BERTOUA, Cameroon, March 5 – UN
High Commissioner for Refugees António Guterres has visited ethnic
Mbororo refugees from the Central African Republic in a bid to focus
world attention on the "forgotten tragedy" of these people sheltering
in Cameroon.
Guterres met and talked to some of the refugees during visits this
week to Mandjou and Boulembe settlements, which are located 350
kilometres east of the Cameroon capital, Yaoundé, and together house
some 3,000 refugees.
"I am here to show my gratitude to the people and government of
Cameroon [for hosting more than 100,000 refugees and asylum-seekers
from about 30 countries, including 80,880 from the neighbouring Central
African Republic]," Guterres said during his visit to Mandjou, where he
received a colourful welcome.
The High Commissioner stressed that he had also decided to visit the
Central African refugees "to draw the attention of the international
community to the forgotten tragedy of the Mbororo refugees." Guterres
said he hoped that peace and democracy would be restored in their
country, which he was due to visit from Friday.
The Mbororos are mainly nomadic cattle breeders from the west and
north-west of the Central African Republic. Those fleeing to Cameroon
since 2005 say that their people have been targeted by organized groups
of bandits and rebels who steal their cattle and kidnap their women and
children for ransom.
They live in dozens of settlements in eastern Cameroon, making it
difficult for UNHCR staff based in the town of Bertoua to monitor their
situation, register new arrivals and distribute aid. The government of
Cameroon recognizes this population as prima facie refugees.
During his visit to the settlement at Bolembe, home to some 1,150
Mbororos, Guterres expressed his admiration for the refugees, who told
him that they lived in peaceful co-existence with the local population.
"We have been living together for several years, sharing water,
classrooms and infrastructure," refugee Aliou Nassé told him.
Guterres also met Hadja Adama, a dignified mother of 11 with a
harrowing story. Aged 45, she looks much older after a life of
hardship. She fled to Boulembe five years ago with her children after
her husband was killed in the Central African Republic by cattle
rustlers. She now struggles to raise her children as well as the four
offspring of her brother, who died suddenly after a short illness.
Guterres was clearly moved by her story. "It is a shame that such
tragedy goes unnoticed. It is urgent to make the international
community face its responsibilities. These people have gone through an
unimaginable ordeal," he said. "And the end of the tunnel is not near
because there is no sign that the security situation has improved
enough for people to think about returning to the Central African
Republic."
A UNHCR registration exercise conducted last October testified to a
steady influx and an increase in the number of refugees from across the
border over the previous year.
In Cameroon, their host country, problems also exist. The refugees
and their host communities join their voices to complain about
shortages of clean water, not enough classrooms and the distance of
health clinics. "These are problems we are trying to solve with our
limited resources," said Aida Haile Mariam, UNHCR's representative in
Cameroon. "The High Commissioner's visit is an opportunity to further
draw the attention of the international community to the plight of the
Central African refugees."
Before heading to Central African Republic, Guterres held talks with
senior Cameroonian officials, including President Paul Biya and Prime
Minister Philemon Yang. (UNHCR)
By Francis Kpatindé in Bertoua, Cameroon