Photo: Brahima Ouedraogo/IRIN. Malian refugees at Somgande refugee camp just outside of the Burkina Faso capital, Ouagadougou
Source: IRIN
DAKAR/OUAGADOUGOU, 4 May 2012 (IRIN) - Sahelian governments and local
and international aid groups are struggling to cope with both the
continual arrivals of people fleeing the regions of Gao, Timbuktu and
Kidal in northern Mali, and the mounting number of hungry people across
the region as the lean season gets underway.
Altogether some 284,000 Malians have fled the north according to the UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, 107,000 of them
thought to be displaced within Mali; 177,000 in neighbouring countries.
New arrivals have pushed refugee numbers to 56,664 in Burkina Faso and
to 61,000 in Mauritania, and to 39,388 in Niger, according to UNHCR.
These governments are already struggling to get aid to millions of
their inhabitants, who are facing hunger due to drought. Fleeing Malians
have told the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) they want to avoid getting
caught up in possible conflict if government soldiers or foreign troops
intervene in the north.
The UN estimates that 16 million people across the Sahel are facing
hunger this year, and hunger levels are rising as the lean season gets
fully underway. Families across the Sahel are also experiencing a
significant loss of income as hundreds of thousands of Mauritanians,
Burkinabes and Malians fled conflict in Libya, bringing a halt to the
remittances they regularly sent.
New appeals
This complex mix of slow and fast-onset crises means the UN will be
revising or launching new funding appeals from the current US$1 billion
to $1.5 billion in coming weeks, said Noel Tsekouras, deputy head of
office at the West Africa bureau of the UN Office for the Coordination
of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) in Dakar.
Donors have given or pledged US$750 million in aid, most of it for food
or nutrition needs, which many in the chronically underfunded region
welcome as a strong response, but mounting demands will make this just
half of the total necessary.
The World Food Programme (WFP) alone needs $360 million to bridge its
immediate funding gap, having received just over half of the US$790
million it requires for the Sahel so far, said Claude Jibidar, deputy
director of WFP in West Africa. The agency desperately needs cash so
that it can start buying food in regional markets, he said.
In early May most food sectors remained severely underfunded. The Niger cluster appeal
is only 7 percent funded for protection activities, 19 percent for
water and sanitation, and has received no funding at all for education.
UNHCR will also be upping its Sahel refugee appeal beyond the $35.6
million requested, of which just 41 percent has been received. UNHCR
spokesperson Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba said refugee camps in Burkina Faso
and Mauritania will need to be expanded to keep up with the growing
numbers.
IRIN looked briefly at the refugee and IDP situation in each affected country.
Mali displaced – unknown numbers
It is difficult to know the exact number of internally displaced persons
(IDPs) in Mali - the UN estimates 107,000, with 75,000 staying in the
north, though some observers in the area say as many as half of the
population in some regions
has left. Several aid agencies, including Catholic Relief Services
(CRS), are diverting part of their aid response intended for the north
to help displaced people who have fled south to Mopti in central Mali,
or Bamako, the capital.
WFP plans to support 200,000 IDPs and host families with food aid, but
there are fears for the estimated 75,000 in the north. Some NGOs have
good access across northern regions, but UNHCR says the situation is
still considered too insecure. “We have a real problem accessing IDPs
in northern Mali,” said Lejeune-Kaba. David Gressly, Regional
Humanitarian Coordinator for the Sahel, says agencies have reached
40,000 of the northern displaced, but 35,000 are without any aid.
In Mopti, just south of the area declared as Azawad by National Movement
for the Liberation of Azawad (MNLA), CRS is leading the IDP response
and says they are seeing approximately 2,500 people pass through each
week, most of them moving on to villages and urban centres such as Ségou
and Bamako further south. CRS gives hot meals to those in transit and
has recently started distributing food and other goods, much of it
diverted from the agency’s planned food aid response for the north.
The Mali Red Cross, UNHCR, and other groups are also trying to provide aid to IDPs sheltering in Bamako.
Mauritania - scale-up needed
Malians in Mauritania tell UNHCR that the two main reasons they have
left are fear of more violence, or difficulty getting by with minimal
aid and breaks in basic services.
Most of the 61,000 Malians sheltering in Mbéra camp, near the town of
Fassala in southeastern Mauritania, come from Timbuktu, over which Ansar
Dine, a jihadist Muslim group, claims control. Others come from the
towns of Niaki, Guargandou, Tenekou and Goundam in the Timbuktu region,
according to UNHCR, which says it needs $18 million to help the refugees
for six months, as long as numbers do not rise significantly.
With hundreds of new arrivals every day, mostly women and children,
agencies working in the camps - UNICEF, WFP and NGO Médecins sans
Frontières - are having to scale up their activities far beyond the
anticipated needs. MSF says camp conditions need to be urgently improved
- by mid-April there was just one toilet for every 610 people. The
nearest hospital to Mbéra is in Nema, a six-hour drive, so MSF is trying
to provide basic services, including maternal health care and nutrition
for children. An MSF communiqué notes that many Tuaregs are arriving
with respiratory tract infections and diarrhoea.
Niger- the most critical
There have been no recent arrivals of refugees in Niger, leaving the
population at 39,000, most of whom are staying in Ouallam camp, 100km
from the Niger-Mali border.
However, Niger as a whole is in a very critical situation, with the same
number of people facing hunger as in all the neighbouring countries
combined. When it comes to getting enough cereals and other basic foods
into the country to stem hunger, “Niger is the biggest problem at the
moment,” WFP’s Jibidar stressed.
Mariatou Adamou, a nurse at the nutrition treatment centre in Goudel,
northern Niger, where many Malians originally arrived, said they were
receiving higher numbers of malnourished children than in 2011, and
adults were also suffering severely. “The grain banks are empty… so even
the parents are malnourished and have nothing at home.” After an
initial screening of newly arrived Malian children aged under five, 100
percent were considered malnourished.
UNHCR and WFP are supporting refugee families in Ouallam camp, while
NGOs are also trying to include refugee needs in their ongoing
responses. NGO Plan International is distributing food, conducting
malnutrition screening and setting up drinking water distribution points
and latrines for refugees staying outside of camps. They are also
making available psychosocial support for people who witnessed violence
or experienced devastating losses.
“Bandits came with guns and stole many of our things… in my village they
were taking animals [representing the main family assets] away right in
front of us… when I left I couldn’t bring anything because I had to
bring my children. I didn’t bring any food,” Azahara Naziou, a Malian in
Goudel, told Plan International.
Another refugee, Adaoula Harouzen, said more than 20 animals were taken
from him. “They have not stolen them… they would tell me, ‘You have to
choose your animals or your life.’ You stand there looking at them,
helpless. You prefer saving your life, so they take the animals and go.”
Burkina Faso – water critical
More Malians are arriving in Burkina Faso every day, leaving the
government’s National Commission for Refugees (CONAREF) overwhelmed,
said its coordinator Denis Ouédraogo. The agency has only 13 staff
members. “We were expecting refugees, but not to that extent in this
context of food deficit in Burkina,” he told IRIN. ‘’The problem is how
to respect our commitments towards our populations, who are faced with a
food shortage, and to assist refugees at the same time.”
The government is mapping out a response plan for the 60,000 refugees, but Ouedraogo fears it will be “quickly outdated”.
Only half of the government’s $170 million appeal to fund food security
and refugee response has been met, said Roger Ebanda, head of the UNHCR
in Burkina Faso, and the UN Refugee Agency’s funding is also low, making
the response “difficult”. Ebanda and Jean Hereu, head of MSF in Burkina
Faso, say water is the urgent need in the camps.
Refugees in camps in Burkina and Mauritania are receiving a maximum of 10 litres of water per day, but agreed minimum standards for disaster response puts rations at double that.
Mohamed Ag Mohamed Maloud, 60, a trader from Timbuktu who is now acting
as a refugee representative at Somgande camp on the outskirts of
Ouagadougou, the Burkina capital, told IRIN he had been forced from his
country during the fighting in the 1990s, but this experience is worse.
‘’The problem is that we do not have enough food... these are difficult
days, but we try to cope.”
Each refugee is given a ration of 7kg of food for two weeks. “It is just
not enough,” he said. The refugees have a money-lending system for
those who arrived with none, prioritizing families who are 100 percent
dependent on WFP for food. Other agencies are also helping - the Burkina
Faso Red Cross is distributing 400 million CFA worth of food vouchers,
as well as tents and water.
Health facilities are weak but improving. MSF has set up mobile clinics
in Dibisi and Goutoure in the north, where 10,000 refugees are
sheltering - before, they had to walk 17km to the nearest health clinic.
The World Health Organization’s Burkina Faso representative, Djamila
Cabral, said children have been vaccinated against meningitis, measles
and polio.