Evaluation of UNHCR's policy on refugees in urban areas: A case study review of New Delhi

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Author(s)
Obi, N. and Crisp, J.
Publication language
English
Pages
46pp
Date published
01 Nov 2000
Publisher
UNHCR
Type
Evaluation reports
Keywords
Forced displacement and migration, Development & humanitarian aid, Protection, human rights & security, Urban
Countries
India

The number of refugees to be found in the urban areas of developing countries
appears to have increased considerably in recent years. It is a trend which has given
rise to a wide range of protection and assistance concerns, both within and outside of
UNHCR. It was in this context that UNHCR issued a new policy on refugees in
urban areas at the end of 1997 (see Appendix A). In a covering memorandum to that
document, UNHCR stated that the policy would be revised as necessary in the light
of comments received from UNHCR offices and partners.


In October 1999, the Evaluation and Policy Analysis Unit (EPAU) was requested to
undertake a comprehensive review of the new policy and its implementation. As a
first step in this process, a desk-based global survey was undertaken, so as to identify
key issues for further research and analysis.


As a second step, a number of case studies have been selected for detailed review.
New Delhi was chosen as the first of these evaluations because it accommodates a
large and longstanding urban refugee population – almost 16,000 in total, most of
them from Afghanistan - and because the UNHCR programme in New Delhi has
proven to be a particularly problematic one.


This review was undertaken by two EPAU staff members, who undertook a mission
to New Delhi from 3 to 13 April 2000. The team interviewed UNHCR staff members
in the Indian capital, as well as personnel from the organization's local implementing
partners: the Public Interest Legal Support and Research Centre (PILSARC);
Voluntary Health Association of Delhi (VHAD) and the YMCA. The evaluation
mission also held discussions with an official from the Foreigners Regional
Registration Office (FRRO), a representative of a major resettlement country, as well
as refugees from Afghanistan, Myanmar, Somalia and Sudan. The evaluation team
also interviewed relevant UNHCR and NGO personnel in Geneva and reviewed a
wide range of programme documents in Geneva and New Delhi, including archival
sources and statistical data.


This review has benefited particularly from the lengthy comments provided on a first
draft of the report by a number of UNHCR units and staff members in Geneva, New
Delhi and other locations. On many issues, it should be noted, these comments were
substantially at odds with each other, testifying to the complex and controversial
nature of the refugee situation in New Delhi.