UNHCR Resumes Voluntary
Returns
of Liberians by Sea
United Nations High Commission for Refugees (Geneva)
NEWS
April 2, 2007
UNHCR has resumed this week the repatriation
of Liberian refugees by sea. The Panama-registered "Kiriaki 1" docked on
Wednesday evening in Monrovia port, bringing back 214 Liberian refugees
from Nigeria and Ghana.
This was the first
repatriation by sea since October 2006. A five-month long pause was
caused by the breakdown of another chartered ship and subsequent
difficulties in identifying an alternative sea-worthy vessel. UNHCR also
charters commercial flights to repatriate Liberian refugees from Nigeria
and Ghana in addition to the on-going repatriation by road from
countries neighbouring Liberia.
We expect to repatriate
some 60,000 refugees from the camps in the region before the end of the
organised repatriation, scheduled for the end of June this year.
To date, UNHCR has
assisted over 94,000 Liberian refugees to return home. We anticipate
that, by early May, the number of returns assisted by UNHCR since the
start of organised voluntary repatriation in October 2004 would reach
the 100,000 mark.
The "Kiriaki 1" sailed
from Nigeria on 22 March with 167 Liberian refugees on board. It made a
stop-over in Ghana at Tema Sea Port, picking up another 47 refugees and
continued to Monrovia on 24 March. Upon arrival, all returnees received
assistance packages, including domestic items, a four-month food ration
and a transport allowance to their final destination..
The sea repatriation
movement is organized in collaboration with the International
Organization for Migration (IOM) and the Governments of Ghana and
Nigeria. With the end of the large-scale organized repatriation in
sight, it is imperative to ensure that Liberian refugees wishing to
return home have the opportunity to do so. With the cut-off date just
months away many are turning up to register for repatriation.
There are still some
104,000 Liberian refugees in West Africa. More than 36,000 are in Ghana,
26,000 in Cote d'Ivoire, 20,000 in Sierra Leone, 16,000 in Guinea, 5,000
in Nigeria, and the rest are scattered in other countries of the region.