Update #4: Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf) residents and the determination of their international protection needs
Publisher | UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) |
Publication Date | 13 December 2012 |
Cite as | UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), Update #4: Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf) residents and the determination of their international protection needs, 13 December 2012, available at: http://www.refworld.org/docid/520a25444.html [accessed 22 June 2017] |
Comments | Other documents in this series include Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf) residents and the determination of their refugee status claims, Update #2: Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf) residents and the determination of their refugee status claims, Update #3: Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf) residents and the determination of their refugee status claims, Update #5: Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf) residents and the processing of their cases for solutions & Update #6: Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf) residents and the processing of their cases for solutions |
Pursuant to the Memorandum of Understanding between the United Nations and the Government of Iraq on 25
December 2011 on the situation of the residents of Camp New Iraq (formerly Camp Ashraf), the large majority have
now been transferred, on a voluntary basis, to the temporary transit location, Camp Hurriya (Liberty), Baghdad.
UNHCR continues to process the approximately 3,200 applications for international protection received from the
residents, and to encourage States to offer long-term solutions for the residents, including resettlement and/or
relocation to third countries.
Camp residents who have submitted requests for international protection are formally asylum-seekers under
international law. In the absence of a national system of adjudication in Iraq, UNHCR is considering these requests on
an individual basis in an appropriate procedure. Individual interviews are taking place in a safe and neutral location,
and in full confidentiality. Transmittal to States of the cases of those with determined international protection needs is
ongoing. Pending their relocation outside Iraq, the residents are being processed in Camp Hurriya, which is a
temporary transit location, as set out in the above-noted Memorandum of Understanding.
International law requires that asylum-seekers must be able to benefit from basic protection of their security and
well-being. This includes protection against any expulsion or return to the frontiers of territories where their lives or
freedom would be threatened (the non-refoulement principle) as well as treatment in accordance with basic
humanitarian standards. The primary responsibility for ensuring respect for these standards lies with the Government
of Iraq. Freedom of movement is the most desirable state while processing takes place.
UNHCR, together with the Government of Iraq, UNAMI and other concerned actors, including importantly the
international community, remains committed to finding peaceful solutions to this long-standing problem.
Accordingly, States have been called upon to actively realize solutions outside Iraq on a humanitarian basis, and so far
a small number of residents have departed Iraq.