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Tripartite mission gives boost to repatriation of Angolans in Republic of Congo

News Stories, 2 November 2006

© UNHCR/F.M.Bampoutou
Officials from Angola, Republic of Congo and UNHCR tell Angolan refugees about the situation back home.

BRAZZAVILLE, Republic of Congo, November 2 (UNHCR) A recent visit by Angolan officials to the Republic of Congo has given a fillip to efforts to repatriate some 2,900 Angolan refugees who fled to this country over the past three decades to escape civil war in their homeland.

On Thursday, 65 refugees were flown from Brazzaville to the Angolan capital, Luanda, as part of the UNHCR repatriation programme. The refugee agency plans to take another 200 refugees to Angola's Cabinda province by land convoy on November 20. The repatriation programme is due to run until the end of this year.

Today's repatriation came days after representatives from Republic of Congo (ROC), Angola and UNHCR travelled to the Congolese departments of Kouilou and Pointe Noire to inform refugees about conditions and reception facilities in Angola.

"We have come to give you a message of hope, a fraternal message, and to tell you that conditions have improved enough for you to come back to our country your country," Feliciano Lopes Toco, deputy governor of Angola's Cabinda province, told the refugees.

His encouragement was welcomed; those taking part in the October 21-25 mission, which included former Angolan refugees, were struck by the refugees' desire to return home. The former refugees gave glowing accounts of the situation in Angola and spoke of their own return and reintegration.

"I returned because I was convinced that conditions had improved in my country. I took advantage of UNHCR's repatriation progamme because it was easier for me. I was able to take all my belongings. We were transported in comfort and safety and at the other end they received us like lords," said Estevao Mangovo Macungo, who has found work and built a house.

At the end of the tripartite mission, UNHCR said that in the next few weeks it would interview refugees at different sites in ROC to determine whether or not they wanted to return home.

Leaders of the three delegations agreed to accelerate the process so that more repatriations could be organised before the programme closes at the end of the year. They also pledged to ensure that the necessary logistical and security conditions were in place to ensure the smooth repatriation and reintegration of returnees.

Some refugees told the visitors they were worried about the security situation in Angola, which only emerged from almost three decades of civil war in 2002. "I want to return home, even immediately, but please assure me that I will not come running back here like the last time," said one refugee, who also wanted assurances that he would be able to return to farming without fear.

Aldina Matilde Barros de Lomba, provincial director of the Angolan Social Welfare Ministry, told him: "If the conditions were not met, we would not have come. You saw the films and the photographs, it is reality and we need everyone to help rebuild the country."

Another tripartite mission is expected to meet Angolan refugees in other parts of the country later this month. ROC hosts more than 60,000 refugees, with most coming from the neighbouring Democratic Republic of the Congo (51,000) and Rwanda (6,500).

Angolans are the third largest refugee group in the country. Since 2003, some 975 Angolan refugees have returned home from Pointe-Noire, Dolisie and Brazzaville with the help of UNHCR. Several thousand have returned home on their own during the same period.

By Flore Mireille Mabika in Brazzaville, Republic of Congo

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UNHCR country pages

Repatriation

UNHCR works with the country of origin and host countries to help refugees return home.

Return to Swat Valley

Thousands of displaced Pakistanis board buses and trucks to return home, but many remain in camps for fear of being displaced again.

Thousands of families displaced by violence in north-west Pakistan's Swat Valley and surrounding areas are returning home under a government-sponsored repatriation programme. Most cited positive reports about the security situation in their home areas as well as the unbearable heat in the camps as key factors behind their decision to return. At the same time, many people are not yet ready to go back home. They worry about their safety and the lack of access to basic services and food back in Swat. Others, whose homes were destroyed during the conflict, are worried about finding accommodation. UNHCR continues to monitor people's willingness to return home while advocating for returns to take place in safety and dignity. The UN refugee agency will provide support for the transport of vulnerable people wishing to return, and continue to distribute relief items to the displaced while assessing the emergency shelter needs of returnees. More than 2 million people have been displaced since early May in north-west Pakistan. Some 260,000 found shelter in camps, but the vast majority have been staying with host families or in rented homes or school buildings.

Return to Swat Valley

Congo's river refugees

More than 100,000 Congolese refugees have crossed the Oubangui River in search of safety in neighbouring Republic of the Congo since inter-ethnic violence erupted in their home areas late last year. They fled from Equateur province in the north-west of Democratic Republic of the Congo after Enyele militiamen launched deadly assaults in October on ethnic Munzayas over fishing and farming rights in the Dongo area. The tensions have spread to other parts of the province.

The majority of the displaced are camping in public buildings and some 100 sites along a 600-kilometre stretch of the Oubangui River, including with host communities. The massive influx is stretching the meagre resources of the impoverished and remote region. Help is urgently needed for both the refugees and the host communities.

The relief operation is logistically complex and expensive because the region can only be reached by plane or boat. However, few boats are available and most are in need of repair. Fuel is expensive and difficult to procure.

Congo's river refugees

UNHCR resumes return operation for 43,000 Angolans in DR Congo

The UN refugee agency has resumed a voluntary repatriation programme for Angolan refugees living in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). Some 43,000 Angolans have said they want to go back home under a project that was suspended four years ago for various reasons. A first group of 252 Angolan civilians left the UNHCR transit centre in the western DRC town of Kimpese on November 4, 2011 They crossed the border a few hours later and were warmly welcomed by officials and locals in Mbanza Congo. In the first two weeks of the repatriation operation, more than 1,000 Angolan refugees returned home from the DRC provinces of Bas-Congo in the west and Katanga in the south. Out of some 113,000 Angolan refugees living in neighbouring countries, 80,000 are hosted by the DRC.

UNHCR resumes return operation for 43,000 Angolans in DR Congo

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