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Refugees & Migrants: Interview with Foni Joyce

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    Foni Joyce is a refugee from South Sudan.
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    Phony, thank you for joining us.
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    The United Nations estimated
    that there were
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    20 million refugees worldwide
    at the end of last year.
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    We often hear such macro level statistics
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    but it is the more personal stories
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    that can resonate and
    bring about awareness and change.
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    Can you please tell us more about
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    your own experience,
    as a refugee.
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    Thank you so much.
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    As you've said, my name is Foni Joyce
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    I was born in Sudan but,
    originally from South Sudan.
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    My parents fled our country in 1981
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    due to war and they had
    to take a long walk
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    from South Sudan into Uganda
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    before they made it to Kenya
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    and it was one of those experiences
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    you were literally running for your life.
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    Because my father was a journalist yeah,
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    and there were people pursuing him
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    because they believed that
    he was an informant
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    and he literally had to
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    take a long walk
    to just survive,
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    make sure his family is safe
    and he ended up in Nairobi,
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    where we stay currently
    with my siblings and my mother.
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    We are speaking ahead of
    The UN General Assembly
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    high-level plenary meeting
    on addressing
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    large movements of refugees and migrants
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    to be held September 19th 2016.
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    This will serve as a key forum
    for member states,
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    to determine a plan
    to meet refugees
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    immediate humanitarian
    and longer-term development needs.
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    How can the outcome of this summit
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    make a difference for people
    like you and your family?
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    The outcome of this summit
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    plays a vital role,
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    'cause policies will be made
    and the policies that will be made
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    will affect my life,
    my siblings' life
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    and other refugees
    in a positive way,
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    because if policies are made
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    regarding education, social services,
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    regarding work permit and all that,
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    it enables us as refugee
    to become humanitarian actors
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    in our own space.
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    It gives us the capability
    to be empowered
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    and whence we're empowered
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    it automatically leads to
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    creating, making us become
    peace builders for a country,
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    so, if there's a positive policymaking
    from this summit
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    then definitely it has
    a great impact in our life.
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    You've also been involved with
    the global refugee youth consultations.
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    What language do you hope to see
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    in the anticipated summit
    outcome document
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    the Global Compact on refugees
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    to ensure the unique contributions
    of young people,
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    to this process are represented?
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    I hope to see more opportunities
    for young people
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    more opportunities for them
    to voice out the ideas,
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    more opportunities for them to
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    take leadership roles and skills,
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    because I believe
    if they're given that opportunity,
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    then definitely they become leaders,
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    they become the change
    that we want to see.
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    By this, the whole global summit
    and staff
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    I hope to see see more
    educational opportunities for them,
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    capacity-building skills for them,
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    and they become more enlightened
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    and more active in what they're doing.
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    So it changes their lives and they become
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    better people that will lead
    the future generations.
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    You mentioned peacebuilding.
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    Youth are often considered
    a threat by many.
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    What do you think would help
    to ensure that young people
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    can be leaders in peace building?
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    Young people can be leaders
    in peace building
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    if they're given the opportunity.
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    If they're empowered,
    if they are mentored.
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    The young people have
    untapped potential
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    and if they're ignored,
    if no one pays attention to them,
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    then anything that will make
    will anyone or anything that
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    will pay attention to them
    distracts them.
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    But if we pay attention
    to the skills they have,
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    if we invest in the skills that
    young people have,
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    then definitely they become peacebuilders.
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    If we ignore them and
    think of them as passive actors,
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    it won't really matter much
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    because they'll feel like
    no one is paying attention to them.
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    But if we take that time and
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    give them the attention they want,
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    if we listen to them,
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    if we mentor them,
    if we build their skills,
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    if we, if we walk with them,
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    mentoring them in different things,
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    in different spaces then,
    they'll see the need of using
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    this potential they have
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    and we end up becoming peace builders.
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    Well, thank you so much for joining us
    and sharing your story.
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    It was a privilage.
    Thank you.
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    Thank you
    Foni Joyce
Title:
Refugees & Migrants: Interview with Foni Joyce
Video Language:
English
Team:
Amplifying Voices
Project:
Refugee Crisis and Solutions
Duration:
04:58

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