UNHCR launches campaign to debunk asylum myths in Austria
16 Feb 2009 17:30:14 GMT Source: UNHCR
VIENNA,
Austria, February 16 (UNHCR) The UN refugee agency on Monday launched a major campaign in Austria to debunk myths about asylum seekers, using billboards, postcards and the internet as well as
radio and TV spots.Leaving everything behind and fleeing from violence is hard to imagine in Austria and therefore difficult to understand. This is the starting point of the awareness
campaign, entitled "Match," created for UNHCR by the Reichl & Partner advertising agency.For television and screen distribution, a 25-second spot explains what flight from persecution
means and shows that asylum is very often another word for survival. The central image is of a one-dimensional house being built from matchsticks, which are then set alight. As the matches burn and
smoulder, the stark message "Flucht ist nie freiwillig" (Fleeing is never voluntary) is plastered across the screen."We want to show the hopelessness of people who are forced to flee. They
lost everything. The only way to survive is to flee and seek asylum," explained Rainer Reichl, chief executive officer of the agency.Aside from TV and radio, the nationwide campaign will also
be presented between now and the end of March on billboards, overhead rolling boards, the internet and postcards distributed in bars and restaurants. The "Match" video will also be screened in
cinemas, several universities, during a football match in Salzburg and at the annual Viennese Refugee Ball this Friday.One of the creative heads behind the campaign, Tomek Luczynski, is a
refugee from Poland. The voice-over was provided for free by Austrian actor and author Miguel Herz-Kestranek. The corporate sector has also provided help, while papers have agreed to run free
advertisements."We want to inform the public and immunize them against messages of fear," Roland Schönbauer, UNHCR's spokesperson in Austria, said of a campaign that seeks to counter
public ignorance about asylum seekers.One common misconception is that most asylum seekers want to come to Austria; the campaign explains that more than 80 percent of displaced people in
Africa, Asia and South America are staying in their regions.Another myth is that is possible to make Austria less attractive for asylum seekers by tightening legislation. UNHCR has found no
evidence that stricter asylum rules lead to fewer asylum applications. In fact, the number of asylum applications in Austria started to decline in early 2003, 16 months before the introduction of
tougher legislation. "If less people flee to Europe, there are usually less asylum applications in Austria," Schönbauer noted.UNHCR has also tried to counter negative media portraying
asylum seekers as criminals because they have crossed a border illegally. The campaign explains that refugees may have good reasons to cross a border by irregular ways. "Someone who flees needs
asylum. And someone who needs asylum is not a swindler or criminal when he or she seeks asylum," Schönbauer said.Meanwhile, the "Match" campaign has already won plaudits. "This is a
simple but highly emotional design. I am sure it works for all age groups," said one observer. UNHCR is considering using the campaign in other countries.By Angelika Strassl in Vienna,
Austria
More . . .
More on the "Match" campaign (in German) on the website of UNHCR Austria: www.unhcr.at (external link)
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