Photo: Anthony Morland/IRIN. Returnees in Wau, South Sudan, camped at a warehouse as they wait for their applications for a plot of land to be processed (file photo)
Source: IRIN
ARU, 15 July 2013 (IRIN) - Benjamin Mogga heads the community protection
committee (CPC) in Aru, a dusty South Sudanese town hugging the road
between Juba and the Ugandan border. He volunteered for the position
three years ago and is responsible for the more than 200 returnees in
his area, helping them reintegrate into the community and ensuring that
they have access to justice. It has not been an easy job.
Tensions have arisen over access to the area’s scant basic services and
land, and are particularly acute between new returnees and those who
have been back home a little longer, or those who never left.
“A returnee is like a visitor who cannot get access,” said Mogga.
In Aru and the surrounding communities, returnees lack basic services
such as medical care, education and even clean water from the community
borehole. While there has been no open fighting, new returnees have
simply had to do without, he said.
Lack of basic services
Through the International Rescue Committee (IRC) CPC project, Mogga has
been lobbying the local government to improve the returnees’ situation -
so far without success.
The returnees “are…depending on their own efforts,” he said.
According to IRC’s South Sudan country director Wendy Taeuber, the
situation in Aru is not unique. Resentment over resources between the
host communities and returnees, she said, can be a “big source of
conflict.”
As South Sudan celebrated the second anniversary [
http://www.irinnews.org/report/98387/two-years-on-south-sudan-still-faces-major-challenges
] of its independence, on 9 July, at least 18,860 returnees were still
living in semi-official transit sites with limited access to basic
services, according to the IRC.
Millions of southern Sudanese fled the decades-long civil war between
Khartoum and southern rebels, which ended in 2005 with the signing of
the Comprehensive Peace Agreement (CPA), eventually leading to South
Sudan’s independence in July 2011.
Since the CPA was signed, at least 2.5 million people have returned to
what is now South Sudan, according to the International Organization for
Migration (IOM).
But they have returned to poor or non-existent services and a variety of reintegration challenges.
Not yet reintegrated
While the South Sudan government promised the returnees land and reintegration, the process has not been straightforward.
Some of those who returned to their home areas have found their farms
under new ownership. Others lack the proper documentation necessary to
settle back on their land.
South Sudan lacks a legal framework to address land allocation issues,
and this can result in “a failure of reintegration, which will increase
the likelihood of conflict between returnee and host populations,” said
Taeuber.
In the introduction to a new Village Assessment Survey released in June,
the IOM head of mission in South Sudan, Vincent Houver, wrote that the
organization had found “major gaps in infrastructure and service
delivery across the country.”
IOM visited 30 counties that have seen high rates of return and asked
the new arrivals about access to services. What they found was a strong
perception of a lack of the basics, with 87 percent of people unhappy
with water services in their new homes, and nearly 70 percent lacking
easy access to a health facility.
Toby Lanzer, South Sudan’s UN Humanitarian Coordinator, pointed out at
the survey’s launch that host communities are dealing with the same
shortages.
“These situation[s] always pose tremendous challenges for communities
who are welcoming people, who are trying to help people integrate. And
we shouldn’t underestimate how difficult the process is, how long it can
take to have such integration,” said Lanzer.
Tensions to remain
Back in Aru, Mogga said that simmering tensions there would remain until there are enough services for everyone.
At present, returnees are collecting money from friends and relatives to
build another school in the area to help with the overcrowding at the
three existing primary schools.
Peter Lam Both, the chairman of South Sudan’s National Relief and
Rehabilitation Commission, said the shortage of services has not led to
conflict between returnee and host communities that he is aware of.
Both acknowledged that there have been financial strains that have
forced the government to return people slower than originally
anticipated, and that some of the returnees have not gotten access to
land. He said that once they arrived at home, returnees are usually
embraced by their communities.
“They have the relatives and are accepted back into the community,” he
said. “The host communities are happy to share with them.”
But Rose Ajnu, who came back to Aru from a Ugandan refugee camp in 2007,
tells a different story. She is still fighting for access to the one
community borehole and to get her four children into school.
Her family ekes out a living by farming. “I have no plan to go anywhere.
Though there are difficulties, this is my place. I will always remain
here,” Ajnu said.
She says she is worried by reports that 200 new returnees will be
arriving in Aru from Khartoum within the next month because there is not
enough for the people already living there.
“If these guys come, it will be a big problem to us. Probably, it will cause some kind of disturbances among us.”