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Western Saharan refugees to meet long-lost families

News Stories, 5 March 2004

© UNHCR/A.Hollmann
Born and bred in Algeria's camps, these refugees may soon get a chance to see their homeland in Western Sahara for the first time.

LAAYOUNE, Western Sahara, March 5 (UNHCR) Forty Western Saharans joyfully embraced their loved ones for the first time in decades as UN agencies today started family visits through weekly shuttle flights between Algeria and Western Sahara.

This morning, 21 Western Saharan refugees left their camps in Tindouf, Algeria, and embarked on a UN flight to Laayoune in the disputed territory of Western Sahara. They were accompanied by senior UNHCR staff and medical personnel from the UN Mission for the Referendum in Western Sahara (MINURSO), and will stay in the territory for five days.

Equipped with a small stipend of $30 each or up to $150 per family, the 12 refugee families will meet spouses, children and relatives for the first time since they fled Western Sahara some 30 years ago. Many of the younger refugees have never seen their homeland, which is just 90 minutes away by plane.

Travelling in the opposite direction, a separate group of 19 Saharans set off on a MINURSO flight this afternoon from Laayoune to visit their relatives in Tindouf's refugee camps.

"The initiative is a major breakthrough in the lives of 165,000 refugees," said UNHCR spokesman Peter Kessler, referring to the inhabitants of western Algeria's five camps who had fled the war that broke out in Western Sahara following Spain's withdrawal in the mid-1970s.

He added, "It is the most visible element of the confidence-building measures we have recently established to help build contacts between the refugees and their relatives in the territory."

Radhouane Nouicer, who heads UNHCR's operations in North Africa and the Middle East and who witnessed the arrival of the refugees in Laayoune, was pleased with the way the operation started.

"We are quite excited about the success of this operation. The encounters I saw today in Laayoune and Tindouf took place amidst a mixture of tears and happiness," said Nouicer, noting that over 1,000 people have so far applied on both sides to take part in future flights of this humanitarian action.

Most of the participants in today's flights were women, but eight children also took part, along with a handful of men.

The UN has stressed all along that its motivation for the flights is to re-establish contacts among people only, not find a political solution to the situation.

A problem emerged when one participant delivered a political message to listeners on his arrival in Laayoune. UNHCR had appealed to all refugees to keep their contacts at the family level, to respect the humanitarian framework of the confidence-building effort and to avoid outbursts that could disrupt an operation that has been many years in the making.

"Any problems might prevent thousands of people from participating in this activity," said Nouicer. Despite the brief exchange in Laayoune, the operation continued without incident.

Other measures envisioned by UNHCR to boost contacts among the refugees and residents of the territory include the resumption of telephone links between the camps and Western Sahara in January, as well as the planned start of a mail service with assurances on the confidentiality of the mail and the neutrality of the operating service. These followed a series of meetings in late 2003 between the Special Representative of the Secretary-General (SRSG), Álvaro de Soto, senior UNHCR staff and representatives of the Algerian and Moroccan governments as well as the Polisario.

MINURSO staff have played a key role in making the family visits possible, particularly through the provision of its AN-24 aircraft and medical personnel who accompanied the participants on the flights the first trips by air that most of the people had ever experienced. UNHCR's Nouicer stressed that support from the SRSG and the MINURSO operation has been remarkable.

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UNHCR country pages

Confidence Building Measures 2009/2010 Western Sahara

Information brochure about UNHCR's Confidence Building Measures programme aimed at addressing the effects of prolonged separation between the Saharan refugees in the camps near Tindouf, Algeria and their families in Western Sahara.

Sighted off Spain's Canary Islands

Despite considerable dangers, migrants seeking a better future and refugees fleeing war and persecution continue to board flimsy boats and set off across the high seas. One of the main routes into Europe runs from West Africa to Spain's Canary Islands.

Before 2006, most irregular migrants taking this route used small vessels called pateras, which can carry up to 20 people. They left mostly from Morocco and the Western Sahara on the half-day journey. The pateras have to a large extent been replaced by boats which carry up to 150 people and take three weeks to reach the Canaries from ports in West Africa.

Although only a small proportion of the almost 32,000 people who arrived in the Canary Islands in 2006 applied for asylum, the number has gone up. More than 500 people applied for asylum in 2007, compared with 359 the year before. This came at a time when the overall number of arrivals by sea went down by 75 percent during 2007.

Sighted off Spain's Canary Islands

Western Sahara Family Visits

Emotions are running high in the Sahara desert as families split for nearly three decades by conflict over sovereignty of the Western Sahara Territory are being briefly reunited by a UNHCR family visit scheme.

Living in five windswept and isolated camps around Tindouf in south-western Algeria for the last 28 years, the refugees have been almost totally cut off from their relatives in the Territory. So when the UN refugee agency launched its five-day family visit scheme in March this year, there were tears of joy as well as apprehension at the prospect of reunion.

The visit scheme is proving extremely popular, with more than 800 people already having visited their relatives and another 18,000 signed up to go. In addition to the family visit scheme, the UN refugee agency has opened telephone centres in some of the camps, creating another channel through which long-lost family members can make contact.

Photos taken in June 2004.

Western Sahara Family Visits