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26/3/2004
Liberia: UN Refugee Agency Scrambles To Help Spontaneous Returnees
With Liberians returning from neighbouring Sierra Leone and Guinea
in a sign of increased confidence in the West African country's
peace process, the United Nations refugee agency said this week
it was scrambling to provide emergency relief since poor security
in some areas did not allow returnees to go back to their homes.
"The worrying aspect of this trend is that many of these
spontaneous returnees end up displaced inside Liberia," UN
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) spokesman Kris Janowski
told a news briefing in Geneva. He noted that over 5,000 returnees
from Sierra Leone were presently at a way-station in Monrovia,
the capital, and in internally displaced persons (IDP) camps nearby.
"UNHCR and its partners are continuing to do their best to
monitor the return and assist with emergency relief where possible," Mr.
Janowski said. Spontaneous returns are expected to peak in the
coming months and continue at a high level during the first months
of next year in the run-up to presidential elections scheduled
for 2005, he added.
On one day alone, over 800 Liberians from Sierra Leone arrived
at the border crossing in Bo. UNHCR quickly responded by sending
additional trucks to transport them on to Monrovia.
According to rough estimates there are over 10,000 returnees in
Grand Cape Mount county, near the Sierra Leonean border, 11,500
in Bong across from Guinea, and a mixed population of 35,000 returnees
and IDPs in northern Lofa County, where the International Committee
of the Red Cross (ICRC) has distributed food, agricultural tools
and seeds.
UNHCR plans to facilitate the return and reintegration of an estimated
320,000 refugees and 300,000 camp-based internally displaced people
this year, pending the full deployment of troops from the UN Mission
in Liberia (UNMIL) and improved security and access in the areas
of return.
UNMIL was set up after a ceasefire agreement last August between
government and rebel forces ended 15 years of civil wars that had
devastated the impoverished country.
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