UN: Thousands of Burundians Expelled From Tanzania
The United Nations refugee agency says
thousands of Burundians living in neighboring Tanzania have been forced
out from the country over the past 30 days.
Burundian refugees, who returned from Tanzania, wait to register at a transit camp in Musenyi, southern Burundi. (file photo)
Nearly one million Burundians crossed into Tanzania when a deadly civil war broke out in their country in 1993. Most of the refugees returned to Burundi when the war ended in 2006, but some of them stayed abroad.
The Tanzanian government considers the Burundian refugees as illegal immigrants and wants them to get out of Tanzania.
“The Burundian government must organize convoys to bring the expelled persons back to their villages. The needs are enormous, and the international community must get involved,” the UNHCR official said.
Tanzania
President Jakaya Kikwete He recently expelled Rwandese from his
country, a move that escalated tensions between the two countries.
Refugees from Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo have also flooded Tanzania due to escalating tensions across Africa’s Great Lakes region.
Refugees from Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo have also flooded Tanzania due to escalating tensions across Africa’s Great Lakes region.
Nearly three million Congolese have fled their homes because of the violence. About 2.5 million have resettled in Congo, but about 500,000 have crossed into neighboring countries.
No comments:
Post a Comment