Headlines
  • After American raids on the Iranian island of Sirik in the Hormozgan region, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps stated on Monday that it attacked an unidentified air base in retaliation.
  • After the occupation of the strategic Beaufort Castle, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu claims he has "instructed the Israeli military to expand the manoeuvre in Lebanon."
  • According to Lebanon's Ministry of Public Health, 3,412 people have died and 10,269 more have been injured as a result of Israel's military intervention.
  • After an Iranian missile attack was intercepted over Kuwait's Ali Al Salem Air Base on Wednesday, a number of American soldiers and civilian contractors were returned to duty after suffering minor injuries.
  • British Foreign Minister Yvette Cooper stated on Sunday that the Israeli military's increased operations in Lebanon must halt since they have killed and displaced civilians, damaged infrastructure, and reduced diplomatic space.
  • New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani became the first mayor of a city in decades to abstain from the annual Israel Day Parade by skipping it on Sunday.

More Details

Refugee Group: Use Frozen Billions to Aid World’s Displaced

The World Refugee Council called Thursday for up to $20 billion stolen by government leaders and now frozen in the United States, Britain and other countries to be reallocated by courts to help millions of displaced people forced to flee conflict, persecution and victimization.   

The council also called for people responsible for the growing crisis of refugees and internally displaced people — including government leaders, military officers, and opposition and rebel figures — to be held accountable, all the way to the International Criminal Court.   

Chaired by former Canadian Foreign Minister Lloyd Axworthy, the 24-member council, which was formed in May 2017, includes former heads of state and ministers, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Leymah Gbowee, and leading business, civil society and human rights officials.   

Displacement at postwar peak

The 218-page report it launched Thursday goes beyond what the United Nations has done, at a time when the number of people forcibly displaced from their homes is 68.5 million, the highest since World War II. Its release also comes as populist and nationalist political figures “are exploiting people’s anxieties, fears” about refugees, Axworthy said, 
 

Tanzania’s former President Jakaya Kikwete, a council co-chair, said the current crisis is a consequence of some countries’ internal policies, authoritarianism, sectarianism, violence and conflicts, “but the other aspect is that the attitude towards refugees has changed.”   

“In the past people have been welcoming, friendly,” he said. “Now people are … closing the doors for people who are … fleeing from danger. But they say, ‘No, no, you can’t come’ … and refugees are being blamed as being the problem.”  

Courtesy: World Refugee Council

Kikwete said “unscrupulous politicians” are using refugees to get votes “because when you tell your people they’re dangerous,” they react, and the politicians become popular.   

At the same time, the report said, “the humanitarian commitment of nations, once a norm, has given way to nativism. Xenophobia — fear and exclusion of the ‘outsider’ — has gathered force in America, Europe, Australia and elsewhere.” 

  The U.N. refugee agency, which relies on voluntary contributions, is seriously underfunded, and its head, Filippo Grandi, called in his latest report on forced displacement for “a new and far more comprehensive approach” to the crisis “so that countries and communities aren’t left dealing with this alone.”   

Axworthy told a news conference: “What we’ve really proposed is a way in which you have to get out of the box in which refugees are seen simply as ‘a humanitarian issue.’ ”  

“There has to be a much stronger level of involvement,” he said, in matters of security, development, human rights, accountability and finance for the world’s 25.4 million refugees and 40 million internally displaced, along with 3.1 million asylum seekers.   

Axworthy said the World Bank has estimated that there are between $15 billion and $20 billion “in purloined assets that various political leaders have stolen from their people.”   

Swiss actions

How much of that can be recovered, he said, depends on how many governments and countries are prepared to give their courts the right to reallocate the money. He pointed to Switzerland, which has done just that, as a model.   

Fen Osler Hampson, the council’s executive director, said Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro’s regime has complained it doesn’t have access to $3 billion in bank accounts frozen in the United States. He said there are several hundred million dollars belonging to Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s family frozen in London bank accounts. And in the case of South Sudan, he said, “the generals have several hundred millions that are frozen in bank accounts in Nairobi.” 
 
“All it takes is political will to introduce that legislation” to give courts the right to reallocate that money, Hampson said.  

Courtesy: World Refugee Council

The World Refugee Council’s argument is that refugees and internally displaced people, the majority of them women and children, are the most vulnerable in the world and should therefore have the primary claim on those assets, he said. 

  Other prospects for new money, Hampson said, are to leverage the vast resources of the private sector and create “refugee bonds,” similar to “green bonds” to tackle climate change.   

Another proposal is a kind of cap-and-trade system in which a country unwilling to resettle refugees for political reasons could contribute money to developing countries saddled with the huge costs of hosting millions of refugees, Hampson said. 

  Remove the ‘impunity’

As for accountability, Axworthy said using the International Criminal Court to prosecute Myanmar’s military leaders for alleged crimes against humanity for the crackdown that led over 700,000 Rohingya Muslims to flee to Bangladesh would “take away the impunity” for those responsible for massive displacement.   

The council also called for the drafting of a new protocol to the 1951 Refugee Convention requiring “collective responsibility for refugees.”  

   And it urged nations to promote the achievements and contributions of refugees to counter the negative narrative of opponents and populists.   
“For example, Syrian refugees in Turkey have established an estimated 6,000 businesses providing 100,000 jobs,” the report said. “In Sweden, the intake of about 600,000 refugees and migrants has produced some of the highest growth rates in Europe and aided in addressing the challenges of an otherwise aging population.”VOA

Related Article

UNHCR Uses a New Technique to…

UNHCR opened two sites inside the Kutupalong refugee settlement, in December 2018 and January 2019, ...
December 8, 2019

The Plight and Dilemmas of Syrian…

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan wants to return up to 2 million refugees to Syria. Under his ...
November 1, 2019

Estimated 160,000 people on the Move,…

World Food Programme (WFP) is deeply concerned about the safety of civilians caught up in the violen ...
October 16, 2019

Escalation of Fighting in Northeast Syria,…

While significant further displacements continue, UNICEF’s partners have started providing emergen ...
October 15, 2019

UNHCR Uses Cash Assistance for Refugees…

Twenty-five-year-old Florence Idiongo fled South Sudan in 2016 and for two years she and her twelve ...
August 28, 2019

Rohingya Refugee Children

UNICEF is supporting the development of youth centres and adolescent clubs in which life skills, psy ...
August 16, 2019

Other Article

Bizzare News

After Road Rescue, Lost Chicken in…

The Bethel Park police department in Pennsylvania said that they had been called to the Drake Road a ...
June 1, 2026
Pet Corner

Austrian Black and Tan Hound Dog…

The medium-sized Austrian Black and Tan Hound breed developed in Austria and has a distinctive build ...
Prevent Cyber Crime

SOAR (Security Orchestration, Automation, and Response)

Security teams may connect and coordinate separate security solutions, automate tedious processes, a ...
News & Views

Quad’s Fiji Port Plan Will Challenge…

A plan by the United States, Japan, India and Australia to collaboratively invest in port infrastruc ...
May 30, 2026
Pick of the Day

UN Secretary-General Meets with President of…

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres meets with Leonor Zalabata Torres, Permanent Repr ...
Bizzare News

After Planting More Than 45,000 Mangroves…

On April 30, Canadian Antoine Moses worked nonstop for about twenty-four hours in order to dissemina ...
May 29, 2026

Top