23.08.2010 12:10
Sport helps to prevent discrimination against refugees
www.fcbarcelona.cat
More than 5,500 Columbian refugees living in Ecuador have benefited from projects jointly sponsored by the FCB Foundation and the UN refugee agency. These projects use sport to improve social cohesion and improve access to health care and education.
Over the last seven months, the FC Barcelona Foundation, in collaboration with the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees, has been carrying out cultural, educational and leisure activities
with young Columbian refugees living in Ecuador.
The projects are part of an agreement between the two bodies dating back
to 2008. Thanks to these activities, the Columbian refugees have been able to interact with the
local population and distance themselves from a life of drug and alcohol addiction, crime and
prostitution. Unlike the case of refugees in many other countries, the Columbians do not live in
camps but are placed in villages along the frontier between the two countries. They have been
forced to leave Columbia and seek shelter in Ecuador due to the violent internal conflicts that
have intensified since the late 80’s.
Sports tournaments
A sports programme has helped bring the two populations together in the urban areas
of Lake Agrio and the Esmeraldas.
A number of football, swimming, cycling and triathlon tournaments have been set up involving
mixed teams of Ecuadorians and Columbians, including women and children. Thanks to these
tournaments it has been possible to establish friendly relations between two communities that were
in constant conflict.
Access to rights
Another successful aspect of the collaboration has been to help the refugees gain
access to their fundamental rights. Over the last seven months, a programme of information,
consisting of talks and written material, has been directed at Ecuadorian public employees –
teachers, doctors, nurses, civil servants etc – and to the Columbian refugees themselves.
This campaign has helped local professional people understand that the Columbian refugees
have the same rights as Ecuadorian citizens. A ministerial agreement announced in 2006 guaranteed
the refuges access to education and in 2007 Ecuador put into action a campaign to inform the
refugees of their right to free health care.