Following an appeal to donors, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) in Guinea recently doubled its funds – to $US390,000 – for health, education and vocational assistance to the some 3,300 Ivoirians at Kouankan II camp in the southeastern N’zérékoré region. Prior to the new funding UNHCR had said its resources for Kouankan II would not last past mid-2009.
The World Food Programme, which had planned to stop food aid at Kouankan II at the end of 2009, has extended its assistance to December 2010, according to WFP-Guinea. Ivoirians at Kouankan receive monthly rations of cereals, oil, beans and sugar.
Aid programming for Ivoirian refugees in Guinea has been based largely on planned presidential elections in Côte d’Ivoire and the ensuing return of most of the refugees, according to Pierre Njouyep, head of UNHCR in N’zérékoré. But elections have been cancelled twice and it is uncertain whether they will take place on the new date of 29 November.
Photo: Nancy Palus/IRIN |
WFP food distribution at Kouankan II refugee camp in southeastern Guinea |
The additional funding for Kouankan II is to be used for agriculture and income-generating projects, medicines, academic scholarships, rehabilitation of school buildings in the camp, and to expand skills training at a vocational centre.
Ivoirians at Kouankan II have long called for training activities to be maintained at the centre, after NGO Jesuit Refugee Services - which funded and ran it - left in December 2007.
Not ready
B. Toualy Apolinaire, an Ivoirian living at Kouankan II, said many at the camp are far from ready to return to Côte d’Ivoire.
“We did not choose to become refugees,” he told IRIN from N’zérékoré. “But I and many of us saw unbelievable violence and we cannot simply pick up and return, especially given the continued uncertainty.”
Uncertainty has now crept into the refugee camp, Toualy told IRIN. Tensions in Guinea following the 28 September deadly military crackdown have Ivoirians concerned about potential further unrest and how it could affect them.
As yet unaware of plans to continue food aid, he said: “Were food aid to stop at end of 2009 you would find a lot of people in a critical condition here.”
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