webGuinée/Camp Boiro Memorial
Human Rights Watch
Refugees in Guinea Must Be Protected
Sierra Leonean refugees face repeated cross-border
attacks, lack refuge
Human Rights Watch today urged the United Nations refugee agency to take immediate steps to protect the security of more than 100,000 Sierra Leonean refugees in Guinea. It called on the agency to move the refugees who are in camps too close to the border to safer locations inside Guinea, as they are doing for Kosovar refugees in northern Albania.
The refugees, who are fleeing the civil war in Sierra Leone, live in refugee camps
close to the border — some as close as half a mile away. Since March 1999, these
camps have frequently come under attack by Sierra Leonean rebels. Dozens of civilians,
including Guineans and refugees, have been killed, mutilated, and abducted during
these attacks.
"The brutality and the frequency of these attacks is simply atrocious," said
Peter Takirambudde, Executive Director of the Africa Division of Human Rights Watch. "Refugee
camps are supposed to be a safe haven, but these camps in Guinea are a magnet for
attack."
Sierra Leonean refugees in the Tassin refugee camp in the Forecariah area of Guinea
came under attack by forces operating from Sierra Leone on May 22. Eleven civilians
were killed during the attack. This was the second attack on the Tassin camp and
fifth attack targeting refugee camps in the Forecariah area since March of this
year. There have also been several attacks on refugee camps in the Gueckedou area,
where approximately 350,000 Sierra Leonean refugees live.
In one case, a refugee in the Forecariah area reportedly had his two hands and
tongue cut off by the rebels. Human Rights Watch has interviewed several victims
of these attacks including a ten-year-old gunshot victim and a woman whose husband
was abducted. Attacking forces have also burned down refugees' homes during these
raids.
Most attacks have been short raids conducted overnight. Their aim is apparently
to abduct refugees, steal supplies, and instill terror.
"It is a long-standing, fundamental principle that refugee camps should not
be located close to international borders with a war raging just on the other side," said
Rachael Reilly, Refugee Policy Director at Human Rights Watch. "These refugees
should not have been settled so close to the border in the first place. Their location
leaves them completely vulnerable to armed attacks and abduction, and they must
be moved immediately."
In June 1998, Human Rights Watch first called on the office of the United Nations
High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) to move the refugees, in accordance with
international law. Human Rights Watch has also urged UNHCR not to settle new refugees
too close to the border, and to ensure that the human rights of the refugees are
respected in the moving process.
Fewer than 10,000 of the refugees have been moved to date. The rainy season has
already begun in Guinea and, in the very near future, unpaved roads leading to
the refugee camps may become impassible, making it extremely difficult to move
refugees to safety.
Kosovar refugees in northern Albania face similar risks of being caught in the
cross-fire between the parties fighting in Kosovo. Unlike in Guinea, however, UNHCR
has taken pains to encourage refugees to move to safer camps in southern Albania.
UNHCR has transported approximately 2,000 refugees to southern Albania per day
over the past few weeks.
UNHCR requested $4 million to move refugees in Guinea to safety but has yet to
receive the entire budget. In Albania, UNHCR has recognized that moving the refugees
away from the border with Kosovo is a priority. It has essentially unlimited funds
for the move.
"The refugees in Albania certainly deserve the world's help," said Takirambudde "But
the refugees in Guinea deserve it no less."