve them in food distribution. Dunbar is
now working with a non-governmental organisation in Freetown to
raise awareness about human rights and prevent violence against
women, many of them returnees, like him, from neighbouring Guinea
and Liberia.
Nominating Baba Conde for the award, the UNHCR office in Guinea
wrote, "Baba Conde has been a model - His efforts, commitment
and dedication have not only influenced change in attitude but also
contributed enormously to programmes that support women. He has
demonstrated high quality commitment in his keen follow-up of the
High Commissioner's objectives for 2002."
At the beginning of the year, High Commissioner Lubbers made commitments
to ensure better protection of refugee women. Among these was a
pledge to ensure that more refugee women are involved in decision-making,
particularly on issues affecting their lives and that of their families.
The refugee agency chief aims to ensure 50 per cent representation
of refugee women in positions of leadership, to involve refugee
women in food distribution to reduce chances of abuse and exploitation,
and to improve registration so that individual refugee men and women
would have their ownidentity document.
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