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1 Fridtjof Nansen, Report on the Work of the High Commission for Refugees 1 (1923)

handle is hein.unl/rwhcr0001 and id is 1 raw text is: 
[Distributed  to the  Council, the                                      A.  30. 1923. X
Members of the League and the
    Delegates at the Assembly.]

                               LEAGUE OF NATIONS

                                                              GENEVA,
                                                                    September  4th, 1923.



         Report   on  the  Work of the High Commission for Refugees

                    presented by Dr. Fridtjof Nansen to the Fourth Assembly.



                                       SUMMARIY.

                                   1. Riussian Itefugee .
     It may  be useful, before entering into the details of the work accomplished by the I igh
 Commission  since the last Assembly, to give a short general survey of the duties with which
 the High Comnmission has been charged from time to time by the Assembly and  the Council
 and of the results obtained.
     It will be remembered  that, during the latter part of 1921, the High Commission was
 established to deal with the problems raised by the presence of inore than one and a-half
 million Russian refugees scattered throughout Europe.   The majority  of these  refugees
 were destitute, and their situation was rendered still more serious by the fact that most
 of them had  no passports, or only possessed passports that were recognised by very few
 Governments.  It was because the individual Governments  found it impossible by indepen-
 dent action to deal with the problem of these refugees that the League was requested to
 interest itself in their welfare.
     Thanks  to the co-operation afforded to the High  Connission   by the  Governments
 interested in the refugee question, and to the valuable support of many private relief or-
 ganisations, it has been possible to effect a very substantial improvement in the situation
 of the refugees, although the general economic depression prevailing throughout Europe
 has up to the present rendered impossible a complete solution of the problem.
     It was recognised from the outset that the problem presented two distinct phases, one
 being of a transitory nature and  consisting of hospitality in various countries, and the
 other the permanent solution by repatriation to Russia if and when conditions in that coun-
 try became favourable.  Substantial progress has been made  in the transitory phase; no
 fewer than 31 Governments,  including Germany   and  Mexico, have recognised the model
 identity certificate for Russian refugees recommended  by  the High  Commission.  As  a
 matter of fact, of all the countries interested in the Russian refugee problem only China
 and Turkey  have refrained from adopting the identity certificate system, but recent nego-
 tiations with the Governments of these two countries encourage the hope that they will not
 long delay their adhesion to the system.  The  introduction of this system has not only
 been of inestimable value to the refugees themselves, in releasing them substantially from
 their disabilities as  Staatenlose , but has been of considerable benefit to countries
 where the  refugees are concentrated ini large numbers, by affording the refugees facilities
 to travel to other countries where they either have prospects of employment or opportunities
 to join friends.
     The High  Commission  has in many  other ways  endeavoured to improve  the material
welfare of the refugees. For example, the Constantinople problem, which, at the time of the
establishment of the High  Commission, assumed  very serious proportions, and was causing
very grave concern to the representatives of the Allied Powers, has been practically liqui-
dated by  means of the evacuation of more than 20,000 refugees to 45 different countries.
     Constantinople has seen, many tragedies, but it is difficult to believe that the catas-
trophes of the past could have entailed such a sum of human misery as was produced by the
three successive refugee waves of Russians, Turks  and Greeks.
     These three separate hordes of miserable human beings, driven from their homes by the
fear of death, ravaged by epidemic diseases and deprived of their power of economic produc-
tion, have since November   1920 descended upon  Constantinople, which, under the Allied
occupation, offered at least security.
     Constantinople, for hunmdreds of thousands of human beings, has been the first stage
of a long and always painful journey, which led, for those more fortunate ones who survived
its rigours, to a new beginning in other countries.
     170,000 Russians, 75,000 Turks, 155,000 Greeks and  Armenians -   these figures give
some  idea of the refugee problems which have had to be faced in Constantinople.
s. d. N. 100 (F) +  160 (A) (prov.) +   :I  (F) I 1200 (A) 9/23 - Imp. Jent. S. A.

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