After 37 Years Burundian Refugees Return Home
Ending one of the world’s longest-running refugee sagas, the United Nations announced that some 400 Burundians left Tanzania today returning to the Central African homeland they escaped in 1972.
“They are to
travel by rail from the same train station where they
arrived 37 years ago when they fled the eruption of ethnic
violence which claimed the lives of an estimated 200,000
Burundian civilians,” said UN High Commissioner for
Refugees (http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home)
spokesperson Andrej Mahecic.
Since March 2008, UNHCR
has helped 53,500 Burundian refugees from the so-called
“old settlements” to repatriate under a joint programme
with the Tanzanian Government, which also saw some 162,000
of the 1972 refugees opting to apply for citizenship in
their host nation.
Tanzania has naturalized 29,000 of
the refugees and expects to complete the process of the
remaining 133,000 by the end of the year.
“Tanzania
also hosts Burundian refugees who fled their country in
1993,” Mr. Mahecic told reporters in Geneva, noting that
all but one of the camps – where 36,000 are sheltered –
hosting this group has now been closed.
At the peak
of the crisis in Burundi in the 1990s, hundreds of thousands
of people escaped clashes, sheltering in makeshift sites
along the border with Tanzania.
“With the gradual
return of peace in Burundi, more than half a million
Burundian refugees have returned home, including more than
430,000 from camps in Tanzania [since 2004],” the UNHCR
spokesman said.
Meanwhile over 20,000 Burundians, who
fled their country in the 1990s, remain in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo (DRC), Rwanda and Uganda, said Mr.
Mahecic.
In Burundi, UNHCR is assisting returnees with
issues in reclaiming property by providing temporary shelter
and supporting the peaceful resolution of land disputes
arising from their long absence. In addition, the Government and its “UN
partners are also helping landless returnees settle in
specially constructed villages, six of which have been
opened in 2008 and
2009.”
ENDS