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Africa: Refugee crisis in Guinea produces a humanitarian disaster
By Barry Mason and Chris Talbot
3 February 2001
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Around a quarter of a million refugees, trapped in the southern
region of Guinea that protrudes into Sierra Leone and Liberia,
are facing a catastrophe. Though it has been given virtually no
coverage in the Western press, the United Nations' refugee agency
UNHCR describe the situation as currently its most severe humanitarian
crisis.
Whilst a majority of the refugees in the camps are from Sierra
Leone, having fled the decade-long civil war there, there are
also Liberians fleeing from the conflict which has now begun again
in that country, and around 70,000 Guineans who have been displaced
by fighting.
The refugees are trapped between Guinean government forces
and those of rebel Guinean dissidents. Hundreds of refugees have
been killed and many more injured in attacks carried out by both
sides. Prevented from moving south into Sierra Leone by the rebel
forces of the Revolutionary United Front (RUF), the refugees cannot
move into safer areas of Guinea because the government there accuses
them of harbouring rebel dissidents.
Some refugees have not been able to receive food aid for the
last five months because of the escalating fighting. A BBC report
described a hellish situation at one of the refugee
camps, with terrified people having fist fights over dwindling
food supplies, while armed militia men allied to the
Guinean government side in the war, swaggered around the camp
taking some of the already insufficient supplies.
According to press reports, over 30,000 Sierra Leonean refugees
at the Nyaedou Refugee camp near Gueckedou pleaded with UNHCR
representatives to take them home, saying that they would rather
die in Sierra Leone than in Guinea.
Although the UNHCR provides some food supplies to Nyaedou with
difficulty, it is unable to reach much of the area. Last year
the head of the local UNHCR office was killed and another staff
member abducted. Many aid workers have also had to pull out.
The refugee disaster takes place as the United States and Britain
step up their campaign to demonise Liberian President Charles
Taylor as the primary cause of the region's problems. A United
Nations report issued in December 2000 accuses Taylor of supporting
the RUF, providing them with logistical support and allowing them
to use Liberia as a staging post for their attacks into Sierra
Leone. Taylor was also accused of breaking UN sanctions by dealing
in diamonds mined in the RUF-controlled areas of Sierra Leone.
The report was discussed by a UN Security Council meeting on January
25, where a draft resolution was drawn up. This called for a fresh
arms embargo, a ban on the export of timber and diamonds from
Liberia, restrictions on international air flights to and from
Liberia and a limit the travel aboard by Liberian government officials.
Whether the full resolution, which is backed by the US and Britain,
will be passed by the UN next month remains to be seen. France
in particular protested against the ban on timber, mindful of
its own interests in the region.
The move to outlaw Liberia is being championed particularly
by Britain, which sent troops into Sierra Leone last May to boost
government forces against the RUF rebels and provides backing
for the UN peacekeeping mission. At that time, the
capture of 500 UN troops, who were taken hostage by the RUF, revealed
the peace deal to be a shambles. Indian and Jordanian contingents
in the UN force then withdrew, after it became clear that no Western
countries were willing to send troops. The present size of the
UN force in Sierra Leone is only half what was laid down by the
UN mandate, and the situation remains precarious, relying on a
shaky ceasefire negotiated with the RUF last November.
Britain has continued to put the RUF under pressure by keeping
600 of its own troops in the country at any one time, with 300
presently involved in training the Sierra Leone army. By September
this year, a total of 8,000 British troops will have undertaken
operations in Sierra Leone, forming a pool of soldiers who are
familiar with the conditions and terrain there. Britain's Ministry
of Defence (MoD) stated that it was monitoring the security threat
and was ready to act if the situation deteriorated. Defence Secretary
Geoff Hoon said: Our rapid reaction capability remains available
to the United Nations, we expect to exercise periodically in Sierra
Leone to demonstrate how we can deploy quickly if necessary.
Press statements last November made it clear that US and British
pressure on the RUF and the Liberian regime was in the full knowledge
that the conflict was likely to shift into Guinea.
The US has initially sent 10 Special Forces soldiers to provide
training for Guinean troops. As a Washington Post article
of November 6 last year explained: U.S. and Guinean troops
say the training is necessary to ensure that Sierra Leone's rebels
cannot move their bases into Guinea if they become pressed by
the British, UN and Sierra Leonean forces supporting the government
there.
Despite the humanitarian rhetoric used by the US and Britain
to justify their interventions in this region of Africafocusing
on the brutality of the RUF and Taylor's support for themtheir
reckless actions have largely contributed to the present refugee
crisis. Whilst Taylor claims to have broken off all relations
with the RUF in order to escape the threatened UN sanctions, and
the RUF say it is engaged in a ceasefire, RUF militia, as well
as militia based in Liberia opposed to the Guinean regime, have
moved over the border into Guinea.
According to the Sierra Leonean newspaper the Concord Times,
Guinean dissidents have made regular visits into RUF-controlled
territory in Sierra Leone, recruiting RUF mercenaries for $200
a month with the promise of a $10,000 bonus at the end of the
mission. The identity and origin of all the militia groups fighting
in Guinea remains unclear. The BBC, for example, report at least
five different outfits being involved.
The Guinean regime, notorious for its brutal treatment of internal
opponents, is now targeting refugees as much as the RUF and dissident
forces. A report produced by Human Rights Watch (HRW) pointed
out that in a radio broadcast, the Guinean President, Lansana
Conte, whipped up hostility to the refugees, demanding that they
go home, and calling on Guineans to defend their
country and round-up all foreigners. HRW reports that, for
several days, armed groups of civilian militias, police and soldiers
broke into refugees' homes, beat, raped and arrested them and
looted their belongings.
Guinea and Liberia are now hurling mutual recriminations, denouncing
each other for supporting the other's rebel groups. Tensions are
escalating throughout the region and threaten to spill over into
full-scale war. Guinea has broadcast confessions from
two men claiming to be RUF rebels. One of them stated that Charles
Taylor was the leader of the Rally of Democratic Forces of Guinea
(RFDG), one of the dissident groups fighting the Guinean regime.
Charles Taylor is quoted as saying: I am the first major
rebel in West Africa. Let Conte not play rebel business with me.
Meanwhile something of the real interests behind Western involvement
in this region were revealed in the decision of the Sierra Rutile
Company, owned by the US mining company Nord Resources Corporation,
to restart operations in Sierra Leone. The Concord Times
points out that the main profits from mining in Sierra Leone do
not come from diamonds but from the rich deposits of rutile (titanium
oxide). The local population complains that the community development,
land rehabilitation and crop compensation promised by the company
have failed to materialise.
See Also:
Britain steps up presence
in Sierra Leone as UN Force crumbles
[7 November 2000]
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