|



|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
Dateline ACT
Guinea01/01
Suffering
- a harsh daily reality
By
Rainer Lang, Geneva, November 2001
A group of smartly dressed people file solemnly into the cultural
center in Conakry, capital of the West African country of Guinea. There
are also TV and newspaper journalists. The center is the venue for an
exhibition of paintings done by school children. Many of them show idyllic
and peaceful scenes of rural life in the country in stark contrast with
the daily reality that is Guinea.
The
people who live in the countryside are poor and barely manage to make
a living from farming. Guinea is now home to tens of thousands of refugees
from neighbouring Sierra Leone and Liberia who fled the civil wars in
their countries. This year most of them had to be relocated to new camps
because of cross-border fighting and rebel incursions from neighbouring
Sierra Leone and Liberia. Most of the larger refugee camps were situated
near the border and the intense fighting endangered the lives of the
people in the camps. The fighting also triggered waves of hatred and
harassment against the refugees who were seen as harbouring the rebels
by Guinean civilians, militia and army personnel.
Most
of the refugees have now been transferred to remote new camps inside
the country by the UNHCR. Nevertheless, the refugees do not feel comfortable
and want to return to their home country. With the peace process in
Sierra Leone progressing, thousands of refugees have already gone back
by boat from Conakry to Freetown, the capital of Sierra Leone. Last
year, when the old existing camps were under attack, thousands gathered
in panic around the Sierra Leonean embassy in Conakry. A year later
all refugees had left the compound of the embassy, leaving no trace
of ever having been there. Even the walls had been given a fresh coat
of paint.
Refugees who want to return home are now gathering in a transit camp
outside the city, 60 kilometers away from Conakry. On this particular
day an old schoolbus brings about 70 Sierra Leonean refugees from the
big camps in the north of the country to the Mambiya transit camp from
where they are returning home. In front of a big tent with a sign "UNHCR
Central Registration" the refugees get off the bus and are asked to
queue up.
One of the refugees is Patrick Momoh (62). Like many other refugees
he comes from the camp Kountaya in the northeastern part of Guinea,
where refugees from neighbouring Sierra Leone live. Patrick has sent
his family home already, and he wants to follow them as soon as possible.
He had to pay 24,000 Guinea-Francs for the trip to Conakry. His luggage
costs an extra 5000 Francs.
Patrick has been living as a refugee in Guinea for years. Life in
the camp is hard, he says. It lacks everything – space, food and medical
treatment. On average, six people die in the camp every day, Patrick
says.
Patrick is a teacher. He comes from the Konu district in Sierra Leone,
the diamond area, which was one of the strongholds of the rebels of
the Revolutionary United Front (RUF). Originally he came over the Parrot’s
Beak area into Guinea, a piece of land that juts into the north of Sierra
Leone. When crossborder fighting started in September 2000, after rebel
incursions from Sierra Leone into Guinea, Guinean president Lonsana
Conte announced that the refugees were no longer welcome, as they were
suspected of supporting the rebel force. Since then tens of thousands
of refugees have returned home. "We were suffering a lot", says Patrick.
He wants to go home as soon as possible and had not expected to be brought
to the transit camp. He had wanted to go to Freetown directly by ferry,
but each boat takes only about 250 people.
Margaret has been waiting for several weeks in Mambiya camp. The 29
year old mother of two has sold all her possessions to pay the 35,000
Guinean Francs for the trip from the Parrot’s Beak to Conakry. Margaret
says that nine buses were sent back from Conakry by the Guinean authorities
who are still hostile to the refugees, often confiscating their property.
Margaret and her children were hidden by their Guinean driver. Now they
sit and wait in the transit camp. Margaret is a widow. Her husband was
shot and killed by the rebels when they attacked the camp in the Parrot’s
Beak.
Most of the refugees camps in Guinea, home to about 340,000 Sierra Leoneans
and 150,000 Liberians, were located along the border to Sierra Leone
and Liberia. After the cross-border fighting started, these camps were
attacked and many refugees fled the camps. Because of these threats
the UNHCR has relocated the refugees for safety reasons away from the
border area to other places in the country. One of the new camps is
Sembakounya camp. It is more than 30 kilometers away from the closest
town, Dabola, in the middle of the bush, to avoid conflicts between
the local population and the refugees. The locals are extremely poor
and when they see that the refugees are given food and medicine by the
aid organisations they become angry. The refugees tell that people were
killed when the old camps were attacked by Guineans. And there are still
some people missing who were taken to prison by the Guinean police.
Sembakounya
is a big tent settlement that offers refuge to about 25,000 people.
The refugees who settled here complain that they have to sleep on the
bare floor, that there are many flies in the bush and that they don’t
get enough food. "Here there are no jobs and we have to sell our possessions
to get food," says Muhammed Kamara. Alice, a mother of five, has a six
month old baby and doesn’t know how to get enough milk for her, as the
town is too far away. Her husband has been missing since the rebel attack
on Forekariah camp, where she had lived before being brought to the
new camp. Her baby is malnourished, according to the doctor in the camp.
Nevertheless Muhammed is "happy that they brought us here". He can no
longer hear gunshots, which he says could be heard around Forekariah
camp all through the last months. There is a school in the camp, a market
and a clinic. People would like ABC development, a local NGO and partner
of ACT members Lutheran World Federation (LWF) and ACT Netherlands to
continue their work in trauma healing and adult literacy courses in
French, drama and social sciences in the new camp. Eddie, who heads
the literacy program, says that they do not have books, schools or chalk.
He is desperately trying to get some form of sponsorship.
ACT-member Lutheran World Federation (LWF) runs two of the new camps,
Kouankan and Kola, in the forest areas of the northeast part of the
country.
Many of the refugees in Sembakounya want to wait and see how the situation
develops in Sierra Leone. It is reported that the peace and disarmament
process is progressing slowly, but that the situation is still fragile.
Many refugees want to see whether the situation will stabilize after
the elections that have been scheduled for May 2002. Some of the refugees
have been living in camps for ten years and for them, the idyllic and
peaceful rural scenes of the paintings done by children for the art
exhibition in Conakry remain an illusive dream.
|
 |