United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) applauds Cameroon's inclusive approach to displacement and calls for increased global support
UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, commends the Government of Cameroon for introducing a national framework to issue identity documents, including biometric identity cards to refugees.
Cameroon is home to more than 1.4 million forcibly displaced people, including nearly 1 million internally displaced persons and 430,000 refugees. In addition to serving as proof of identity, identity documents give displaced people access to essential services such as healthcare, education and employment, facilitating their integration and stability. Through these efforts, the country is making significant strides to address forced displacement by advancing inclusion efforts that pave the way for lasting solutions.
In February 2025, Cameroon introduced a national framework to issue identification documents, including residence permits and national disability cards. In collaboration with UNHCR, the Government is working to expand these efforts to guarantee that all refugees are recognized and included in society.
"We are proud of the results of our collaboration with the Government of Cameroon," said Yvette Muhimpundu, UNHCR Representative in Cameroon. "This decree is a testament to Cameroon's dedication to upholding the principles of the Global Compact on Refugees and ensuring that refugees have access to essential identification documents. The identity card is a lifesaving tool that enables forcibly displaced people to be acknowledged by the hosting authorities and access basic services such as education, health, finance, and banking to ensure their self-reliance."
Throughout the years, the government has introduced a number of initiatives to enhance refugee inclusion, including a biometric identification program that has already provided 25,000 refugees with legal identification. This will improve access to essential services and economic opportunities, offering a pathway to stability and self-reliance for forcibly displaced people.
For refugees like, 36-year-old Shelley Teckombi, who spent seven years in Cameroon without official documentation, the biometric ID card represents a lifeline to stability and opportunity. With this, Shelley who fled violence in the Central African Republic and has built a life in the Eastern community of Mandjou is now able to access education, jobs, healthcare, and travel around the region and country without fear of arrest.
Cameroon has made notable progress in improving the inclusion of forcibly displaced populations. However, the success of refugee inclusion is at risk without sustained international support. Continued funding is essential to bridge the financial gap and ensuring the long-term success of these initiatives. Without sufficient resources, refugees and IDPs will be deprived of the critical services needed for integration and self-reliance.
With global displacement at record levels, a coordinated response is essential. UNHCR's efforts to achieve lasting solutions to forcibly displaced persons require host governments' commitment and increased international support to assist those most affected.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Khaleej Times
36 minutes ago
- Khaleej Times
Shaken by crises, Switzerland fetters UBS's global dream
Switzerland announced reforms on Friday to make its biggest bank UBS safer and avoid another crisis, hampering the global ambitions of a lender whose financial weight eclipses the country's economy. UBS emerged as Switzerland's sole global bank more than two years ago after the government hastily arranged its rescue of scandal-hit Credit Suisse to prevent a disorderly collapse. The demise of Credit Suisse, one of the world's biggest banks, rattled global markets and blindsided officials and regulators, whose struggle to steer the lender as it lurched from one scandal to the next underscored their weakness. On Friday, speaking from the same podium where she had announced the Credit Suisse rescue in 2023 as finance minister, Switzerland's president Karin Keller-Sutter delivered a firm message. The country would not be wrongfooted again. "I don't believe that the competitiveness will be impaired, but it is true that growth abroad will become more expensive," Keller-Sutter said of UBS. "We've had two crises. 2008 and 2023," she said. "If you see something that is broken, you have to fix it." During the global financial crisis of 2008, UBS was hit by a losses in subprime debt, as a disastrous expansion into riskier investment banking forced it to write down tens of billions of dollars and ultimately turn to the state for help. Memories of that crisis also linger, reinforcing the government's resolve after the collapse of Credit Suisse. For UBS, which has a financial balance sheet of around $1.7 trillion, far bigger than the Swiss economy, the implications of the reforms proposed on Friday are clear. Switzerland no longer wants to back its international growth. "Bottom line: who is carrying the risk for growth abroad?" said Keller-Sutter. "The bank, its owners or the state?" The rules the government proposed demand that UBS in Switzerland holds more capital to cover risks in its foreign operations. That move, one of the most important steps taken by the Swiss in a series of otherwise piecemeal measures, will make UBS's businesses abroad more expensive to run for one of the globe's largest banks for millionaires and billionaires. Following publication of the reform plans, UBS Chairman Colm Kelleher and CEO Sergio Ermotti said in an internal memo that if fully implemented, they would undermine the bank's "global competitive footprint" and hurt the Swiss economy. Strategy The reform would require UBS to hold as much as $26 billion in extra capital. Some believe the demands may alter the bank's course. "It could be that UBS has to change its strategy of growth in the United States and Asia," said Andreas Venditti, an analyst at Vontobel. "It's not just growing. It makes the existing business more expensive. It is an incentive to get smaller and this will most likely happen." Credit Suisse's demise exploded the myth of invincibility of one of the wealthiest countries in the world, home to a global reserve currency, and proved as unworkable a central reform of the financial crisis to prevent state bailouts. For many in Switzerland, the government's reforms are long overdue. "The bank is bigger than the entire Swiss economy. It makes sense that it should not grow even bigger," said Andreas Missbach of Alliance Sud, a group that campaigns for transparency. "It is good that the government did not give in to lobbying by UBS. The question is whether it is enough. We have a banking crisis roughly every 12 years. So I'm not really put at ease." UBS CEO Ermotti had lobbied against the reforms, arguing that a heavy capital burden would put the bank on the back foot with rivals. The world's second-largest wealth manager after Morgan Stanley is dwarfed by its U.S. peer. Morgan Stanley shares value the firm at twice its book value, compared with UBS's 20% premium to book. On Friday, the bank reiterated this message, saying that it strongly disagreed with the "extreme" increase in capital. But others are sceptical that the government has done enough. Hans Gersbach, a professor at ETH Zurich, said there was still no proper plan to cope should UBS run into trouble. "The credibility of the too big to fail regime remains in question."


The National
2 days ago
- The National
'Trumped' again: Taking stock of Tesla's market ups and downs
Tesla Motors' stock price is taking a beating again, this time because of the very high-profile squabble between chief executive Elon Musk and US President Donald Trump. Its 15 per cent decline on Thursday reflects the volatility that shadows the company's shares, which remain vulnerable to everything from market trends to short tweets, especially from Mr Musk. Now, with his increasingly bitter fight with Mr Trump, Mr Musk might find himself on the short end of the stick: once a trusted adviser, he has now fallen out of favour with his blitz of criticism over Mr Trump's "big, beautiful" budget bill. Mr Musk derided it as a "disgusting abomination". His gripes won't surely sit well with a "very disappointed" Mr Trump, who is notorious for getting back at his critics. Mr Musk curried favours during his time in the US administration, securing contracts and deals for his companies. Those favours are now likely up in the air. Mr Trump had already suggested that one way to save "billions and billions" is to "terminate" Mr Musk's government subsidies and contracts. It's a spectacular U-turn for the once allies; Mr Trump said he even bought a Tesla to show his support for Mr Musk. Losing the White House's support would be "terrible for Tesla, which is being eaten alive in Europe and Asia by Chinese competition, and Elon Musk's irritating involvement in politics", said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, a senior analyst at Swissquote Bank. She pointed out that Mr Musk would need the President's support, especially for Tesla's self-driving cars and Robotaxis, which "need friendly legislation to thrive". "Legislation is Trump. The hype around Tesla is not looking good," she added. Tesla's shares were up nearly 5 per cent in premarket trading on Friday amid reports of a scheduled call between Mr Trump and Mr Musk to end the spat. While Tesla's stock still remains slightly above its level when Mr Trump won his second presidency in November – Mr Musk splashed $250 million to help ensure that – it's now uncertain how the Musk-Trump clash will affect its share price moving forward. Here are some of the biggest movements in Tesla's stock history. July 24, 2024: Competition heat Tesla's stock dove 12 per cent to $215.99 after its second-quarter financials disappointed, with revenue sliding 7 per cent. The EV maker began feeling the heat from intense competition, most notably from China, as BYD famously overtook it as the world's biggest EV maker in the fourth quarter of 2023 and, subsequently, for the entirety of 2024. October 24, 2024: 22% blitz After solid third quarter financials that saw Mr Musk boldly projecting up to 30 per cent more sales in 2025, Tesla's stock rocketed nearly 22 per cent, putting investors at ease. This was the biggest single-day gain in more than a decade, which also added $150 billion to the company's market value. November 11, 2024: Tesla gets 'Trumped' Tesla gained nearly 9 per cent to $350 as investors expected the alliance between Mr Musk and the then president-elect Mr Trump to further boost its stock. The world's wealthiest person threw in about $250 million into Mr Trump's campaign to help the latter recapture the White House earlier that month. January 2, 2025: New Year's peeve After a series of highs, Tesla came back down, starting the new year with a more than 6 per cent drop to $379.28 after deliveries posted their first decline in a decade. This was also the first time the stock went below the $400 level in nearly a month. February 11, 2025: BYD strikes again After the previous coups, BYD once again hit Tesla, this time as it partnered with fellow Chinese company DeepSeek – famous for putting a dent into the auras of OpenAI and Nvidia – to utilise artificial intelligence in autonomous vehicles. That caused Tesla's stock to shed 6.3 per cent to $328.50. March 10 to April 9, 2025: Tariff see-saw The beginning of the Trump tariff effect: on March 10, Tesla's stock slid more than 15 per cent to $222.15, amid concerns and uncertainty around Mr Trump's planned tariffs. It didn't last long, as the company's share price worked its way back up, peaking – for this period – at $288.14 on March 25, as Mr Trump signalled he might scale back some of the levies. Mr Trump unveiled his Liberation Day tariffs on April 2. By April 8, investors were now raising concerns on how the company would cope with them: that combination pulled down Tesla's shares nearly 5 per cent to $221.86, its lowest since the March 10 slide. This time, it seemed like a blip: the following day, April 9, Tesla shares soared more than 22 per cent after Benchmark Company analyst Mickey Legg dismissed the sell-off as 'overblown'. April 21, 2025: Dogged by Doge Tesla shares gave up almost 6 per cent analyst fears that there was an 'continuing brand erosion' stemming from Mr Musk's role in the Trump administration. Mr Musk and Tesla had already been feeling the backlash: consumers and the general public, particularly those incensed by his federal job and budget cutting, have protested outside Tesla stores and vandalised its EVs, in addition to Tesla owners "rebranding" their cars out of protest. May 14, 2025: Tariff reprieve Tesla gained more than 9 per cent to $347.68 from the close on May 12 – the day the US and China agreed to temporarily halt their tit-for-tat tariffs. The company's stock would then remain largely steady, until Mr Musk departed from his role in the US government – leading to the public squabble with Mr Trump.


The National
3 days ago
- The National
Trump defends travel ban and says Egypt 'has things under control'
US President defends decision to exclude Egypt from travel ban that affects citizens of 12 countries