IRIN Web Special on Cote d’Ivoire crisis
Thursday 4 November 2004
 

 

IRIN Web Special on Cote d’Ivoire crisis


WEST AFRICA: Insecurity in Cote d’Ivoire has thousands on the run

Children stand amid the rubble of their destroyed homes

OUAGADOUGOU, 3 December 2002 (IRIN) - Things had not been easy for Seydou Kabore and his compatriots in recent years in Abidjan, but they became even tougher after Burkina Faso was accused of supporting an armed uprising that began in Cote d’Ivoire on 19 September.

So when he heard that his country’s government had started repatriating some of its nationals, he did not hesitate. “As soon as I heard the buses were in town to take us back home, I just gave my keys to one of my colleagues and rushed to the Embassy,” Kabore told IRIN in the Burkina Faso capital, Ouagadougou.

The 35-year-old was visibly exhausted from his three-day journey from Abidjan to Ouagadougou via Ghana. He was hopeful even if a bit bitter. ''We worked there [in Cote d’Ivoire] for years,” he said. "Now that they do not need us we are coming back home to use our strength to build our country."

Seydou had worked as a taxi driver in Abidjan, but after the accusations against Burkina Faso were carried on state media, some Ivorians started attacking West African migrants, especially those from Sahelian countries - Mali and Burkina Faso - and Liberia.

Forced to sleep on the ruins of razed homes

The situation became more difficult when tens of thousands of people, immigrants as well as Ivorians, lost their homes as shanty dwellings in Abidjan were destroyed on the order of the Ivorian authorities. Cote d’Ivoire’s government described the move as a security measure aimed at depriving the rebels of potential hiding places. Some people were forced to sleep in the open air on the ruins of their destroyed homes. The luckier ones found refuge with friends.

The Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) reported on 19 November that, according to NGOs working in Abidjan, an estimated 40,000 people were displaced from 13 shantytowns razed by the military or the gendarmerie. Only a small minority were taken in by social centres established by the authorities.

In October, nationals of some West African countries began to seek refuge in their embassies, prompting governments to organise convoys to take them home.

Burkina Faso, for example, announced in November that it aimed to repatriate 7,000 of its nationals at a cost of 450 million FCFA (about US $690,000), contributed by the Burkina Faso government, NGOs, donors and the UN. As at 22 November, the embassy in Abidjan had organised the return home of 1,850 Burkinabe, according to Zacharie Masse of the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), who has been collecting data on the repatriations from embassies in Abidjan.

Seydou was part of a first batch of 600 Burkinabe who were repatriated. He arrived in the capital, Ouagadougou, on 14 November with next to nothing. His home had been demolished and burnt, along with his belongings, while he was at work. ''I had nothing left,” he said. “Fortunately the church and Caritas [a Catholic NGO] gave me clothes and fed me, along with the Burkina embassy.”

By the end of the third week of November, Niger had repatriated 946 of its nationals, Benin 547, Ghana 400 and Nigeria, which had suspended its repatriations, 2609, Masse told IRIN. Many more people had gone back home on their own. These included about 34,000 Burkinabe and around 2,000 people from Niger. An association of Guinean migrants, the Haut Conseil des Guineens en Cote d’Ivoire (Higher Council of Guineans in Cote d’Ivoire) had organised transport for 1,242 persons, who paid their own fares.

Guinea’s Service National d’Action Humanitaire (SENAH), which is part of the Ministry of the Interior, said on 5 November that about 8,600 Guinean returnees had been registered crossing the border from Cote d’Ivoire, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Conakry reported. It said SENAH estimated that about 200 Guineans were arriving daily.

In the case of Mali, UNHCR reported that as at 11 November, just under 5,000 people had arrived from Cote d’Ivoire. However, a crisis committee in Sikasso, a Malian region close to the Ivorian border, estimated that as many as 7,300 non-Malians had arrived from Cote d’Ivoire through official crossing points in southern Mali from 19 September to 5 November.

Complaints of abuses

Some of the returnees have complained of abuse at the hands of loyalist forces in Cote d’Ivoire. On 24 October, Mali protested to the United Nations in New York that Malians had been subjected to “violence, atrocities, disappearances and even death,” in particular in Daloa, western Cote d’Ivoire.

The atrocities, also documented by human rights groups, followed the recapture of Daloa from the insurgents, who had occupied it briefly, according to Malian officials, human rights groups and media. Many of the Malians arrived destitute, officials said. They complained that their belongings had been taken from them in Cote d’Ivoire. Some also said they had left family members behind.

The war has also taken a toll on thousands of Ivorian families. Many people in the south of the country have had no news of close relatives blocked in the north. In Korhogo, over 600 km north of Abidjan, telephone connections were down for weeks and were only reestablished in late November.

Few people have been able to leave Korhogo because there are not many vehicles which travel from there to locations farther south and those that do charge exhorbitant fees, according to residents of the town.

On the other hand, between 200,000 and 300,000 people left Bouake between 19 September and late November. The town, located 350 km north of Abidjan, had a population of about 600,000 before the crisis.

Part II 

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