1979
Sue Morton, an American living in Asia, witnesses the push-back of
40,000 Cambodian refugees on the Thai border. Sue decides to create Refugees International as a "global
voice for the world's dispossessed."
1979
Sue and a few volunteers and refugees are standing vigilant at the
White House to ask the U.S. to protect Indochinese refugees. President
Jimmy Carter walks out of the White House and announces that he will
order the U.S. Navy to rescue the "boat people" at sea. "I cannot let
your people die," he says.
1980s
RI volunteers play a pivotal
role in stimulating new guidelines by the U.S. and Thai governments to
facilitate protection for refugees and more equitable screening for
their resettlement.
1985
RI rents its first "home," a
supply closet of the Indochina Resource Action Center, and hires its
first employee, Executive Director Susan Goodwillie. Bill Clarke
becomes RI's Board Chair.
1986
RI reorganizes, plans for the
future, moves into adequate office space, expands its advocacy for
Southeastern Asian refugees -- and almost goes broke. During the next
four years, RI is often out
of money, but the commitment to refugees never wavers.
1987
RI receives the Volunteer
Action Award from President Reagan for inspiring volunteerism in
communities across the United States.
1990
Lionel Rosenblatt becomes President of Refugees International. RI expands its work outside
Southeast Asia and undertakes missions to Guinea, on behalf of Liberian
refugees, and the Iraq-Jordan border to call for the rescue of 150,000
Kuwaiti and other "hostages of the desert."
1991
RI is first on the ground on
the Iraq-Turkey border to spark world attention to the plight of Kurds
fleeing Saddam Hussein. Our television appearances and full-page
newspaper ads help stimulate a massive and unprecedented U.S. military
rescue mission for the Kurds.
1992-1993
Philanthropist George Soros asks RI
to advise on the expenditure of $50 million in aid for emergency relief
to besieged Sarajevo. Working in Sarajevo, under fire, with consultant
Fred Cuny, RI recommends
financing of innovative programs to rebuild Sarajevo's water, gas, and
electric utilities.
1994
RI reports on the exodus of
nearly 2 million Rwandans to Zaire (now Congo and Tanzania), the most
rapid refugee flow in history. RI
successfully advocates in Washington for a U.S. military rescue
operation to save thousands of lives.
1995
Lionel Rosenblatt leads a search for missing humanitarian and former RI Associate, Fred Cuny, in
war-torn Chechnya. Tragically, we learn that Fred has been killed. RI is a co-founder of the Burundi
Policy Forum, now the Great Lakes Policy Forum, an informal
organization which meets monthly to consider and recommend action on
humanitarian issues in the embattled Great Lakes region of Africa.
1996-1997
RI takes up the cause of
several hundred thousand Rwandan refugees who have fled to the forests
of eastern Congo. We unsuccessfully advocate for a military rescue
mission for the "Lost Refugees," but our efforts do result in emergency
aid reaching the refugees and some are repatriated. The fate of most,
however, is still unknown. Bill Clarke retires and is replaced by
Richard Holbrooke as RI Chair.
1997
Bulgaria is suffering from a financial crisis. RI stimulates food aid for Bulgaria
and designs a very successful school feeding program for more than
150,000 poor children. RI
expands its programs to help the most vulnerable people in Cambodia:
returned refugees, landmine victims, homeless and landless families,
female headed households, and ethnic minorities.
1998
RI publicizes the atrocities,
including mutilations, committed by rebel forces in Sierra Leone. RI's photos and interviews with the
victims are published by The New York Times and other major media. Our
reports stimulate international attention for a nearly forgotten
conflict and its victims. RI
is on the scene in Kosovo, Albania, Macedonia, and Montenegro to give
an early warning of the Kosovo crisis and to call for a credible threat
of NATO military action to halt Serbian depredations. NATO finally acts
in Spring 1999 after nearly a million Kosovars have been displaced.
1999
Board members David and Penny McCall and European Representative Yvette
Pierpaoli are killed in an automobile accident in Albania in April.
Richard Holbrooke leaves the RI
Chair to become U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations. AOL Founder
James V. Kimsey is elected Chair. After many years of a nomadic
existence, RI purchases an
office building as a permanent headquarters. In another measure of
growth, RI undertakes 23
field missions to 17 countries in 1999, the most productive year in our
history.
2000
RI identifies six new
humanitarian priorities for the new century to expand the scope of our
advocacy. Our new priorities are (1) creation of a standing rapid
reaction peacekeeping force; (2) greater attention to
internally-displaced persons; (3) refugee women's issues; (4) child
soldiers; (5) the relief to development gap; and (6) building local
capacity. RI is on the ground
at the conclusion of the war between Eritrea and Ethiopia. Our reports
are the first to inform the international community that 1.5 million
Eritreans are displaced and in desperate need of food, shelter and
other aid. Our follow up advocacy in Washington stimulates increased
and accelerated aid to save threatened Eritreans.
2001
After eleven years of successful leadership, Lionel Rosenblatt turns
over RI's presidency to Ken
Bacon, former Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs and
Pentagon Spokesman. RI
is a finalist for the Conrad N. Hilton Humanitarian Prize, one of the
largest and most prestigious humanitarian awards, and WORTH Magazine
names RI one of America's 100
best charities. RI's
experience in Afghanistan pays off after the September 11 terrorist
attack on the United States. Our early on-the-scene reporting, op-eds,
and media interviews highlight the humanitarian crisis in Afghanistan
and help generate a $320 million aid package from the U.S. Ken
Bacon becomes Co-chair of the Partnership for Effective Peace
Operations (PEP), a Washington, D.C. based working group that supports
improved UN peace operations capacity.
2002
RI leads on issues related to
the humanitarian preparations for the war in Iraq, acting with peer
organizations to prompt the U.S. to make a $200 million cash
contribution to the UN World Food Program for immediate purchase of
emergency food supplies in the region. RI advocates a central UN role and
better coordination in the humanitarian aid and reconstruction effort
that will follow a conflict in Iraq. RI conducts four first-time
regional assessments to address problems of refugee or internally
displaced people in Guatemala, Nicaragua, Colombia, Venezuela, Uganda,
Azerbaijan, Georgia, Lebanon, the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip.
2003
RI rose to the challenge of Iraq by
providing invaluable and consistent leadership to the American NGO
community. RI was effective
at getting our message heard, both at high levels of the Administration
and to the public through continuous media outreach. In 2003 RI conducted a mision to Angola,
after which RI advocated with
the World Bank to modify its proposed Demobilization and Reintegration
Program so that abducted girls and UNITA "wives," women who had been
forced to join UNITA soldiers as spouses, would also be given support.
The impact of this successful effort is an additional 300,000 women
directly benefiting from financial support and vocational training.
Later that year RI returned
to northern Uganda, found an underreported humanitarian emergency, and
advocated with the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs and UNICEF to increase and improve their response. After RI advocacy, the UN pledged to
triple their humanitarian assistance.
