Rwanda, Africa
Thousands of Congolese refugees harboured at Gihembe Refugee Camp for years. So much humanity in such little space.
Gihembe Refugee Camp
UNHCR
July 14, 2006
Kresta King
Source: flickr.com
Thailand
A Cambodian refugee woman ponders her future at Ban Kaeng camp in Thailand.
UNHCR/ R. Burrows/ 1982
Theanvy KuochProfession:Therapist
Country of Origin:Cambodia
Country of Asylum:United States of America
Date of birth:10 January 1946Theanvy Kuoch turned her own experience as a Cambodian refugee into something positive - she now helps other victims of persecution to overcome the scars of the past and has won international recognition for her achievements.
After suffering for four years under the Khmer Rouge regime, she managed to escape from Cambodia in 1979. She recalls the horror of the 1970s: “From 1975 to 1979, I was a slave of the Khmer Rouge and forced to do heavy labour. I watched as my family died one by one from starvation and abuse until I had lost more than 19 relatives.” Following the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia, Kuoch, fearing Khmer Rouge reprisals, ran away with her six-year-old son and her niece. They hid in the forest, staying until it was safe to go back to her home, where she was reunited with her father and three sisters.
Kuoch left her little boy with her sisters and went to the Thai border in search of food. On their way, together with other needy Cambodians, they crossed an area where clashes had broken out between the Khmer Rouge and the Vietnamese Army. “I ran for many hours and when I got to the border, my feet were so swollen that all my toenails fell off.” The Red Cross located them and helped them reach Khao-i-Dang, a UNHCR refugee camp.
In the refugee camp, Kuoch was able to regain her self-respect, lost during the long years of harsh treatment. She began working for a surgical hospital operated by the German Catholic Relief Organization and was trained as a theatre nurse. After spending two years working in various refugee camps, she was resettled in the United States. In America, she obtained a master’s degree in Cross Cultural and Contextual Family Therapy at Goddard College, Vermont.
Since 1982, Kuoch, together with other devoted nurses from the Khao-i-Dang camp, has provided health services to survivors of torture and persecution through Khmer Health Advocates. As she has said: “I learned that my own pain was eased by helping others.” This organisation, based in West Hartford, Connecticut, co-operates closely with other international refugee agencies and assists families to locate and resettle relatives. Finding her own son after 11 years of separation was the greatest reward for her lifelong work.
In the late 1980s, Kuoch started a project called Cambodian Mothers for Peace, a women’s group that advocated an end to fighting in Cambodia through discussions and presentations about their Cambodian experience. This year, she organised the National Cambodian American Health Taskforce to address a health crisis in Cambodian communities across the United States.
Kuoch has been awarded on several occasions for her enduring refugee work: in 1984, she was one of the humanitarians honoured as “Outstanding Women” in commemoration of the United Nations Decade of Women. In 1991, President George Bush declared her a “point of light” on National Refugee Day. In 1992, she received an award by the Women’s Refugee Commission for Refugee Women and Children for her advocacy work.
Source: Flickr / unhcr
Pakistan
An Afghan refugee poses at the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees registration center on the outskirts of Peshawar, Pakistan, on June 20, prior to returning to Afghanistan.
Pakistan hosts a refugee population of 1.9 million. The United Nations sought to debunk what it called “worrying misperceptions” about movements of displaced people, saying that developing countries host 80 percent of the world’s refugees. The United Nations’ World Refugee Day is observed on June 20 each year.
A. Majeed / AFP - Getty Images
Source: MSNBC
Thailand
A Cambodian refugee woman ponders her future at Ban Kaeng camp in Thailand.
UNHCR/ R. Burrows/ 1982
Theanvy Kuoch
Profession:Therapist
Country of Origin:Cambodia
Country of Asylum:United States of America
Date of birth:10 January 1946
Theanvy Kuoch turned her own experience as a Cambodian refugee into something positive - she now helps other victims of persecution to overcome the scars of the past and has won international recognition for her achievements.
After suffering for four years under the Khmer Rouge regime, she managed to escape from Cambodia in 1979. She recalls the horror of the 1970s: “From 1975 to 1979, I was a slave of the Khmer Rouge and forced to do heavy labour. I watched as my family died one by one from starvation and abuse until I had lost more than 19 relatives.” Following the Vietnamese invasion of Cambodia, Kuoch, fearing Khmer Rouge reprisals, ran away with her six-year-old son and her niece. They hid in the forest, staying until it was safe to go back to her home, where she was reunited with her father and three sisters.
Kuoch left her little boy with her sisters and went to the Thai border in search of food. On their way, together with other needy Cambodians, they crossed an area where clashes had broken out between the Khmer Rouge and the Vietnamese Army. “I ran for many hours and when I got to the border, my feet were so swollen that all my toenails fell off.” The Red Cross located them and helped them reach Khao-i-Dang, a UNHCR refugee camp.
In the refugee camp, Kuoch was able to regain her self-respect, lost during the long years of harsh treatment. She began working for a surgical hospital operated by the German Catholic Relief Organization and was trained as a theatre nurse. After spending two years working in various refugee camps, she was resettled in the United States. In America, she obtained a master’s degree in Cross Cultural and Contextual Family Therapy at Goddard College, Vermont.
Since 1982, Kuoch, together with other devoted nurses from the Khao-i-Dang camp, has provided health services to survivors of torture and persecution through Khmer Health Advocates. As she has said: “I learned that my own pain was eased by helping others.” This organisation, based in West Hartford, Connecticut, co-operates closely with other international refugee agencies and assists families to locate and resettle relatives. Finding her own son after 11 years of separation was the greatest reward for her lifelong work.
In the late 1980s, Kuoch started a project called Cambodian Mothers for Peace, a women’s group that advocated an end to fighting in Cambodia through discussions and presentations about their Cambodian experience. This year, she organised the National Cambodian American Health Taskforce to address a health crisis in Cambodian communities across the United States.
Kuoch has been awarded on several occasions for her enduring refugee work: in 1984, she was one of the humanitarians honoured as “Outstanding Women” in commemoration of the United Nations Decade of Women. In 1991, President George Bush declared her a “point of light” on National Refugee Day. In 1992, she received an award by the Women’s Refugee Commission for Refugee Women and Children for her advocacy work.
Source: Flickr / unhcr
Pakistan
Afghan refugee Nazool, 6, stands next to her house in a slum on the outskirts of Islamabad, Pakistan, on Jan. 25. The Pakistani government and the United Nations refugee agency reached an agreement in March 2009 to allow some 1.7 million registered Afghan refugees living in Pakistan to continue sheltering there until at least 2012. Thousands of them still live without electricity, running water and other basic services.
Muhammed Muheisen / AP
Source: MSNBC





