25 Dec 2015, 06:00 am Print

“The need to ensure that the rights of LGBTI people are respected has recently received increased attention and support from UN agencies, States, and the broader humanitarian and human rights community,” Assistant High Commissioner for Protection Volker Turk says of the measures which focus on practical guidance for staff and partner organizations.
“However, despite significant progress in this effort, discrimination against LGBTI persons persists, and their international protection needs often go unmet,” he added in a news release.
“UNHCR [High Commissioner for Refugees] is committed to protecting the rights of LGBTI persons of concern, and will continue to take targeted actions to build the capacity of staff and partners to this end. The training package we have developed is a significant step in that direction.”
The programme, developed jointly with the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and funded by the United States Bureau for Population, Refugees and Migration, covers relevant terminology, international law, communication, operational protection, conducting interviews, durable solutions, health, and refugee status determination.
It encompasses sexual orientation and gender identity, the particular protection risks affecting displaced LGBTI people, specific means to address them and will result in better delivery of protection to LGBTI persons of concern by UNHCR and its partners, the agency said.
Photo: OHCHR/Joseph Smida
- Over 800 died in Gaza trying to source food in recent weeks, confirms UN human rights office
- Bangladesh: Hindu trader lynched to death in Dhaka, attackers jump on his body
- Israeli strike leaves ten people, including children, fetching water in Gaza
- Pakistan: Police claim they averted mob attack on Ahmadi religious place in Karachi
- Chaotic wave of returnees from Iran and Pakistan to Afghanistan is threatening broader regional stability, says UN