29/34 Report of the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of internally displaced persons, Chaloka Beyani
Document Type: Final Report
Date: 2015 Mar
Session: 29th Regular Session (2015 Jun)
Agenda Item: Item3: Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, including the right to development
GE.15-06840 (E)
Human Rights Council Twenty-ninth session
Agenda item 3
Promotion and protection of all human rights, civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights,
including the right to development
Report of the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of
internally displaced persons, Chaloka Beyani
Summary
The present report, submitted in accordance with Human Rights Council resolution
23/8, provides an account of the activities undertaken by the Special Rapporteur on the
human rights of internally displaced persons, during the period since the submission of his
previous report to the Council. It also provides a thematic analysis of the human rights of
internally displaced persons in the context of the post-2015 development agenda.
The objective of ensuring a life of dignity for all lies at the heart of the Millennium
Development Goals and the post-2015 development agenda. Internally displaced persons
are frequently deprived of their human rights, stripped of the elements of their lives that
provide dignity: their homes, a livelihood and income, a sense of belonging and of what the
future holds, security and justice, the knowledge that they will be able to feed, clothe and
educate their children, and the ability to make decisions about their lives. The displacement
experience is one of trauma, dependency and survival, with the average conflict-induced
displacement lasting a staggering 17 years. Ensuring durable solutions for internally
displaced persons is a complex process which requires that they be included in sustainable
development goals and strategies that seek to restore to them conditions of normality in
circumstances of dignity and safety, and a secure future.
Contents
Paragraphs Page
I. Introduction ............................................................................................................. 1–2 3
II Activities of the mandate ......................................................................................... 3–17 3
A. Mandate .......................................................................................................... 3 3
B. Engagement with countries ............................................................................. 4–10 3
C. Cooperation with regional and international organizations ............................ 11–13 5
D. Mainstreaming the human rights of internally displaced persons
in the United Nations system .......................................................................... 14–17 5
III. Internally displaced persons in the context of the post-2015 development agenda . 18–90 6
A. Introduction and overview .............................................................................. 18–25 6
B. Progress towards ensuring a place for internally displaced persons in
development agendas ...................................................................................... 26–34 8
C. Towards greater attention to internally displaced persons
in the post-2015 development agenda ............................................................. 35–41 9
D. Durable solutions and development for internally displaced persons ............. 42–45 11
E. Why should internally displaced persons be a priority within development ..
agendas? .......................................................................................................... 46–75 12
F. Implementing sustainable development goals for internally displaced ..........
persons at the national level ............................................................................ 76–78 19
G. Essential steps for the inclusion of internally displaced persons in sustainable
development goals .......................................................................................... 79–88 19
H. Mitigating the impact of development-induced displacement ........................ 89–90 22
IV. Conclusions and recommendations ......................................................................... 91–110 22
I. Introduction
1. The present report by the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of internally
displaced persons, Chaloka Beyani, is submitted in accordance with Human Rights Council
resolution 23/8. The first part provides an overview of his activities over the reporting
period since his last report to the Council.
2. The second part considers the human rights of internally displaced persons
(IDPs) in the context of the post-2015 development agenda and the sustainable
development goals. It urges greater attention to IDPs within the framework of development
processes, targets and activities relating to durable solutions. States are urged to include
IDPs, in particular those in protracted displacement situations, as beneficiaries of and
contributors to their development programmes and strategies.
II. Activities of the mandate
A. Mandate
3. The Human Rights Council, in its resolution 23/8, mandated the Special
Rapporteur to address internal displacement, in particular by mainstreaming the human
rights of IDPs into all relevant parts of the United Nations system, working towards
strengthening the international response to internal displacement, engaging in coordinated
international advocacy and action for improving protection and respect of the human rights
of IDPs, and continuing and enhancing dialogue with governments, intergovernmental,
regional and non-governmental organizations and other relevant actors.
B. Engagement with countries
Kenya
4. During his follow-up visit to Kenya from 29 April to 7 May 2014, the Special
Rapporteur stressed that finding durable solutions for IDPs was a long-term process
requiring humanitarian, development and peacebuilding action. Although progress had been
made in supporting durable solutions for those displaced by the post-election violence of
2007–2008, significant obstacles persisted, most notably regarding socioeconomic and
political participation. In Moyale, in northern Kenya, he highlighted the situation of those
newly displaced due to ethnic and intercommunal violence or natural disasters. He urged
the Government to implement fully its progressive legislation adopted in 2012 on assistance
and protection for IDPs and affected communities, and to ratify the African Union
Convention for the Protection and Assistance of Internally Displaced Persons in Africa (the
Kampala Convention).
Azerbaijan
5. From 18 to 24 May 2014, the Special Rapporteur visited Azerbaijan, including IDP settlements in and around Baku and in the western district of Agdam. He welcomed the
progress made by the authorities in improving the living conditions of IDPs. He noted that
reaching a peaceful settlement to the unresolved conflict in and around the Nagorno-
Karabakh region1 was critical to resolving the protracted situation of internal displacement.
He emphasized that the inclusion of IDPs in development planning strategies in areas such
as housing, education, health and employment was necessary to strengthen their resilience,
livelihood opportunities and self-reliance. He stressed that IDPs must be fully involved in
development planning decisions and processes and recommended that a survey of intent
and a needs-based assessment be carried out in preparation for durable solutions
(A/HRC/29/34/Add.1).
Côte d’Ivoire
6. From 16 to 20 June 2014, two years after his official mission to Côte d’Ivoire,
the Special Rapporteur visited Abidjan to assess the progress made in fostering durable
solutions for IDPs. While the majority of IDPs had returned to their area of origin, he
stressed the need for continued support to secure their basic needs and to rebuild their lives
sustainably. IDPs in need of durable solutions must not be forgotten at a time when
humanitarian actors were drawing down their activities. He stressed that the ratification by
Côte d’Ivoire of the Kampala Convention in 2014 provided a framework for concerted
action and he pointed out that IDPs must participate in national elections in 2015.
Haiti
7. From 29 June to 5 July 2014, the Special Rapporteur visited Port-au-Prince to
assess the overall situation of IDPs in Haiti, four years after the earthquake. He called for a
transition from a largely humanitarian approach to development strategies that would
include durable solutions for IDPs in the context of addressing vulnerability and extreme
poverty. He reaffirmed the primary responsibility of the Government to work towards
rights-based development approaches to alleviating poverty while incorporating durable
solutions for IDPs (A/HRC/29/34/Add.2).
Ukraine
8. From 16 to 25 September 2014, the Special Rapporteur visited Ukraine,
including the Luhansk and Donetsk regions in eastern Ukraine. He urged the Government
to intensify its efforts to meet the needs and protect the human rights of IDPs from the
conflict-affected eastern region and the Autonomous Republic of Crimea. Noting the lack
of comprehensive data on the number, location and needs of displaced persons, he stressed
that full registration and profiling of IDPs, including needs assessments, were essential.
Registration procedures should be harmonized to ensure access for IDPs to essential
services, employment and livelihood opportunities, and to enable them to vote in future
elections (A/HRC/29/34/Add.3).
Central African Republic
9. From 10 to 14 February 2015, the Special Rapporteur visited the Central African Republic on a joint mission with the Assistant Secretary-General of the Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs and the Director of Operations of the Humanitarian
Aid and Civil Protection department of the European Commission. The delegation visited
Bambari, Yaloke, Mpoko and PK5 in Bangui. The Special Rapporteur stressed the need to
ensure the safety and freedom of movement of IDPs, while protecting the way of life of
nomadic groups. He welcomed the ratification by the Central African Republic of the
Kampala Convention, but urged that consultations for the national dialogue (the Bangui
Forum on National Reconciliation) be truly inclusive of IDPs.
1 Any reference to the territories in and around the Nagorno-Karabakh region should be understood to
be in full compliance with General Assembly resolution 62/243 of 14 March 2008.
Requests for country visits
10. Since his previous report, the Special Rapporteur has made or reiterated requests
to visit Colombia, Iraq, Mexico, Nigeria, the Philippines and the Syrian Arab Republic.
C. Cooperation with regional and international organizations
11. The Special Rapporteur engaged closely with the African Union to promote
ratification and implementation of the Kampala Convention. He visited the African Union
headquarters in March 2014 to activate a joint continent-wide action plan on
implementation of the Convention. He called upon States parties to establish or strengthen
internal mechanisms promoting the engagement and participation of local authorities,
communities, civil society organizations and the private sector. In November 2014, as
keynote speaker at the African Union Humanitarian Symposium in Nairobi, he discussed
effective humanitarian interventions and assistance in conflict-induced displacement
situations. In December 2014, he took stock of and urged greater progress on the
Convention at an event organized by the Permanent Delegation of the African Union to the
United Nations Office at Geneva marking the second anniversary of the entry into force of
the Convention.
12. In July 2014, the Special Rapporteur participated in a joint initiative of the
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), including delegations from
participating States, and the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR), to promote a more collaborative approach to addressing displacement, using the
Protection Checklist elaborated jointly by OSCE, UNHCR and his mandate. The Checklist
is a tool for ensuring the protection of displaced populations and affected communities at
all stages of a conflict. He also informed the OSCE participating delegations of his findings
in OSCE States affected by displacement.
13. The Special Rapporteur maintained a strong partnership with civil society organizations. Among such collaboration, he appreciates the support provided by the
Brookings-London School of Economics Project on Internal Displacement, and the
strategic partnership with the Joint IDP Profiling Service, the Danish Refugee Council and
the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre. Civil society has played a vital role in
supporting him, including during his country visits.
D. Mainstreaming the human rights of internally displaced persons
in the United Nations system
14. The Special Rapporteur continued to support the mainstreaming of the human
rights of IDPs within the United Nations system and the wider humanitarian community by
participating actively in the work of the Inter-Agency Standing Committee, the Global
Protection Cluster and the humanitarian affairs segment of the Economic and Social
Council. He drew on his recent missions to illustrate the importance of humanitarian
principles in responding to the protection and assistance needs of IDPs, both in the
emergency phase of conflicts and in the search for durable solutions.
15. In May 2014, the Special Rapporteur addressed the Security Council in an “Arria formula” meeting on “Protection of internally displaced persons: challenges and role of the Security Council”,2 focusing on common goals of the Council and its partners, inter
2 Available from
www.ohchr.org/Documents/HRBodies/SP/ArriaFormula_SC_on_protection_of_IDPs.pdf.
alia: protection of civilians, including IDPs in areas of refuge, during flight and upon
return; and durable solutions involving humanitarian and development challenges, but also
peacebuilding challenges. He addressed the Council again in October, in a debate on
“Women, peace and security — displaced women and girls: leaders and survivors”. He stressed that internally displaced women often faced double discrimination as IDPs and
women. They experienced unique human rights challenges due to the intersection of gender
with factors such as age, group affiliation, disability and their civil or socioeconomic
situations. Despite positive developments, responses to internal displacement still did not
adequately address the specific concerns of women and girls.
16. In June 2014, the Special Rapporteur participated in a Central and West African
consultation, in Abidjan, in preparation for the World Humanitarian Summit, and from 2 to
6 March 2015, he participated in a Middle East and North African regional consultation in
Amman. At those consultations, he highlighted approaches to mitigating protracted
displacement, building more coherence between governments, development partners and
the humanitarian community, and support for communities affected by displacement.
Stressing the lack of preparedness of regional and national actors in responding rapidly to
IDP needs, he stated the necessity to adopt regional instruments and national laws and
policies on internal displacement and urged that effective partnerships be entered into in
order to respond to emergency needs in urban areas.
17. In September 2014, the Special Rapporteur participated in a panel on “Durable
solutions for post-crisis development”, in the context of the World Reconstruction
Conference 2 organized by the World Bank. He stressed the importance of the involvement
of development partners to attain durable solutions. Drawing on examples from his
missions, he shared challenges and opportunities encountered in developing durable
solutions for post-crisis displacement.
III. Internally displaced persons in the context of the post-2015 development agenda
A. Introduction and overview
18. The phenomenon of displacement is currently, more than ever before, a global
crisis. As at December 2013, an estimated 33.3 million persons were internally displaced by
conflict and violence globally. In addition, in 2013 alone, some 22.4 million people were
newly displaced within their own countries by disasters. Given new and ongoing crises,
these figures are likely to have increased in 2014, with displacement at its highest level
since the Second World War.
19. Displacement, whether caused by conflict, violence or disaster, usually leads to
extreme poverty and renders IDPs highly vulnerable. It typically results in loss of land,
homes and property, loss of employment or livelihood, food insecurity, lack of access to
basic services, including water and sanitation and health care, and poor access to education.
Displacement may cause IDPs to be more at risk of violence, including sexual and gender-
based violence, trafficking and other forms of abuse, either in the context of ongoing
conflicts or due to the perilous and poor conditions in which IDPs find themselves.
Displacement causes disintegration of community and family cohesion, and of
socioeconomic networks and support mechanisms.
20. While the numbers of IDPs are shocking, an even more surprising statistic is that
the average duration of conflict-induced displacement is now a staggering 17 years.3 While
some IDPs are able to return to their homes relatively quickly and with all the necessary
assistance, for many, displacement is a protracted and life-changing experience which may
last decades.
21. The challenges facing IDPs have long been recognized internationally. In 1998,
Kofi Annan, then United Nations Secretary-General, noted that internal displacement had
emerged as one of the great human tragedies of our times and that internally displaced
people were among the most vulnerable of the human family. The former United Nations
Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator and
current Secretary General of the Norwegian Refugee Council, Jan Egeland, has stated that
“something is going terribly wrong in how we are responding and dealing with this issue”.4
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, António Guterres, has affirmed that
“we have a shared responsibility to act to end this massive suffering. Immediate protection
and assistance for the internally displaced is a humanitarian imperative.”5
22. Internal displacement must also be recognized as a development imperative
requiring sustainable solutions. If not appropriately addressed through durable solutions,
internal displacement can strain the capacities of the communities in which IDPs live,
potentially leading to further instability, strife and displacement. Internal displacement
crises can impede the achievement of national development goals and may destabilize the
regions affected, particularly in conflict or fragile post-conflict settings. However, where
development-based durable solutions are implemented, the positive contributions of IDPs to
their own and to their hosts’ communities can be significant as IDPs adapt to new lives and
new livelihoods.
23. The challenges posed by, and the increasingly protracted duration of, internal
displacement mean that it must be recognized as a development challenge for the
international community and all nations facing internal displacement situations. Failing to
do so potentially leaves many millions of IDPs neglected and excluded from development
processes. Regrettably, IDPs frequently fall outside the net of development action, in large
part due to the perception that the issues of displaced persons require primarily
humanitarian rather than development solutions. While humanitarian assistance is essential
to support IDPs through the immediate crisis and its aftermath, development approaches
and the engagement of development actors as well as peacebuilding actors from the very
outset ensure that durable solutions are made available to IDPs.
24. Rather than being included in development initiatives, over time IDPs often lose the attention and support of national authorities and international actors. This is particularly
true for those living outside collective centres or camps, dispersed and hosted within
families and displacement-affected communities, for instance in urban areas. However, it
can also be witnessed when long-term IDP camps become established, semi-permanent
settlements where, due to necessity, coping mechanisms improve and economic and social
functions begin to emerge and take root.
25. There is a danger of camps and their populations becoming “invisible” or an
inconvenience that national authorities seek to remove by closure or demolition of facilities.
Regrettably, some governments have taken the view that the closure of camps and/or the
provision of cash grants to IDPs without linking the grants to livelihood and other
3 See www.internal-displacement.org/blog/2014/a-record-33-3-million-now-displaced-by-conflict-and-
violence-worldwide-as-one-family-flees-inside-syria-every-60-seconds.
4 Ibid.
5 Ibid.
sustainable strategies, constitute a solution to displacement that absolves them of further
responsibilities. Such measures may be forced upon IDPs or accepted by them, since they
are frequently unaware of their rights under international law.
B. Progress towards ensuring a place for internally displaced persons in
development agendas
26. With displacement at its highest levels since the Second World War, it is
important to revisit the fundamental premises on which the post-war order is based, in the
context of displacement. The 1945 Charter of the United Nations (Arts. 55 and 56) created
an obligation for the United Nations and Member States to create conditions of stability and
well-being based on respect for the equal rights and self-determination of peoples, and to
promote and pledge to achieve, inter alia, higher standards of living, full employment, and
conditions of economic and social progress and development. Those obligations also
pertain to IDPs and require their inclusion in the post-2015 development agenda.
27. The 1986 Declaration on the Right to Development (General Assembly
resolution 41/128, annex) underscores that development is an inalienable human right. It
establishes that: “States have the right and the duty to formulate appropriate national
development policies that aim at the constant improvement of the well-being of the entire
population and of all individuals, on the basis of their active, free and meaningful
participation in development and in the fair distribution of the benefits resulting therefrom.”
Nevertheless, IDPs have frequently been neglected in or excluded from development
strategies and programmes.
28. A 2014 European Commission paper on “Development, refugees and IDPs”6
states:
While refugees and IDPs frequently benefit from humanitarian assistance, they are often
excluded from programmes and activities carried out by development actors, with the result
that their developmental needs may be neglected and efforts to achieve sustainable solutions
receive inadequate attention. At the same time, host populations might not benefit from
humanitarian assistance provided to refugees and IDPs, paving the way to potential conflicts
between the two communities. In addition, the development needs of returnees and long-term
strategies to address them have often been overlooked once back in the country or area of
origin.
29. UNHCR highlights that approximately three quarters of displaced persons, both
refugees and IDPs, are in situations of protracted displacement. It has stated:
the perception that displacement challenges can only be addressed by humanitarian means is
ill-conceived which has either impeded or delayed in achieving the sustainability of solutions
or resulted in protracted displacements finding difficulties to break from the cycle of
dependence on humanitarian assistance and to move on with their lives and livelihoods.7
30. In his report to the General Assembly (A/68/225), in which he addressed the role
of humanitarian and development actors in achieving durable solutions for IDPs through
peacebuilding in the aftermath of conflict, the Special Rapporteur identified initiatives
aimed at bridging the gap between relief and development. For instance, the Solutions
Alliance was launched in April 2014 when humanitarian actors, development organizations,
6 Available from
http://ec.europa.eu/echo/files/policies/sectoral/2014_dev_refugees_idps_issuespaper.pdf.
7 UNHCR, “Concept note: Transitional Solutions Initiative”, p. 1.
States, donors and civil society gathered in Copenhagen to discuss solutions to protracted
displacement and its management. On that occasion, it was emphasized that the
displacement of refugees and IDPs presents significant development opportunities and
challenges, in addition to the humanitarian needs and the humanitarian ‘imperative’”.8
31. In recent years, some development actors have increasingly paid attention to
IDPs. In 2012, the World Bank developed Guidelines for Assessing the Impacts and Costs
of Forced Displacement in order to meet the need for enhanced understanding and
evaluation of the economic and social aspects of forced migration. In a more recent report
of the Global Program on Forced Displacement of the World Bank, Political Economy and
Forced Displacement: Guidance and Lessons from Nine Country Case Studies, a political
economy analysis was used as a tool to demonstrate the development impacts of
displacement and to advance arguments for development initiatives to assist IDPs and host
communities.
32. The positive achievements of the Millennium Development Goals demonstrate
that significant progress by States is possible, in collaboration with international
development partners. Lessons can be learned, for example, from what has been achieved
in poverty reduction and providing access to education in the least developed countries.
However, lessons must also be learned about where and why the Goals failed to benefit the
poorest and most vulnerable groups. It is essential to intensify efforts to reach those
individuals, communities and population groups, including IDPs, who have been bypassed,
neglected or failed.
33. Despite the explicit commitments made in the United Nations Millennium
Declaration to protect the vulnerable and “to help all refugees and displaced persons to
return voluntarily to their homes, in safety and dignity and to be smoothly reintegrated into
their societies”,9 millions of IDPs globally are amongst those who were left behind as
others were brought out of poverty. All durable solutions, not just return, but also local
integration or settlement elsewhere within the country, must be considered as options
available to IDPs. They all require the involvement of development processes, strategies,
and actors for their achievement.
34. Over the Millennium Development Goal period, millions of people in numerous
countries have been plunged into extreme poverty and vulnerability as a direct result of
internal displacement. The United Nations Millennium Development Goals Report 201410
acknowledges that “every day in 2013, 32,000 people had to abandon their homes to seek
protection due to conflict”. The number of newly displaced persons11 has tripled since 2010,
representing a significant setback to achievements under the Goals and demonstrating a
disturbing trend towards increasing displacement that must be recognized in the post-2015
development agenda.
C. Towards greater attention to internally displaced persons
in the post-2015 development agenda
35. The Open Working Group on Sustainable Development Goals released its
proposal on sustainable development goals in August 2014. The proposed goals are: (1)
8 Roger Zetter, “Reframing displacement crises as development opportunities”, policy brief prepared
for the Global Initiative on Solutions Copenhagen Roundtable, 2 and 3 April 2014, p. 1.
9 General Assembly resolution 55/2, para. 26.
10 Available from
www.un.org/millenniumgoals/2014%20MDG%20report/MDG%202014%20English.pdf.
11 Displaced internally or across international borders.
End poverty in all its forms everywhere; (2) End hunger, achieve food security and
improved nutrition and promote sustainable agriculture; (3) Ensure healthy lives and
promote well-being for all at all ages; (4) Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education
and promote lifelong learning opportunities for all; (5) Achieve gender equality and
empower all women and girls; (6) Ensure availability and sustainable management of water
and sanitation for all; (7) Ensure access to affordable, reliable and sustainable and modern
energy for all; (8) Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and
productive employment and decent work for all; (9) Build resilient infrastructure, promote
inclusive and sustainable industrialization and foster innovation; (10) Reduce inequality
within and among countries; (11) Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe,
resilient and sustainable; (12) Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns; (13)
Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts; (14) Conserve and
sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources for sustainable development; (15)
Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage
forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity
loss; (16) Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide
access to justice for all and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions at all
levels; (17) Strengthen the means of implementation and revitalize the global partnership
for sustainable development.
36. There is much to praise in the approach of the international community to the
post-2015 development agenda and sustainable development goals. While IDPs are not
explicitly referred to in the currently proposed goals and targets, several have the potential,
directly or indirectly, to have a positive impact on IDPs, including through new or
enhanced focus areas, for example, to reduce inequality; to make cities and human
settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable; and to take urgent action to combat
climate change and its impacts. Nevertheless, it is essential that broad references to and
definitions of “vulnerable”, “marginalized” and “disadvantaged” groups explicitly include
IDPs.
37. That having been said, it is not sufficient to simply include IDPs in a list of
vulnerable groups. In a joint note sent to the United Nations Secretary-General in October
2014, the Special Rapporteur, the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs,
UNHCR and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) expressed concern that,
despite strong support from many Member States, a dedicated displacement target was
omitted from the final report of the Open Working Group on Sustainable Development
Goals (A/68/97).12 A dedicated target on reducing the number of IDPs and refugees by
providing durable solutions, contained under proposed sustainable development goal 16 on
achieving peaceful and inclusive societies would be a valuable step towards that end.
38. In December 2014, the synthesis report of the Secretary-General on the post- 2015 sustainable development agenda13 highlighted “gap issues”, and included explicit references to internal displacement. It calls for a transformative shift away from business as
usual and proposes six “essential elements”: (a) dignity: to end poverty and fight inequalities; (b) people: to ensure healthy lives, knowledge and the inclusion of women and
children; (c) prosperity: to grow a strong, inclusive, and transformative economy; (d)
planet: to protect our ecosystems for all societies and our children; (e) justice: to promote
12 A previous draft of the proposed goals contained a specific target on IDPs and refugees, but did not
find consensus. During the thirteenth session of the Open Working Group, in July 2014, more than
20 countries argued for an IDP/refugee target under goal 16.
13 The road to dignity by 2030: ending poverty, transforming all lives and protecting the planet
(A/69/700).
safe and peaceful societies and strong institutions; (f) partnership: to catalyse global
solidarity for sustainable development.
39. The synthesis report recognizes increasingly negative displacement trends. In the
section on “dignity” it states that no society can reach its full potential if whole segments of
that society are excluded from participating in, contributing to, and benefiting from
development. It notes that the agenda “must not exclude migrants, refugees, displaced
persons, or persons affected by conflict and occupation”. The chapter entitled “A synthesis”
states that particular attention should be given to countries in situations of fragility and
conflict and the specific conditions of each country should be addressed. There is a
consistent call to “leave no one behind” and ensure equality, non-discrimination, equity and
inclusion. The report states: “We must pay special attention to the people, groups and
countries most in need. We need to include the poor, children, adolescents, youth and the
aged, as well as the unemployed, rural populations, slum dwellers, persons with disabilities,
indigenous peoples, migrants, refugees and displaced persons, vulnerable groups and
minorities. These also include those affected by climate change.”
40. On “justice”, the report highlights the need “to rebuild and reintegrate societies
better after crises and conflicts. We must address State fragility, support internally
displaced persons and contribute to resilience of people and communities. Reconciliation,
peacebuilding and State-building are critical for countries to overcome fragility and develop
cohesive societies and strong institutions. These investments are essential to retaining the
gains of development and avoiding reversals in the future”. Finally, the report emphasizes
that “we must, inter alia, address inequalities in all areas, agreeing that no goal or target be
considered met unless met for all social and economic groups.”
41. The synthesis report provides a clear call to include IDPs. Political negotiations
continue in 2015 and will culminate in a Special Summit on Sustainable Development, to
be attended by Heads of State and Government, in New York from 25 to 27 September, at
which the post-2015 development agenda and the sustainable development goals will be
adopted. The Special Rapporteur stresses the need for the ongoing discussions to address
displacement. Displacement concerns must also be addressed in the formulation of
indicators for targets whose implementation can affect the well-being of IDPs, including
those relating to resilience and disaster risk reduction; equal opportunity; and social,
economic political inclusion.
D. Durable solutions and development for internally displaced persons
42. Durable solutions for IDPs and sustainable development goals are inherently
linked and mutually reinforcing. Durable solutions envisage three scenarios: sustainable
reintegration in the place of origin (return); sustainable local integration in areas where
IDPs take refuge (local integration); or sustainable integration in another part of the
country.14 IDPs must be able to make decisions voluntarily, through informed choice, on
solutions that meet their needs. Freeing IDPs from the cycle of dependency is the key goal
of durable solutions and is best achieved by their inclusion in development strategies and
rights-based approaches that recognize and respond to their unique situations. Walter Kälin,
former Representative of the Secretary-General on the human rights of internally displaced
persons, stated in his 2009 report: “A durable solution is achieved when internally
displaced persons no longer have any specific assistance and protection needs that are
14 Inter-Agency Standing Committee, IASC Framework on Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced
Persons (Washington, D.C., The Brookings Institution – University of Bern Project on Internal
Displacement, 2010).
linked to their displacement and can enjoy their human rights without discrimination on
account of their displacement.”15
43. States and other national and international actors frequently misunderstand what
constitute durable solutions. Neither return to place of origin nor establishing permanent
settlement elsewhere constitute, on their own, durable solutions. In places of origin, homes,
infrastructure and livelihoods may be destroyed and development projects are essential for
early recovery and reconstruction. Property may have been occupied or sold creating
significant obstacles to be resolved. IDPs opting for local integration require development
assistance to overcome barriers to integration. Improved housing provision or cash grants,
for example, do not constitute durable solutions if not combined with strategies to address
livelihood and integration objectives. Host communities affected may also require sustained
development assistance.
44. As highlighted in the IASC Framework on Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced Persons, achieving durable solutions entails responding to key development
challenges in addition to guaranteeing security and non-discrimination. They include
ensuring access to livelihoods, education and health care in areas of return, local integration
or other settlement areas, helping to establish or re-establish local governance structures
and the rule of law, and supporting the rebuilding of houses and infrastructure. International
humanitarian and development actors must have rapid and unimpeded access to assist IDPs
in finding durable solutions. Such actors have a complementary role alongside national
authorities and they should all work together to set up a rights-based process to support
durable solutions for IDPs.
45. Humanitarian responses to displacement are frequently short-term and focused
on immediate needs despite the fact that chronic and protracted crises have become the
norm and are to a large extent predictable. Humanitarian actors commonly focus on
narrowly defined mandates and objectives, for example the provision of shelter, water,
sanitation and hygiene, food, health care or education. Humanitarian coordination has
vastly improved, including through the use of thematic clusters, and in some situations
working groups on durable solutions. However, responses rarely meet durable solutions
criteria for protracted displacement situations. Holistic development approaches have long-
term and sustainable objectives which recognize, for example, the fundamental
interconnection between shelter and livelihood, and their importance for health, food
security and education.
E. Why should internally displaced persons be a priority within
development agendas?
46. Due to conflict and political, social or other factors, including failure to
implement international standards, many IDPs in all regions find themselves in protracted
displacement situations. What were originally “temporary” solutions may regrettably
become more permanent places of settlement. According to the Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs, when governments and international agencies understand that
reality they must recognize that “internal displacement is not only a humanitarian issue
but ultimately and most importantly a long-term development issue that requires the full
and sustained engagement of a diversity of national and international actors” .16
15 A/HRC/13/21/Add.4.
16 Hansjoerg Strohmeyer, Chief of Policy Development, Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs, “The forgotten millions”. Available from https://medium.com/@UNOCHA/the-forgotten-
millions-6a18188d165c.
47. As the Special Rapporteur pointed out in the joint note to the Secretary-General
in October 2014 with Valerie Amos, António Guterres and William Lacy Swing:
The displaced are often excluded from longer-term development and institutional planning. If
left unaddressed, protracted displacement generates further marginalization, inequality,
fragility, vulnerability and erodes people’s resilience. This poses a serious impediment to all
present pillars of sustainable development both for the displaced persons and host
communities. Development actors need to increase their engagement from the onset of a crisis
to ensure that the development dimensions of displacement are addressed. The post-2015
development agenda therefore needs to address protracted displacement by ensuring effective
support for durable solutions.17
48. Displacement commonly leaves homes, infrastructure, businesses and
livelihoods in ruins, and requires extensive reconstruction and socioeconomic development
projects. The impacts on communities and the psychological well-being of IDPs also
require attention to rebuild functioning communities. Where IDPs return to environments of
previous conflict, development actors can introduce elements of community cohesion,
justice and reconciliation into development projects that work across previously conflict-
affected communities as key development and peacebuilding initiatives.
49. A consideration of some of the proposed sustainable development goals through an internal displacement lens, informed by IDP standards, and the work and visits of the
Special Rapporteur and his predecessors, demonstrates the clear rationale for dedicated
attention to IDPs.
Goal 1: End poverty in all its forms everywhere
50. IDPs often lose their homes, land, possessions, livelihoods and their financial resources. They are among the poorest of the poor and may be made more vulnerable by
hostility and insecurity, as well as by the trauma of displacement and the breakdown of
community cohesion. They are likely to have weaker and less established coping
mechanisms than other poor communities, and what resources they do have are likely to be
targeted towards basic survival. Owing to their unique circumstances, while their coping
mechanisms, employment and income-generating activities may improve over time, the
poverty experienced by IDPs is likely to be more extreme and persistent than poverty
experienced by others in society and requires dedicated programmes to address it.
Consequently, the target to eradicate extreme poverty for all people everywhere by 2030
will be impossible to meet without tackling the situation of IDPs.
51. During his visit to Haiti in July 2014, the Special Rapporteur noted that one of
the main obstacles in the search for durable solutions for IDPs remained the extreme
poverty from which a large portion of the population suffered and which particularly
affected those displaced by the 2010 earthquake. In that context, the Special Rapporteur
further reaffirmed the primary responsibility of the Government to work towards rights-
based development approaches to alleviating poverty that incorporated durable solutions for
IDPs.
Goal 2: End hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition and promote
sustainable agriculture
52. Hunger and food insecurity are frequently the most pressing problems for IDPs.
Having lost access to lands and livelihoods, their ability to produce or purchase food may
be limited, leaving them heavily reliant on humanitarian aid or the charitable donations of
17 Joint note from OCHA, UNHCR, IOM and the Special Rapporteur on the human rights of internally
displaced persons to the United Nations Secretary-General (October 2014).
host families and communities, who may also face food insecurity. Where displacement
becomes protracted, without durable solutions in place, food security and nutrition
problems may be particularly pronounced, especially where humanitarian aid has
diminished or ended. Often lacking adequate coping mechanisms, IDPs are amongst the
most vulnerable communities in terms of food security.
53. While humanitarian aid staples often consist of rice, beans, oil and tinned
produce, as well as products to meet the nutritional needs of children, there is frequently a
shortage of higher value or perishable foodstuffs, such as meat, fish and vegetables. A
restricted diet over any significant period can result in inadequate nutrition and
malnutrition, with a lasting effect on the health of individuals and their susceptibility to
illness. In this respect, the Special Rapporteur stresses the importance of taking into account
the specific needs of children, breastfeeding mothers and groups with specific dietary
habits, such as nomadic peoples. Systematically implementing an approach to hunger and
food security that recognizes the need for availability, accessibility, acceptability and
quality, means also including IDPs.
54. During his joint visit to the Central African Republic in February 2015, the
Special Rapporteur deplored the living conditions of nearly 500 members of the Peulh
minority group, trapped in an enclave in Yaloke.18 According to reports, the food being
distributed in Yaloke does not meet the cultural and nutritional needs of the Peulh minority
group. The Peulh, living largely on a diet of beef and milk from cattle, are not used to the
rice and beans that humanitarian agencies distribute. As of December 2014, over 40 Peulh
had died from malnutrition and other diseases, the majority of them children.
55. In many displacement situations access to land, livestock and employment are
essential elements of durable solutions and development that must be put in place to enable
IDPs to reduce or eliminate their dependency on humanitarian aid. Furthermore, where
large numbers of IDPs are sheltered within host communities they can be a heavy burden
on the food security of such non-IDP communities, whose food resources must be spread
further.
Goal 3: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages
56. IDPs frequently lose access to health care and medicines and rely heavily on
humanitarian health-care assistance. The situation is particularly acute in the least
developed countries where health-care provision is generally poor and in rural areas where
facilities are sparse. In cases of large-scale displacement, the capacity of existing health-
care services is often inadequate to respond to the psychological and physical health-care
needs of IDPs. In urban settings, the challenges are also acute and include lack of capacity
of health-care services, and challenges relating to documentation and possible
discrimination. The costs of services and medicines frequently put adequate health care out
of the reach of IDPs.
57. Médecins Sans Frontières has highlighted the health-care challenges facing
IDPs, especially in the context of conflict, noting that “while programmes exist to provide
surgical and other care to these victims, the vast majority will not receive the care they need
because they live in regions where the health-care system has collapsed and where it is too
dangerous for independent aid agencies to operate”.19 To achieve that target “for all at all
ages”, requires resolving the health-care and well-being challenges experienced by IDPs.
18 See UNHCR, Questions and answers, “UN rapporteur looks at how to restore stability and peaceful
coexistence in CAR” (27 February 2015), available from www.unhcr.org/54f090f06.html.
19 Available from www.doctorswithoutborders.org/our-work/humanitarian-issues/refugees-and-idps.
58. During his visit to Azerbaijan in May 2014,20 the Special Rapporteur highlighted
the difficulties IDPs encountered in accessing health services due to limited availability and
supplies in IDP communities. Limited access to reproductive health services was also
raised. During his visit to Ukraine in September 2014,21 the Special Rapporteur learned that
IDPs lacked access to essential medicines, which were not available free of charge. Those
IDPs requiring urgent medical care or maternal health care and those with chronic health
conditions are particularly vulnerable. Congested or cramped living conditions, poor
hygiene and sanitation breed and spread diseases. The psychological impact of
displacement and proximity to conflict often requires specialist care, rarely available to
IDPs.
Goal 4: Ensure inclusive and equitable quality education and promote lifelong
learning opportunities for all
59. For many children in displacement situations, exclusion from education can be a
long-term problem. Particularly in less developed countries, lack of resources, buildings,
teachers and education materials may all create barriers to education. Lack of
documentation, including birth certificates, may be a factor in States in which students must
demonstrate their citizenship or residence in a region to have access to services.
Discrimination may also be a factor, with schools and local authorities being reluctant to
accept displaced children from different ethnic, linguistic or religious groups.
60. Education also provides routine, normality, a protective function, support and
information and can be an important step towards community integration in displacement
locations. For IDPs, education may be a low priority in the face of survival needs. Children
may contribute economically to displaced communities, which can be another barrier to
their schooling. Internally displaced parents may exclude children from school in the belief
that they will quickly return to their original homes, only for their displacement to become
protracted. Parents may also hesitate to send their children to school in conflict zones which
may be targeted for forced recruitment of children.
61. On his visit to Côte d’Ivoire in 2012,22 the Special Rapporteur noted that in some
western regions, an estimated 140,000 children had missed out on their education in 2011,
due to insecurity and the destruction and pillaging of school buildings. Education was also
disrupted in the centre and east of the country, and in Abidjan. He stressed that urgent
measures were needed to ensure that children, some of whom had seen their education
repeatedly disrupted, were provided with support to resume their education and make up
the years of lost schooling.
Goal 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls
62. As women and mothers, poor and frequently from minorities, internally
displaced women face multiple and intersectional challenges. Women are frequently
separated from men in conflict-related displacement situations, sometimes permanently due
to the death of men, or to men joining the armed conflict or being forced to flee the conflict
without their families. Women also frequently have the primary responsibility of caring for
children and the elderly and are less able to seek employment or income-generating
activities. Despite these obstacles, internally displaced women frequently take on family
and community leadership roles.
20 See A/HRC/29/34/Add.1.
21 See A/HRC/29/34/Add.3.
22 See A/HRC/23/44/Add.1, para. 61.
63. As highlighted by the Special Rapporteur in his address to the Security Council23 as well as in a press statement marking the International Day for the Elimination of
Violence Against Women,24 internally displaced women and girls are often
disproportionately affected by displacement. The Special Rapporteur on violence against
women, its causes and consequences, Rashida Manjoo, has said: “They flee to escape arbitrary killings, rape, torture, inhuman or degrading treatment, forced recruitment or
starvation, but too often, they encounter the same level of insecurity, violence and threats of
violence, reinforced by a climate of impunity, at their destination.”25
64. In his 2013 report on internally displaced women, the Special Rapporteur noted
that discussions of gender issues within host and return communities and how particular
durable solutions could backstop protection for internally displaced women remained
relatively nascent.26 Addressing them required more concerted attention, as well as
cooperation between humanitarian and development actors.27 Amongst his
recommendations, he urged States to facilitate the active participation of internally
displaced women in the development and implementation of national and regional action
plans on women, peace and security, and the integration of their diverse concerns into such
plans.
Goal 6: Ensure availability and sustainable management of water and sanitation
for all
65. Secure access to safe water and sanitation can be a matter of life or death for IDPs. While national and international actors have achieved much in terms of emergency
humanitarian provision of water, sanitation and hygiene for all, barriers to the provision of
safe water and sanitation continue to create and exacerbate disease, illness and death among
IDPs. Once humanitarian actors leave or step down their activities following conflict or
disaster, the degradation of emergency water and sanitation systems remains a significant
challenge for many IDPs.
66. Humanitarian programmes have achieved essential results. In the Darfur region
of the Sudan displacement has affected an estimated 2.7 million Darfurians since 2013. A
647 million euro project from April 201228 provided IDPs in targeted camps with 15 litres
of safe water per day; established water collection points within safe walking distance;
ensured access to adequate sanitation facilities and latrines; and ensured that targeted
communities had knowledge of waterborne diseases and their prevention. Some 182,890
people were beneficiaries of the 12-month programme. While such results are impressive,
the challenge remains to ensure sustainability and to transition from humanitarian responses
to durable, development-led solutions as early as possible.
Goal 8: Promote sustained, inclusive and sustainable economic growth, full and
productive employment and decent work for all
67. Seeking and obtaining employment or livelihood activities are commonly more
difficult for displaced persons in unfamiliar localities who may face additional barriers,
23 Open debate on “Women, peace and security — displaced women and girls: leaders and survivors”
(October 2014).
24 Available from
www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=15343&LangID=E.
25 Ibid.
26 A/HRC/23/44, para. 50.
27 Ibid.
28 Available from www.danchurchaid.org/where-we-work/list-of-projects/previous-projects/improving-
water-sanitation-and-hygiene-for-internally-displaced-people-in-sudan.
including discrimination, loss of documents, and the psychosocial impact and pressures of
displacement. Where they find refuge in areas of existing unemployment or economic
hardship they are likely to be the last to gain work if it does become available. Women and
mothers are likely to face unique challenges and restrictions to their income-generating
activities, including childcare issues and the threat of violence if they leave the camps.
68. During the Special Rapporteur’s visit to Sri Lanka in December 2013, he noted obstacles to durable solutions for IDPs in their lack of access to their original land, which
prevented their return and their having sustainable livelihoods. He stressed that significant
efforts were required to ensure that the livelihoods of IDPs were restored.29 During his visit
to Ukraine in September 2014, the Special Rapporteur was informed of the difficulty faced
by IDPs in finding employment and income-generating opportunities. Some IDPs described
problems with their residence registration in their places of origin, their work records which
remained with former employers, and discrimination when they identified themselves as
IDPs.
Goal 10: Reduce inequality within and among countries
69. IDPs frequently face gross and persistent inequality that significantly worsens
their displacement and hampers their ability to integrate fully into new or host societies.
Reducing inequality and discrimination within countries helps prevent displacement as well
as contributing to achieving durable solutions for IDPs. Respect for the principle of equal
rights ensures the well-being of IDPs. Social, economic and political inclusion of all,
including IDPs, is thus key to the prevention of displacement by achieving equality within
and among countries. For some ethnic, religious or national minorities, their government is
the perpetrator of violence, their homes are not safe and integration into new localities may
be particularly difficult.
70. IDPs frequently belong to national, ethnic or religious minorities who, due to
historical, geopolitical, social and other factors, may face varying degrees of discrimination,
social and economic marginalization and sometimes violence on the basis of their identity.
They may be excluded or marginalized in national development programmes, even during
periods of peace. During times of instability and conflict, they are vulnerable to violence
and displacement by larger population groups, members of which may dominate the
government, the police and military forces and other public bodies, including those with
responsibility for national development goals.
71. During his follow-up visit to Kenya in May 2014, the Special Rapporteur noted
that, although progress had been made in supporting durable solutions for those displaced
following the post-election violence of 2007/08, significant obstacles to achieving that goal
remained, most notably regarding socioeconomic and political integration. In accordance
with the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement and the IASC Framework on Durable
Solutions for Internally Displaced Persons, he recalled that IDPs should be able to exercise
their right to participate in public affairs at all levels and without discrimination on the basis
of their displacement.
Goal 11: Make cities and human settlements inclusive, safe, resilient and sustainable
72. While IDPs living in camp settings are more visible, alternative coping
mechanisms, including living with host families, are now the norm for a majority of IDPs.30
An implicit assumption is often made that IDPs living outside camps are less in need of
protection and assistance and have found solutions of their own. While host communities
29 A/HRC/26/33/Add.4, paras. 40 and 54.
30 See A/HRC/19/54.
may initially welcome and assist IDPs, when their stay is protracted, the strain on resources
may lead to an eventual breaking point, and may require IDPs to look for alternative
assistance or living arrangements, often resulting in secondary displacement. For economic,
security and anonymity reasons, IDPs often move to the outskirts of cities, where they mix
with the urban poor.31 While such areas may provide better livelihood opportunities, they
are often most violent or hazardous areas and IDPs are at greater risk of being displaced a
second time or of facing additional human rights abuses.
73. Despite the challenges, the Special Rapporteur is of the view that a more
effective and systematized management of IDPs outside camps, and more specifically of
IDPs in urban areas, can improve the overall response to internal displacement, anchor it
within a human rights-based approach and contribute to durable solutions. He also
emphasizes the need to address the specific needs of displaced populations in urban
planning and policies and to consult them in their design and implementation.
Goal 13: Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts
74. Changes in the environment and climate have an important impact on human
mobility and are predicted to significantly increase displacement and alter its patterns.32 In
2013 alone, some 22.4 million people were newly displaced by disasters triggered by
natural events. In 2010, the Cancun Agreements expressly acknowledged “climate-induced
displacement”, which the Special Rapporteur addressed in his report to the General
Assembly in 2011.33 Preparedness, environmental risk assessment, mitigation and disaster
risk reduction are development imperatives in the context of the challenges posed by
climate change-induced displacement. The consequences of climate change, such as
environmental degradation and loss of livelihood, are a driver of increased rural-to-urban
migration, often to urban slums and informal settlements offering precarious living
conditions. Climate change-induced displacement must be addressed in humanitarian and
development terms, to alleviate immediate suffering, but also to ensure lasting,
development-based solutions for affected persons that avoid the precariousness,
marginalization and instability associated with protracted displacement.
Goal 16: Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development
75. Armed conflict, generalized violence and human rights abuses are major causes
of internal displacement. Indeed, internal displacement can be seen as an indicator of
whether societies are peaceful and inclusive. In line with the Guiding Principles on Internal
Displacement and the IASC Framework on Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced
Persons, securing effective remedies for the violations of international human rights and
humanitarian law which cause displacement, or which occur during displacement, can have
a major impact on prospects for durable solutions for IDPs. IDPs who have been victims of
violations must have full and non-discriminatory access to effective remedies and justice,
including, where appropriate, access to transitional justice mechanisms and reparations.
Failure to secure effective remedies may cause further displacement, impede reconciliation
processes, create a prolonged sense of injustice or prejudice among IDPs and undermine the
achievement of durable solutions. Securing justice for IDPs is an essential component of
long-term peace and stability.34
31 See A/69/295.
32 See A/66/285 and A/HRC/19/54/Add.1.
33 A/66/285.
34 IASC Framework on Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced Persons (see note 16), p. 43.
F. Implementing sustainable development goals for internally displaced
persons at the national level
76. Clear references to IDPs should be included in the post-2015 goals and targets.
While explicit references to IDPs may be lacking, many proposed goals and targets have
the potential to directly or indirectly have a positive impact on IDPs at the national level.
Nevertheless, it is essential to look beyond international cooperation and focus on the
importance of national implementation. The report of the Open Working Group on
Sustainable Development Goals states that “targets are defined as aspirational global
targets, with each government setting its own national targets guided by the global level of
ambition but taking into account national circumstances” (A/68/970, para. 18). National
authorities are responsible for providing protection and development for all and for
implementing strategies and programmes to meet internationally agreed targets and goals.
Countries affected by internal displacement must set their own national targets and include
IDPs in national development strategies.
77. The IASC Framework on Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced Persons
points to the “need to ensure at a minimum that the necessary legal and/or policy
frameworks are in place to secure the rights of IDPs, to establish effective government
structures to coordinate the national and local response, to facilitate provision of
humanitarian and development assistance, and to ensure that adequate funding, through
national budgets as well as international aid, is allocated to support the process”.35
78. Indicators to help to assess the implementation of the sustainable development
goals at the international level are still under consideration at the time of writing. The
Special Rapporteur strongly advocates the indicators to systematically address the specific
situation of IDPs by mentioning them explicitly as beneficiary groups. Displacement,
whether due to conflict or disaster, is truly a “global” issue, potentially affecting rich and
poor countries, northern and southern States, and international indicators should
consequently specifically address displacement. Equally, countries should develop their
own national-level indicators, taking into account, where relevant, their actual or potential
displacement situation.
G. Essential steps for the inclusion of internally displaced persons in
sustainable development goals
1. National leadership, good governance and political will
79. National leadership and good governance are essential to both preventing
conflict-induced displacement and appropriately responding to all displacement situations.
Deficits in good governance and the rule of law frequently ignite tensions and result in
conflict and displacement. Good and inclusive governance is a cornerstone of sustainable
development activity at the national level and actions to appropriately address the rights of
IDPs. The first essential step towards ensuring implementation of sustainable development
goals for IDPs is for national governments to recognize IDPs as legitimate targets of
development initiatives. If left unaddressed by development actors, displacement can
generate further longer-term marginalization, inequality, fragility and vulnerability.
Addressing internal displacement through a development lens has the potential to prevent
further marginalization and potential secondary displacement.
35 Ibid., p. 11.
2. Data, profiling and needs assessment
80. Official IDP figures advanced by governments tend to differ significantly from those of international agencies and non-governmental organizations due to factors that
include data-gathering and registration deficiencies and, in some cases, the desire to
downplay the issue and the number of people affected by internal displacement. The latter
is particularly true in situations of conflict or violence and when the national authorities are
complicit in a displacement situation. Deficiencies in registration procedures and reluctance
of displaced persons to register due to fear, lack of information or other factors can all
contribute to underestimation of the actual number of displaced persons. The Internal
Displacement Monitoring Centre highlights that figures often reflect only those living in
camps, while 60 per cent of IDPs are dispersed in other locations and with host families,
and are often not officially counted.36 Even when officially counted, the concerns and
perceptions of IDPs are frequently not captured by official statistics and require more
sophisticated data-gathering and household surveys.
3. Full and meaningful consultation with and participation of internally displaced
persons
81. Efforts to ensure durable solutions and effective sustainable development
programmes must involve full consultation with and the meaningful participation of IDPs.
It is imperative that they not be considered simply as beneficiaries of development policies
and programmes, but as full partners in the design, implementation and monitoring of such
activities. IDPs have a right to full participation in decisions affecting them, and measures,
including their return or relocation, should be undertaken with their full consent. Measures
that do not meet those criteria violate their rights and do not constitute durable solutions.
Participation of IDPs is also essential to ensuring effective accountability mechanisms.
4. Engagement of development actors on issues relating to internally displaced persons
82. National and international development actors must engage with IDPs at the
earliest stages of displacement and recognize that, even in cases where early return to
places of origin or integration in host communities is possible and desired, the challenges
facing IDPs are likely to be considerable and complex, requiring medium and long-term
development-centred solutions. It may take years to fully rebuild displacement-affected
communities or to integrate them fully into new communities to the extent that they achieve
conditions of full equality, access to services and participation in the economic, social and
public and political aspects of society.
5. Establishment of national laws and policies on internally displaced persons
83. In December 2012, the African Union Convention for the Protection and Assistance of Internally Displaced Persons (the Kampala Convention) entered into force.
The first legally binding instrument specifically for IDPs, it sets obligations for States in
their responses to internal displacement and aims to “establish a legal framework for preventing internal displacement, and protecting and assisting internally displaced persons
in Africa”. So far, 24 African Union member States have ratified and a further 37 have signed the Convention. The Special Rapporteur reiterates his call for all African States to
ratify and implement the Convention, as a key step towards ensuring durable solutions for
IDPs and their inclusion in development.
36 Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre, Global Overview 2014: people internally displaced by
conflict and violence.
84. While national governments have the primary responsibility towards IDPs, their
responses are often ad hoc, uncoordinated and, therefore, ineffective. National laws,
policies or strategies on internal displacement can assist national authorities in addressing
the challenges of displacement in a planned manner, and improve short-term and long-term
responses. Such national instruments may serve to clarify who is an IDP and what such a
person's corollary rights are, establish budgets directed towards them and create
administrative and response structures and responsibilities, as well as creating confidence
amongst regional and international development partners.
85. National instruments can grant IDPs entitlements based on their situation, rights
and needs, and enshrine those entitlements in laws and policy, including their right to be
included in development assistance programmes as citizens or habitual residents of the
State. Where possible, national instruments on internal displacement should be explicitly
linked to national development documents, strategies and targets, and ideally result in
dedicated national strategies and action plans for IDPs.
6. Implementation of effective governance structures
86. Appropriate and effective governance and response structures are essential from
the earliest stages of displacement, but also in the medium and longer term to ensure
sustained attention to IDPs. The Special Rapporteur notes that such structures are
frequently absent or inadequate in practice and governments rely on existing bodies,
including emergency response bodies, existing government institutions with limited
technical and staffing capacity, the United Nations and national and international civil
society to lead responses to displacement. This can result in a lack of specialist, targeted
attention and insufficient policy and programme responses to the longer-term needs of
IDPs.
87. Examples of positive governance structures include dedicated ministries,
departments or units responsible for IDP issues and for ensuring that attention to IDPs is
mainstreamed across relevant governmental and other bodies in areas such as education,
employment, health, housing and development policy. Such bodies can work to ensure that
greater attention to IDPs is paid by development actors, and should be appropriately
resourced and funded. High-level leadership, for example specialist bodies under the office
of the president or prime minister, can ensure that IDPs are given and maintain high priority
at the national level and by development actors.
7. Addressing conflict, its causes and consequences
88. Attention to preventing and resolving conflict, and stabilizing fragile States is
essential to achieving sustainable development worldwide, as well as to prevent further
displacement. Poverty, exclusion and discrimination are drivers of conflict and
displacement. Development initiatives should be used both as preventive measures and as
early recovery and reconstruction tools to help build peaceful and inclusive societies, as
well as achieve long-term stability. In conflict and post-conflict situations, protection risks,
access issues and an unreliable government partner at a time when governments may be
fighting for their existence may also create an environment that is not conducive to
development actors’ actions. Peace agreements should contain specific provisions for IDPs
and for resolving internal displacement issues. Consultation with and the participation of
IDPs in peace processes, peace agreements and peacebuilding are essential.37
37 See The Brookings Institution-University of Bern Project on Internal Displacement, “Addressing
internal displacement in peace processes, peace agreements and peace-building” (2007).
H. Mitigating the impact of development-induced displacement
89. Historically, development projects have been a major cause of displacement.
Important questions relating to their impact must always be asked and the principles of
informed consultation, participation and consent respected. For example, while proposed
sustainable development goal 7 calls for States to ensure access to affordable, reliable,
sustainable and modern energy services for all, the impact in terms of displacement of
communities to make way for hydroelectric and other development projects must be taken
into account. The sustainable development goals must not be achieved at the cost of forced
displacement.
90. Development projects, including dams, irrigation projects, pipelines, highways, urbanization, mining, and conservation of nature, can all create displacement. The
Brookings Institution report, “Risks and rights: the causes, consequences, and challenges of development-induced displacement”,38 states that it is “problematic at best, even when a State has the best interests of the entire population at heart. The effects can be catastrophic
when such displacement occurs in the midst of conflict and human rights abuse, or when a
State deliberately or arbitrarily targets some of its people to bear a disproportionate share of
the costs of development and denies them a proper share of the benefits”.
IV. Conclusions and recommendations
91. IDPs must be an integral part of the post-2015 development agenda if it is to
live up to its pledge to secure a life of dignity for all and to “leave no one behind”.
Many currently proposed goals and targets have the potential to have a positive
impact on the situation of IDPs, either by helping to ensure durable solutions or by
preventing further displacement. However, their potential will only be fulfilled if IDPs
are clearly recognized as development targets, partners and beneficiaries.
92. Resolving internal displacement is essential for peaceful and inclusive
societies for sustainable development. The post-2015 development agenda can help
States achieve durable solutions for IDPs. Equally, in countries with no displacement,
inclusive development policies address poverty, discrimination and exclusion and
prevent conflict and displacement.
93. One element of the Secretary-General’s call for a transformative agenda
must be to transform protracted displacement situations from neglect and reliance on
humanitarian assistance to durable solutions and sustainable development.
94. Informed by the Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement, the Kampala
Convention, the IASC Framework on Durable Solutions for Internally Displaced
Persons, and by his experience in dealing with situations of internal displacement
worldwide, the Special Rapporteur makes the following recommendations to:
States affected by displacement
95. Develop national legal frameworks and policies on internal displacement,
based on international law, and specifically identify and address obstacles to durable
solutions for IDPs, including access to justice mechanisms; housing, land and property
rights; and livelihood opportunities.
38 Available from www.brookings.edu/fp/projects/idp/articles/didreport.pdf.
96. Make adequate budgetary provisions and ensure human resource capacity
in all relevant ministries and local authorities to implement such legal frameworks
and policies.
97. Ensure that IDPs are fully included as target populations and partners in
policies, programmes and national action plans to implement the post-2015
sustainable development goals. Ensure the inclusion of durable solutions for IDPs in
national plans for local development, poverty reduction, economic reconstruction and
urban development.
98. Improve disaggregated data collection on, and profiling and needs
assessments of, IDPs. Improve methodologies and the capacity of national statistical
offices to ensure accurate data on numbers, demographic characteristics, locations
and needs, while ensuring the confidentiality of data, to inform appropriate
programmes and solutions, and monitor progress over time on the basis of key
indicators.
99. Ensure national tailoring of targets to address IDPs and displacement
situations and closely monitor and evaluate the impact of development programmes
on IDPs including via the use of national indicators and research methodologies.
100. Implement livelihood programmes and vocational training to bridge the
gap between the existing skills of IDPs and those required for entry into the labour
market in their place of displacement to make the sustainable development goals a
reality for IDPs.
Donor States
101. Recognize the prevention and resolution of internal displacement as an
investment in development and an essential element of conflict prevention and
peacebuilding.
102. Ensure that areas/regions where IDPs seek durable solutions attract
development support, notably by ensuring regional equity in access to development
assistance.
103. Increase the length of the funding cycle to allow actors to meet immediate
and long-term needs, and consider bridging the gap in aid budgets between
emergency relief and development aid to allow more comprehensive development-led
responses to internal displacement.
The international community
104. The definition of vulnerable, marginalized and disadvantaged groups in the
post-2015 development agenda must encompass IDPs which will partially ensure that
as progress is being made towards achieving goals and targets, IDPs are not left
behind. Under proposed sustainable development goal 16 on achieving peaceful and
inclusive societies, a target for reducing the number of IDPs would ensure national
and international attention to achieving durable, development-led solutions for IDPs.
105. Guidance on how to implement durable solutions and development
programmes for IDPs should be provided by regional and international organizations,
as well as technical assistance for operationalizing the IASC Framework on Durable
Solutions for Internally Displaced Persons in national contexts.
106. International and regional development actors, development donors and
others should ensure that IDPs are targeted in their country programmes, including
through policies, strategies and funding decisions that support durable solutions and
development goals.
107. Humanitarian and development actors should systematically interact to
develop solution strategies for IDPs and identify mechanisms to promote integrated
approaches from the early stages of displacement.
108. The Kampala Convention pays the necessary attention to IDPs and
provides legally binding standards and guidance on their treatment and development
assistance. Other regional bodies should develop such IDP frameworks.
109. On the basis of agreed sustainable development goals and targets, clear and
targeted indicators and data disaggregation specific to IDPs should be developed to
assist States and development actors in their national implementation efforts. This
means developing indicators for targets whose implementation will affect the well-
being of IDPs.
110. The United Nations system, international development actors and non-
governmental organizations should monitor, by country, region or globally, the
impact of the implementation of the sustainable development goals on the situation of
IDPs.