Photo: UNHCR/L. Dobbs.Some 40,000 Angolan ex-refugees wish to remain in DRC (file photo)
Source: IRIN
KINSHASA, 22 January 2013 (IRIN) - Some 40,000 former Angolan refugees
in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) are living in limbo, unwilling
to go home but lacking legal status in DRC.
In June 2012, it was determined that the circumstances - created by a
civil war - that led to refugee status being granted to tens of
thousands of Angolans were no longer in place. Under the terms of the
1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, this means that
there is no longer a prima facie case for international protection. In
short, the refugee status of these Angolans was revoked.
Individuals are still able to make a fresh application for refugee status based on their specific protection concerns.
Recognizing that local integration is one of the recognized “durable
solutions” for refugees - the others being voluntary repatriation and
third-country resettlement - the DRC government agreed to grant
permanent residency permits to all the Angolans who did not wish to
return to Angola.
But the government did not manage to distribute the required 40,000
permits by the planned deadline of the end of 2012, so many of the
Angolans now lack legal identity documents.
"With such large numbers of Angolan refugees still dispersed across DR
Congo provinces, it will take some time for all former refugees to be
issued with resident permits," Stefano Severe, UNHCR's regional
coordinator, told IRIN in Kinshasa.
"So far we have assisted the DR Congo government in funding over 6,500
permits, which have been printed and will be distributed during this
January... Local authorities are well aware that this is still ongoing,
and the National Refugee Commission is represented in all provinces," he
said.
Waiting
Many of the former refugees are from Angola's oil- and mineral-rich
northern exclave of Cabinda, which has experienced a long-running
conflict that pits the government against secessionists.
"We welcomed the end of our refugee status with sadness. I'm worried to
live at the moment without any status, not knowing who will protect me
and my family. We were told that we could receive asylum-seekers' status
by the host country's authorities. So far, we've got nothing," said one
former refugee, who preferred anonymity.
"Today I can be arrested and be labelled as one of the gangsters in
Kinshasa known as 'Kuluna' and won't have anyone to defend me."
Some 23,000 Angolans returned home under a repatriation programme UNHCR
carried out in 2012 - the fourth since the Angolan civil war ended in
2002 - before the June revocation of their refugee status. Another
22,000 say they are willing to go home. Most were repatriated to the
Angolan mainland.
"The last repatriation was based upon agreements between Angola, the
UNHCR and the host countries when it was established that Angola had
regained the stability [required] and its economy was prospering,
especially as the majority of its refugees had returned to their home
country," said Severe.
Still fearful
Refugees from Cabinda say they continue to live in fear, and accuse
Angolan security forces of entering DRC and other neighbouring countries
to kidnap those believed to be linked to the province's rebel groups,
some of which have been fighting for independence from Angola for
decades.
"I continue to live with fear because if you have a Cabindan name, it
means you are considered by Angolan authorities as a rebel. Recently a
friend of mine was kidnapped when he went to trade near the DRC-Angola
border," said Alfred Gomez, a 48-year-old refugee and former school
teacher originally from Cabinda, now living in Kinshasa.
"In October 2011, we went into hiding for two weeks when we received
information from our homeland that Angolan security agents had been
deployed to western Congo to kidnap people of Cabindan origin,” he said.
“We looked for safety from Congolese friends until we established that
they [security agents] had returned [to Angola]."
Efforts to reach Angolan authorities were unsuccessful.
Cabindan refugees are reluctant to return home, either because they
support the secessionist movement or because they fear they will be
pressured to pick a side once they return.
"Some are not activists, but they are former fighters of the FLEC [Front
for the Liberation of the Enclave of Cabinda, the main Cabindan
secessionist group]," Jose Vase, a Cabindan journalist based in
Kinshasa, told IRIN.
"Others are regular citizens who cannot go back home. This is because
when they do so, they will be obliged by Angolan local authorities to
make statements against rebel groups, showing also the goods things the
government is doing for returnees... When they do it, they are
considered as enemies [of Cabindan separatists]."