Refugee and migrant rights project additional information

Description

Established in 1996 the LHR Refugee and Migrant Rights Project is a specialist programme that advocates, strengthens and enforces the rights of asylum seekers, refugees and other marginalised categories of migrants in South Africa.

Objectives

The project team consists of 8 lawyers, a social worker, two paralegals and 2 administrators who operate from the project's legal advice offices in Johannesburg, Pretoria, Durban and Port Elizabeth.The project provides free legal services to indigent asylum seekers, refugees and migrant clients. Litigation is used as a tool to advance our client's rights and to develop African jurisprudence in the field of refugee and immigration law. The project's litigation programme focuses on impact litigation with precedent-setting value. For more information on our Strategic Litigation Programme, click here.LHR also undertakes vigorous detention monitoring which documents the human rights abuses suffered by migrants in the detention and deportation process, and advocates for policy reform. Legal assistance is also given to those who have been unlawfully arrested and who are at risk of deportation. LHR is also an active member of the International Detention Coalition. For more information on this campaign, click here.Understanding that humane laws and policies do not always automatically translate into humane law enforcement, the project has developed training programmes for government employees who work directly with refugees and immigrants. LHR regularly undertakes training of social workers, police officers and refugee communities on the rights and needs of refugees and migrants.Funding for this project is provided by the following donors:United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)*Foundation for Human Rights*International Commission of Jurists (Sweden)*Save the Children*Themba Lesizwe*Atlantic Philanthropies

History

HR first became actively interested in refugee issues in August 1996, acting on a request for assistance from local church groups, who were sheltering a large group of refugees and asylum seekers from various countries and wanted to understand these persons' legal position.Further investigations led to the lodging of a complaint with the Human Rights Commission and establishment by LHR of the "Refugee Rights Consortium", an informal association of NGOs.In November 1996, LHR, along with the University of Witwatersrand Rural Facility's Refugee Research Programme, organised a workshop to discuss critical issues of concern. The Asylum and Naturalisation: Concerns Regarding Policies and Practices workshop was attended by representatives from a number of South African NGOs, UNHCR, Human Rights Watch, IOM and the Departments of Home Affairs, Correctional Services and Safety and Security (Border Police). There was much open discussion and a number of recommendations were made, some of which have since been implemented in whole or in part by the Department of Home Affairs. A document from the workshop was produced by LHR.The Refugee Rights Project was established as a full-time project in May of 1997, co-ordinated from LHR's Head Office in imgPretoria. In addition to much advocacy and lobbying work, the Project has advised and/or represented a number of individuals, primarily on asylum-related matters but occasionally on immigration or citizenship-related issues.

The Project has also networked with a number of refugee law and advocacy groups in other countries, including the Netherlands where it established a South / North networking initiative in 1998. In that same year, a major international conference was organised by the project in Pretoria. A report of this conference is available here.With the coming into force of the Refugees Act of 1998 in April 2000, and the opening of five Refugee Reception Offices throughout the country, the Refugee Rights Project extended to cover other geographical areas in addition to Gauteng. The Refugee Rights Project currently operates out of the Pretoria, Johannesburg, Durban and Port Elizabeth LHR offices. Each of these offices provides legal advice and counselling to asylum seekers and refugees. For more information on the hours of consultation of each of these offices, click here.LHR has contributed to a number of policy processes relating to migration and refugee policy. Copies of some of these documents can be found here on this site.LHR regularly conducts, collects and disseminates research, particularly on the legal and constitutional position of refugees, asylum seekers and undocumented migrants in South Africa. It also makes presentations for NGOs, universities and at conferences on the subject of human rights and refugee protection.

Finally, the Project actively participates in the Consortium for Refugee Migrants in South Africa, which consists of service-provider NGOs, the UNHCR, and various specialist research institutes. The initiative focuses on developing service delivery, developing and lobbying for the implementation of rights-regarding refugee protection policy, and developing national initiatives to combat xenophobia. To obtain more information on these national initiatives, click here.