Organization: UNV – United Nations Volunteers
Location: Hatay | Gaziantep | Kilis
Grade: Administrative support – Administrative Services and Support – Generally no need for Higher Education
Occupational Groups:
Legal – Broad
Administrative support
Closing Date: 2024-05-28
Details
Mission and objectives
The international obligations of Turkey and its national legislative framework on asylum have shaped the form of the current collaboration with UNHCR. During the last 54 years, UNHCR and Turkey have been working together in close partnership. Turkey has provided the asylum space for persons seeking refuge, and UNHCR has assisted Turkey to determine who is in need of international protection and to enable access to rights by these persons, including access to justice. As the main partner of the Turkish State in the field of international protection, UNHCR Turkey continues to cooperate with the Presidency of Migration Management (PMM), the Union of Turkish Bar Associations (UTBA), the Justice Academy of Turkey (JAT) and other national institutions to enhance institutional capacity-development in the field of refugee protection. UNHCR in Turkey also intervenes to strengthen access to justice by persons of concern through conducting technical assistance and capacity development activities for legal actors, in a way to include lawyers, judges, prosecutors, interns, I/NGOs, national and local authorities. Access to justice is consisted of enabling access to various rights, such as, inter alia, legal aid, legal assistance, interpretation, and access to courts.
Context
The Office of the UNHCR was established on 14 December 1950 by the UN General Assembly. The agency is mandated to lead and coordinate international action to protect refugees and resolve refugee problems worldwide. Its primary purpose is to safeguard the rights and well-being of refugees. It strives to ensure that everyone can exercise the right to seek asylum and find safe refuge in another State, with the option to return home voluntarily, integrate locally, or resettle in a third country (www.unhcr.org). At the end of September 2022, 3,636,668 Syrians under Temporary Protection (TP) in Türkiye, and more than 1,971,515 Syrian under TP are hosted in Southeast Türkiye. The situation in the Southeast is currently characterized by a much stricter approach to border management than in previous years. The admissions are limited to family reunification, medical cases, and humanitarian cases only. The growing hate speech and anti-refugee sentiment have dramatically grown in Turkish society, with several incidents since the beginning of the year. UNHCR monitors spontaneous returns to Syria, which take place through Cilvegozu, Zeytindali, and Yayladagi border gates in Hatay, Oncupinar in Kilis, Karkamis in Gaziantep and Akcakale border gates in Sanliurfa. No notable change is anticipated in the number of voluntary returns soon. The expansion of the detention facilities, notably the Malatya Removal Centres, has led to many transfers of irregular migrants from various parts of the country to these facilities for removal to their countries of origin. Although Türkiye has received new arrivals from Ukraine, few have sought assistance from the State or humanitarian actors in the Southeast, while registration for newly arrived Afghans is restricted in some provinces. The 2021/2022 refugees’ address verification has resulted in the deactivation of TP or IP cards for thousands of persons of concern, and its impact on the situation is yet to be determined. Further, on 6 June 2022, the PMM (Presidency of Migration Management) announced the closure of TP registration in all provinces for all unregistered persons except for certain categories of persons. This has created new and uncertain dynamics in operational response in the SE region where all TACs (Temporary Accommodation Centres) are located. This UN Volunteer assignment will be with the Protection Unit, under the supervision of the Assistant Protection Officer, the focal point of the legal component and related detention and deportation aspects of the UNHCR Sub-Office Gaziantep, which has an area of responsibility covering ten provinces in Southeast Türkiye. The operations of the UNHCR Sub-Office Gaziantep support the Government of Türkiye under the Syria Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan and the Global Compact of Refugees. The aim of UNHCR is to strengthen and enhance the capacity of the Government of Türkiye to assist coordination and stakeholder engagement at the interagency and sectoral levels and promote state-led inclusive and localized coordination arrangements at the provincial and municipal levels.
Task description
Within the delegated authority and under the supervision of Assistant Protection Officer or his/her designated mandated representative(s), the UN Volunteer Legal Assistant will: • Ensure continuous communication and necessary follow-up with the Persons of Concern (PoCs), family members, and partners, and liaise with the lawyers. • Provide necessary technical counseling and advice to lawyers, or partners following up on the cases. Update and track the detention/deportation, registration, and other relevant databases. • Share informative sessions during training and assist in the preparation of activities on legal issues. • Conduct desk reviews and analysis on the current issues and recent changes in the legislation and legal practices. • Support the Sub-Office and the Protection Unit, in the working group, thematic, and/or operational meetings with stakeholders and prepare necessary Note for the Files (NFFs) and keep track on agreed action points. The UN Volunteer will assist in the preparation of thematic and operational reports. • Follow up and coordinate with the field units to respond to the protection and legal needs of the PoCs. • Keep track of information on ProGres and TuranCore systems, follow up with relevant colleagues on the field for interventions with PDMMs and draft incident forms to be shared with relevant focal points at the country office in urgent cases that need prompt intervention at the central level. Furthermore, UN Volunteers are encouraged to integrate the UN Volunteers program mandate within their assignment and promote voluntary action through engagement with communities in the course of their work. As such, UN Volunteers should dedicate a part of their working time to some of the following suggested activities: •Strengthen their knowledge and understanding of the concept of volunteerism by reading relevant UNV and external publications and taking active part in UNV activities (for instance in events that mark International Volunteer Day); •Be acquainted with and build on traditional and/or local forms of volunteerism in the host country. •Provide annual and end-of-assignment self-reports on UN Volunteer actions, results, and opportunities. •Contribute articles/write-ups on field experiences and submit them for UNV publications/websites, newsletters, press releases, etc. •Assist with the UNV Buddy Programme for newly-arrived UN Volunteers. •Promote or advise local groups in the use of online volunteering or encourage relevant local individuals and organizations to use the UNV Online Volunteering service whenever technically possible. Results/expected outputs: •As an active UNHCR team member, efficient, timely, responsive, client-friendly, and high-quality support rendered to UNHCR and its beneficiaries in the accomplishment of her/his functions, including: •As a UNHCR member team, provide relevant and immediate information on detention cases to prevent deportation and to prepare advocacy points with the Government. •Support the NOA during the Legal counselling meeting, on the group work plan to update and follow up needed actions. •Follow up with the partners, UNHCR, and persons on their referrals on legal issues. •Support the quality and timely reporting of the protection unit, on the legal and protection aspects. •Quality periodic thematic reports on detention and deportation cases prepared, clear reporting about pushback, and gap analysis in the field. •Support the organization of consultation and technical workshops of 2024. •A final statement of achievements towards volunteerism during the assignment, such as reporting on the number of stakeholders supported, activities participated in, and capacities developed.