• Text size Normal size text | Increase text size by 10% | Increase text size by 20% | Increase text size by 30%

Guterres marks end of Angolan repatriation; next challenge is Congolese in Angola

News Stories, 28 March 2007

© UNHCR/J.Redden
Congolese refugee children in class at a settlement on the edge of the Angolan capital, Luanda. UNHCR hopes to find a solution for the Congolese refugees in Angola.

LUANDA, Angola, March 28 (UNHCR) UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres has underlined the next challenge UNHCR faces in Angola, celebrating the end of organised repatriation of Angolan refugees from abroad while discussing how to find a solution for Congolese refugees who have been in Angola for decades.

A day after marking the successful return of some 410,000 Angolan refugees to their homeland, Guterres on Wednesday visited the Vianna Refugee Camp, which houses some 7,000 Congolese refugees who have been in Angola since fleeing fighting in their homeland in the 1960s.

While repatriation was the "durable solution" for most of the half million Angolans who fled their country during three decades of war, the UN refugee agency believes permanent residency would be the best option for the long-staying Congolese refugees. Most were born in Angola, the children of the original refugees, and have indicated they do not want to go to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).

"When it comes to hosting refugees, the extreme generosity of African nations is impressive and should serve as an example for other nations to follow," Guterres said. He was due to leave Angola on Wednesday night.

Angola hosted a ceremony on Tuesday to mark the official close of the UNHCR-organised assisted repatriation programme. Spontaneous movement home started from the end of the Angolan civil war in 2002, when 457,000 Angolans were sheltering in neighbouring countries.

The following year, with continuing peace assured, UNHCR and governments in bordering states began organised returns. Most came from Zambia and the DRC, which sheltered the bulk of refugees. Smaller numbers came from Namibia, the Republic of Congo, Botswana and South Africa.

In the four years of repatriation, UNHCR organised the return of 138,594 Angolan refugees. The last of the 2006 repatriation groups arrived this month by chartered aircraft from the DRC. During that period, UNHCR also assisted 116,856 Angolan refugees who returned on their own. A further 154,000 Angolans are estimated to have returned home and reintegrated without UNHCR help.

"Contrary to what many people believe, the vast majority of refugees do not want to emigrate to a rich country, the majority want to go back home," Guterres said at the ceremony on ending organised repatriation, which was attended by representatives of the countries that had hosted Angolan refugees.

He noted that those Angolan refugees who had not accepted the UNHCR offer of repatriation assistance in the last four years could still return on their own. Prime Minister Fernando da Piedade Dias dos Santos said Angola would do everything to guarantee the sustainable reintegration of returnees, including providing jobs, schools and hospitals.

"This is a very important moment and this operation is particularly important, not only because of the number of persons repatriated and the countries involved, but also and for me this is the most important fact because the operation was carried out without any accidents or incidents," the prime minister told the meeting.

In recent years, UNHCR in Angola had been focused primarily on facilitating the reintegration of the returning Angolan refugees. While it undertook a number of community-based projects, the priority was to act as a catalyst to involve others the government, other international bodies and non-governmental organisations in much-needed development programmes.

"UN agencies have eventually and with some difficulty moved from the humanitarian phase to a development-oriented one," said Enrique Valles, the UNHCR officer responsible for Angolan reintegration. "However, the humanitarian situation in the areas of return of the country remains fragile."

As UNHCR's role in reintegration and repatriation ends, the office in Luanda is shifting toward protection concerns. In his audience with the Angolan Minister of the Interior, General Roberto Leal Ngongo, Guterres reiterated the need for Angola to assume the role of a country of asylum and offered to help Angolan authorities differentiate between refugees and economic migrants.

The immediate priority for UNHCR is to find a solution for the long-standing Congolese refugees in Angola. UNHCR is planning a registration of the refugees in Vianna and elsewhere in Angola later this year to provide detailed data on this group.

The Angolan government has indicated a willingness to resolve the situation but the lack of clear information has hindered any progress. They originally arrived during the separatist conflict in Katanga province, in what was then the country of Zaire, and have lived alongside Angolans ever since.

By Manuel Cristovao Simao in Luanda, Angola

• DONATE NOW • • GET INVOLVED • • STAY INFORMED •

 

The High Commissioner

António Guterres, who joined UNHCR on June 15, 2005, is the UN refugee agency's 10th High Commissioner.

Repatriation

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

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

As a massive food distribution gets underway in six UNHCR-run camps for tens of thousands of internally displaced Congolese in North Kivu, the UN refugee agency continues to hand out desperately needed shelter and household items.

A four-truck UNHCR convoy carrying 33 tonnes of various aid items, including plastic sheeting, blankets, kitchen sets and jerry cans crossed Wednesday from Rwanda into Goma, the capital of the conflict-hit province in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The aid, from regional emergency stockpiles in Tanzania, was scheduled for immediate distribution. The supplies arrived in Goma as the World Food Programme (WFP), with assistance from UNHCR, began distributing food to some 135,000 displaced people in the six camps run by the refugee agency near Goma.

More than 250,000 people have been displaced since the fighting resumed in August in North Kivu. Estimates are that there are now more than 1.3 million displaced people in this province alone.

Posted on 6 November 2008

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

Since 2006, renewed conflict and general insecurity in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo's North Kivu province has forced some 400,000 people to flee their homes – the country's worst displacement crisis since the formal end of the civil war in 2003. In total, there are now some 800,000 people displaced in the province, including those uprooted by previous conflicts.

Hope for the future was raised in January 2008 when the DRC government and rival armed factions signed a peace accord. But the situation remains tense in North Kivu and tens of thousands of people still need help. UNHCR has opened sites for internally displaced people (IDPs) and distributed assistance such as blankets, plastic sheets, soap, jerry cans, firewood and other items to the four camps in the region. Relief items have also been delivered to some of the makeshift sites that have sprung up.

UNHCR staff have been engaged in protection monitoring to identify human rights abuses and other problems faced by IDPs and other populations at risk across North Kivu.

UNHCR's ninemillion campaign aims to provide a healthy and safe learning environment for nine million refugee children by 2010.

Posted on 28 May 2008

UNHCR/Partners Bring Aid to North Kivu

Displaced in North Kivu: A Life on the Run

Fighting rages on in various parts of the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), with seemingly no end in sight for hundreds of thousands of Congolese forced to flee violence and instability over the past two years. The ebb and flow of conflict has left many people constantly on the move, while many families have been separated. At least 1 million people are displaced in North Kivu, the hardest hit province. After years of conflict, more than 1,000 people still die every day - mostly of hunger and treatable diseases. In some areas, two out of three women have been raped. Abductions persist and children are forcefully recruited to fight. Outbreaks of cholera and other diseases have increased as the situation deteriorates and humanitarian agencies struggle to respond to the needs of the displaced.

When the displacement crisis worsened in North Kivu in 2007, the UN refugee agency sent emergency teams to the area and set up operations in several camps for internally displaced people (IDPs). Assistance efforts have also included registering displaced people and distributing non-food aid. UNHCR carries out protection monitoring to identify human rights abuses and other problems faced by IDPs in North and South Kivu.

Displaced in North Kivu: A Life on the Run

Angelina Jolie in EcuadorPlay video

Angelina Jolie in Ecuador

Angelina Jolie meets Colombian refugees in Ecuador during her first field visit as Special Envoy of the High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres.
Mauritania:  A Desert VisitPlay video

Mauritania: A Desert Visit

UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres travels to north-west Mauritania to visit some of the world's most isolated refugees.
South Sudan: Appeal for Doro CampPlay video

South Sudan: Appeal for Doro Camp

UN High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres visits refugees in South Sudan and says international assistance is "absolutely crucial.”