"); NewWindow.document.close(); return false; } // end hiding from old browsers -->

IRIN Africa | Great Lakes | CONGO | CONGO: Rwandan refugees reluctant to return home | Refugees IDPs | Focus
Tuesday 20 December 2005
 
Regions
Latest News
East Africa
Great Lakes
·Burundi
·CAR
·Congo
·DRC
·Great Lakes
·Rwanda
Horn of Africa
Southern Africa
West Africa
Weeklies
Themes
Children
Democracy & Governance
Early warning
Economy
Education
Environment
Food Security
Gender Issues
Health & Nutrition
HIV/AIDS
Human Rights
Natural Disasters
Peace & Security
Refugees/IDPs
IRIN Films
Web Specials

CONGO: Rwandan refugees reluctant to return home


[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]


BRAZZAVILLE, 4 Oct 2005 (IRIN) - Despite the prevailing peace in Rwanda, thousands of refugees who fled the country following the 1994 genocide and found refuge in the Republic of Congo (ROC) are hesitant to return home.

They have settled in perfect harmony with their hosts, so much so that they have not been in favour of a plan hatched in June 2003 by the ROC government, Rwanda and the UN refugee agency, UNHCR, for their repatriation.

The Rwandans fled their country after the genocide in which up to 937,000 Tutsis and politically moderate Hutus were killed in a period of about three months.

Some refugees say some of the reasons for their not returning home are simply because they have put down roots in their host country through marriage with locals; no family members left back home; and the lack of trust in the authorities there. Fear of possible prosecution in Rwanda's traditional justice system, known as "Gacaca", or retribution by still angry surviving family members of those killed in the genocide is a compelling reason to stay in the Republic of Congo.

"Each one of us can go back to Rwanda if one wants but when I know already that my entire family was killed in Kigali. What will I go back there for?" Naomie Ntsenga, Hutu refugee living in Mbé, 155 km northeast of Brazzaville, said.

Mbé District is the home of the Batékés, the ROC's largest ethnic group. Here the Rwandan's have settled into farming; working as farm labourers; engaging in other odd jobs; and some locals appreciate their presence. The district chief, Domenica Mounzouani, said the refugees had been particularly useful to the local economy after tractors broke down in the area due to poor maintenance.

"The refugees are for us a strong labour. They help us cultivate and we help them to live like us," Mounzouani said.

Businesses

Although highly mobile and industrious - engaging in farming, fishing, bakery, taxi services and the selling of palm wine - there is an ugly side to some of the Rwandans' activities. For example, local chiefs provided farm land around Kintélé but because the soil was sandy and unproductive some refugees started felling trees around the village for firewood and charcoal; actions which have led to environmental problems.

"They destroy the natural and man-made forests," said Gabriel Ontsira, a director of information and the promotion of humanitarian international law at the Office of Solidarity and Humanitarian Action within the Ministry of the Social Affairs.


Refugees at Kintele Camp, 25 km north of Brazzaville, the capital.
The UNHCR says most of the Rwandans have been able to fend for themselves and, therefore, no longer require the agency's help. Today, only some 800 of the original Rwandan inmates of the 4,413 at the UNHCR's Kintélé Refugee Camp remain there, according to a UNHCR Brazzaville document in July 2005 titled "Les Objectifs pour 2005". Many have gone to the departments of Cuvette, Sangha and Likouala in the northeast and central Congo as well as south to Kouilou, the department of the Pointe-Noire.

In fact, the executive director of the Congolese Observatory for Human Rights, Roger Bouka Owoko, said the Rwandans were pretty much present in all the country's administrative departments.

Uprooting the refugees from Congo and repatriating them voluntarily is proving particularly difficult; even though in June the Rwandan minister for community development and social affairs, Marie Christine Nyatanyi, visited Brazzaville in an effort to assure them that it was safe to return home.

"We are rebuilding the country, and we need the assistance of all Rwandans who are abroad and inside the country," she told them; but her words have gone largely unheeded.

[ENDS]


 Theme(s) Refugees IDPs
Other recent CONGO reports:

Rural residents left high and dry for lack of clean water,  15/Dec/05

Profile of ex-Prime Minister Bernard Kolelas,  9/Dec/05

Norway to promote peace and development through culture, sports,  2/Dec/05

War-affected youth target of reintegration project,  2/Dec/05

Mbeki promises to help nation fight poverty,  2/Dec/05

Other recent Refugees IDPs reports:

ANGOLA: Peace raises fear of increased land conflict, 19/Dec/05

YEMEN: Somali refugee sit-in gets violent, 18/Dec/05

PAKISTAN: Acute respiratory infections increasing among quake survivors, 16/Dec/05

MIDDLE EAST: Appeal to Arab world to give more to world’s poorest, 16/Dec/05

WEST AFRICA: IRIN-WA Weekly Round-up 308 covering 10-16 December 2005, 16/Dec/05

[Back] [Home Page]

Click here to send any feedback, comments or questions you have about IRIN's Website or if you prefer you can send an Email to Webmaster

Copyright © IRIN 2005
The material contained on www.IRINnews.org comes to you via IRIN, a UN humanitarian news and information service, but may not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations or its agencies.
All IRIN material may be reposted or reprinted free-of-charge; refer to the IRIN copyright page for conditions of use. IRIN is a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs.