Photo: Anna Jefferys/IRIN. A displaced child in Sévaré, whose family fled northern Mali in 2012 (file photo)
Source: IRIN
BAMAKO/DAKAR, 16 January 2013 (IRIN) - Fear and rumour are rife in Mali
as French military air strikes against Islamist militants continued for
the sixth day in the centre and north of the country.
Information is limited on the number of Malians who have fled the
violence, or fear being caught in clashes, but the UN Office for the
Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) estimates at least 30,000
people have abandoned their homes in recent days.
The UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR) says according to rough preliminary
estimates, 1,230 people have fled to Niger, Burkina Faso and Mauritania,
90 percent of them women.
Refugees arrived in eastern Mauritania from Léré and surrounding
villages; in Mangaize camp (north of Ouallam), as well as in Banibangou
and Tillabéry towns and the Tillia area in Niger; and in Damba and
Mentao camps, as well as the second-largest town, Bobo Dioulasso, in
Burkina Faso.
Many people have fled Konna, Amba, Boré and Douentza in Mopti Region,
where intense fighting took place on 12-13 January, according to
eye-witnesses. The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC)
assessed 445 arrivals in Mopti and Sévaré, most of whom were staying
with host families.
“People are continuing to flee for the south for fear of reprisal
killings from Islamists who are now assimilated among the local
population, and for fear of French attacks,” said a journalist and
resident in Sévaré, Mamouou Bocoum. “I understand them, we are in a
really difficult situation here.”
According
to a partner of UNHCR, local NGO the Commission on Population Movements
in Mali, unconfirmed estimates indicate 5,000 people - half of Konna’s
population - have fled across the River Niger.
Recent movements add to the 400,000 Malians already displaced across the region.
Islamists mixing with civilians
Islamists remain in Konna and Diabaly - both scenes of heavy fighting -
many of them embedding themselves within the civilian population,
according to French forces and eye-witnesses.
Civilians and humanitarians are deeply concerned that civilians could be mistakenly targeted in the fighting.
More French ground troops are arriving imminently, bringing French
forces up to 2,500. French military chiefs have said they will do their
utmost to avoid civilian casualties.
Access shrinking
The wide dispersal of Islamist groups into the population has
humanitarians worried that the combat zone will continue to widen, and
humanitarian access continue to shrink, NGO workers told IRIN.
Mali head of NGO Catholic Relief Services (CRS) Sean Gallagher said
staff are very concerned about accessing the displaced in Mopti Region,
as the French and Malian military are getting increasingly restrictive.
A number of aid agencies suspended their operations in Mopti Region
during and after the fighting in Konna and Douentza, angering some
locals. Journalist Mamouou Bocoum told IRIN: “The humanitarian
organizations have left town for security reasons - that’s not right.
It’s now that we need them here to help the displaced.”
CRS pulled out of Sévaré temporarily but plans to continue working in
the region and supporting the displaced with food and possibly cash
transfers, once it has finished assessing the situation, Gallagher told
IRIN.
ICRC and the Mali Red Cross are currently trying to step up their
distributions of food aid, medical care and water to people in the north
and in Mopti Region, said spokesperson Germain Mwehu.
“Our major concern is that this intervention is taking place in a
[northern] context that has already seen a food security crisis, and
very difficult humanitarian conditions,” Mwehu told IRIN.
As of 14 January just US$2 million of the $370 million needed had been
raised to cover humanitarian operations in Mali in 2013, according to
OCHA.
Northerners flee to bush
French air strikes in Gao and Kidal on 13 January in territory held by
Islamist groups since April 2012, targeted rebel training camps, say
eye-witnesses.
Hundreds of residents of Kidal Region’s main towns, Kidal and Tessalit, fled into the bush where they have set up small camps.
Doctors of the World (MDM) advocacy officer Olivier Vandecasteele told
IRIN: “Rumour is rife. People [in Kidal Region] are either staying in
their homes or fleeing from towns, which puts their access to health
care in jeopardy.” MDM, which runs the hospital and 20 health clinics
across Kidal, is worried about hundreds of severely malnourished
children whose treatment will be interrupted as a result.
MDM has treated 2,050 malnourished children in Kidal and Gao since
September 2012 and admitted 400 new infants in Kidal in December alone,
said Vandescasteele.
“Populations are exhausting their resilience - it’s been close to a year
since their problems started. Families have gone through a major food
crisis and a humanitarian crisis, and are now on the move again. This
worries us,” Vandescasteele told IRIN. “We should do mobile health teams
to reach these people, but we need to do some more security checks
before we take the risk.”
Gao residents said Islamist groups fled following the air strikes.
Before leaving, they brought 30 or so bodies to the hospital morgue,
said Alousseyni Maïga, a teacher in Gao city.
Some residents expressed relief at their departure. Resident Amahani
Touré told IRIN: “Thank you God. For two days we’ve worn what we wanted
to and felt our liberty again... the religious zealots have been chased
out. Let’s hope that they don’t return.”
Telephone lines to Gao have since been cut.
Air strikes have not targeted Timbuktu in the north. NGO Médecins sans
Frontières, which works in the hospital there, said they had received
patients injured by fighting that was taking place a seven-hour drive
away.
More troops on way
In addition to more French troops, the first African troops are to set
off within the week from Nigeria to Mali to shore up the French military
offensive. Senegal, Niger, Togo, Benin and Burkina Faso have all
confirmed they are sending soldiers imminently.
The Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), France and its
fellow UN Security Council members want to speed up the deployment of a
UN-mandated, 3,300-strong West African intervention force in Mali.