Congo-Kinshasa: Central African Republic - Refugees Not Ready to Return
Effiong Ekpo
15 January 2010Zinga — Assurances from authorities in Kinshasa that peace had been restored to their home areas in northwestern Democratic Republic of Congo carry little weight with thousands of refugees across the Ubangi River in the Central African Republic (CAR): they are in no hurry to return home.
The refugee exodus from Sud-Ubangi happened quickly. Those who fled say they simply picked up what they could and headed over the river, using whatever crafts came to hand, with some drowning.
Sud-Ubangi lies next to Equateur province, where most of the clashes took place.
The sheer volume of the exodus has left relief agencies struggling to keep up. According to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), more than 107,000 people have fled DRC for the Republic of Congo. Many more are displaced within the DRC itself.
CAR hosts about 17,000 refugees, settled temporarily in sites near the Ubangi river in the Lobaye region. UNHCR estimates at least 60 percent of the refugees are children, many having fled orphanages.
Speaking after a visit to Zinga, WFP regional director for West and Central Africa, Thomas Yanga, warned that initial predictions of a short-term refugee presence had been wide of the mark.
"We anticipate that the refugees will be there for at least a year," said Yanga, adding that WFP had responded as quickly as possible to the influx, liaising closely with the local authorities. UNHCR and others have pointed to refugees vastly outnumbering the local population in areas like Zinga and Mongoumba, which have their own nutritional problems. Yanga acknowledged fears among sections of the host population that the influx of refugees might jeopardize their own food security, but said WFP's provision of food aid, including items like salt, beans and oil, had alleviated such concerns.
"From what I've seen, food needs have been entirely covered," said Yanga, adding that WFP would brief other UN agencies on medical, shelter and other needs.
This is the dry season and temperatures drop after the sun goes down. "It is bitterly cold at night," complains Madame Ida. "The children are getting malaria, there is a lot of diarrhoea and some cases of typhoid." Other refugees talk of several deaths in Zinga.
Fighting continues
Refugees and relief agencies have faced a similar situation in southeast CAR, with thousands of refugees arriving in Haut-Mbomou after fleeing attacks by the Ugandan Lord's Resistance Army.
In Sud-Bangui, the refugee exodus was triggered by serious clashes between the Boba and the Lobala. Many of the Boba refugees in Zinga come from the riverside town of Libenge, scene of clashes between rebels and government troops during DRC's 1996-2003 civil war.
"For a long time there has been a dispute about access to ponds containing fish," says "Mr Jonathan", designated refugee spokesman in Zinga. "There was a pond that was specially allocated to the Boba, but there was a break in the family line of succession and the Lobala tried to take over." Neither local nor outside mediators from Kinshasa could break the impasse and it was the Lobala who initiated the conflict, he said. "They did not like the kind of solutions being put forward, so they resorted to traditional violence."
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But refugees like Mathieu Balimbala say it is difficult to get up-to-date information. "We are just refugees living across the river. We don't know what is going on," Balimbala told IRIN. "We would like to go back and see if we can live in peace again, but that is not for now."
This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations
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