Repatriation for Mauritanian refugees resumes from Senegal
Repatriation for Mauritanian refugees resumes from Senegal
Yesterday (Monday) morning, UNHCR resumed its repatriation operation for Mauritanian refugees from Senegal following a 10 month break. We transported a first group of 121 passengers to the southern Mauritanian town of Rosso across the River Senegal that marks the natural boundary between the two countries.
Voluntary repatriations from Senegal to Mauritania were suspended in December 2009 pending a tripartite meeting of the two countries with UNHCR. That meeting took place in July, allowing repatriations to resume now that the rainy season is over. We are planning weekly convoys to transport home some 2,500 refugees by the end of this year. These are people who have been given clearance by the Mauritanian authorities to go back to the Trarza region of southern Mauritania.
The meeting also agreed to a strengthened Mauritanian government role in the repatriation process. Starting this week, the government has taken over the transportation of its returning citizens to their final destinations, the allocation of temporary shelters and construction kits to returnee families, as well as distributions of hot meals upon arrival. Previously, these activities were carried out by UNHCR while the authorities mainly handled the administrative formalities of refugee returns into the country.
UNHCR welcomes Mauritania's greater involvement in the process and will continue to support its authorities in making returns sustainable. This assistance includes a cash grant, mosquito nets, blankets and provision of shelter kits to vulnerable families. UNHCR will also continue providing micro-credits to help returnees to become self-reliant, and maintain protection monitoring activities.
Refugees from Mauritania have been in Senegal for more than two decades. They are among the tens of thousands who fled when a longstanding border dispute between Mauritania and Senegal degenerated in April 1989. However their voluntary return only became possible after the Mauritanian government called in 2007 on its citizens to return home from exile.
Monday's departure was the 80th convoy UNHCR has organized since launching the repatriation operation in January 2008, which has seen the return of more than 19,000 Mauritanian refugees.
There are still 21,300 Mauritanian refugees in Senegal and another 10,500 in Mali, of the initial 60,000 who fled to both countries in 1989.