My UNGPID Presentation
My UNGPID Presentation
My UNGPID Presentation
Introduction to the
It is so far the most comprehensive legal protection for Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs)
It is intended to serve as an international standard to guide governments as well as humanitarian and development agencies in providing protection and assistance to IDPs. It provides four (4) sets of principles relating to :
Protection From Displacement Protection During Displacement Humanitarian Assistance Return, Resettlement and Reintegration
Understanding
The phenomenon of Internal Displacement refers to the involuntary or coerced movement or relocation of persons, families, or communities from their areas of habitual abode and source of subsistence within national border. The internally displaced persons in the Philippines are usually driven to exodus or mass departure to escape harm and persecution arising from: Human Made-Disasters
Natural Disasters
Human Made-Disasters
Armed conflict Situations of generalized violence Violations of human rights Demolition Environmental destruction, and Aggressive implementation of development
Natural Disasters
Storms Floods Volcanic eruptions
Persons or group of persons who have been forced or obliged to flee or to leave their homes or places of habitual residence, in particular as a result of or in order to avoid the effects of: armed conflict, situations of generalized violence, violations of human rights, natural or human-made disasters. (Par. 2,
Introduction Scope and Purpose, United Nations Guiding Principles on Internal Displacement)
Persons who are forced to move as a response to systematic violations of their human rights, including economic, social, and cultural rights, fit the description of an internally displaced person.
IDPs
B o r d e r Being internally displaced does not confer to the IDPs legal status as provided for by international refugee law.
Refugees
Refugees are protected by the International Refugee Law of 1958.
State A
State B
Families from rural areas, usually from the interior and hinterland communities. In urban centers, those who are categorized as urban poor are the hardest hit by forced eviction.
Mindanao
(where, by far, majority of IDPs are found)
Moro ethno-linguistic groups: Maguindanaoan, Maranao, Iranun, and Tausug Indigenous peoples: Blaan, TBoli, Higaononon, Manobo, Subanen, and Teduray.
Mindoro: Mangyan communities have been affected by military operations against the New Peoples Army (NPA) This also holds true in some villages in Eastern Visayas and some parts of Luzon. Cordillera Region: have been haunted by episodes of displacements not only due to militarization, but also because of tribal wars and enroachment of so-called development projects.
From conflict-ridden and devastated places to areas where they feel relatively sheltered from violence and harm.
Others who are uprooted from their ancestral domains and farms find temporary shelters in church, plaza, schools, government buildings, and evacuation centers. Some goes deeper into the forest where they feel safer, and where food may be found. Others move in with their relatives elsewhere, or migrate to the cities and live in informal settlements.
Temporary Displacement
Is a situation where the victims are compelled to transfer from their usual place of abode or community for a relatively brief period of time.
Example: A community forced to seek temporary shelter in an evacuation site until a heavy storm or swelling of the river subsided.
Repeated Displacement
Takes place when families or communities are driven to move elsewhere a number of times.
This usually happens in places where skirmishes between government troopers and members of armed opposition groups erupt from time to time, disrupting repeatedly the lives and usual activities of the affected population.
Long-term Displacement
A situation where affected persons or families are forced to stay in temporary settlements for an indefinite period of time.
They are unable to return to their original place of residence for fear over their lives and safety, devastation of their properties and source of subsistence, or the lack of economic and political mans to go back and rebuild their community.
According to the Ecumenical Commission for the Displaced Families and Communities (ECDFC) Displacement is considered to have ceased when the victims have returned or successfully resettled elsewhere, living a lifestyle similar or better as before displacement, and when cultural and psychosocial rehabilitation are attained.
Social Trauma
Involuntary movements of evacuees disrupt their usual lives. Even when their displacement is over, the crack in the community social relationships may continue leading to the phenomenon of social trauma.
Effects on Children
to their education Unable to resume peaceful lives, the education of children are greatly affected. to their growth Kids grow up in a climate of aggression, animosity, and deprivation are likely to imbibe a culture of hostility and aggression as a way of resolving conflicts. to their health Impoverished as they already are, malnutrition and various kind of sickness stalk the IDPs, especially those who stay in evacuation sites with hardly any assistance from authorities.