Tag: Nigerian refugees

  • FG to repatriate Over 100,000 Nigerian refugees

    FG to repatriate Over 100,000 Nigerian refugees

    The federal government is set to repatriate over 100,000 Nigerian refugees scattered in different African countries such as Niger, Chad, and Cameroon.

    Plans are in place to empower them instead of leaving them stranded.

    In response to an announcement by U.S. President Donald Trump, the Nigerian government is also preparing to receive soon-to-be deportees from the United States.

    During a media briefing in Abuja, Director General Tijjani Aliyu disclosed that the federal government is putting machinery in motion to absorb and resettle the prospective deportees affected by what he described as a mere policy statement by the Trump administration.

    He said, “We are going to match this statement with action. The government would now leverage its position as the chair of the Rabat Process, a key Euro-African dialogue on migration and development, to push for softening some of the stringent international immigration laws mainly tilted against Nigeria and other African countries.

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    “He believes the position will help Nigeria advance more reasons for global action against climate-induced mobility, insecurity, education, and other factors that force Nigerians to become refugees or seek greener pastures in other countries.

    “Nigeria’s accession to the leadership role was formalised at the senior officials meeting of the Rabat Process, held on 29–30 January 2025 in Porto, Portugal. The Rabat Process brings together 57 partner countries, the European Union, the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), and several international organisations”.

    It also serves as a framework for cooperation on migration governance, focusing on areas such as regular pathways, irregular migration, and development which includes international protection. Nigeria’s leadership marks a significant milestone, reinforcing its role as a key stakeholder in global migration governance. 

  •  Fed Govt begins repatriation of 7,790 Nigerian refugees from Chad

     Fed Govt begins repatriation of 7,790 Nigerian refugees from Chad

    • ‘Returnees spent 10 years in neighbouring country over Boko Haram attacks’

    The Federal Government has begun the repatriation of 7,790 Nigerians from the Republic of Chad.

    The Nigerian citizens fled to the neighbouring country and lived there for almost a decade due to Boko Haram insurgency.

    The Special Adviser on Media to Borno State Governor Babagana Zulum announced the development in a statement yesterday in Maiduguri, the state capital.

    The statement said Zulum led the Federal Government’s delegation to Chad in the company of the Minister of Humanitarian Affairs and Poverty Reduction, Yusuf Sununu, and the Chief Executive Officer of the National Commission for Refugees, Migrants, and Internally Displaced Persons (NCFRMI), Aliyu Ahmed.

    It said the delegation was received in Baga Sola on Wednesday by the Governor of Lac Province of Chad, Saleh Tidjani.

    The statement said the Nigerian citizens, who are mostly indigenes of Borno State, had been taking shelter in Chad after their communities around Lake Chad Basin were overrun by insurgents.

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    It added that before launching the first phase of the repatriation, Zulum had attended the signing of a tripartite agreement with the governments of Nigeria, Chad, and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in Baga Sola.

    According to the statement, Sunusi signed on behalf of Nigeria, Tidjani on behalf of the Chadian government, and Jerome Merlin, the Second Representative of the UNHCR in Baga Sola, on behalf of his commission.

    The statement quoted Zulum as saying that of the refugees currently living in Chad, only those who voluntarily wished to return were repatriated.

    It added that the governor expressed gratitude to the Government of Chad for hosting thousands of displaced Nigerians over the years.

    “This exercise is entirely voluntary. We are grateful to the government and people of Chad for their hospitality and support in sheltering our people during their time of need.

    “Now that peace has returned to many areas in Borno State, we are prepared to help them reintegrate into their communities.

    “In the first batch of the repatriation, about 1,768 families, comprising 7,790 individuals, will be transported back to Nigeria,” the statement quoted Zulum as saying.

  • Don’t evict Nigerian refugees, UN tells Cameroon

    The UN High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) has expressed grave concerns over plans by Cameroon to evict thousands of Nigerian refugees to Borno.

    UNHCR deplored the reported move that Cameroon was forcing several thousand Nigerians to return to Borno, adding, it has put the lives of the refugees “at risk”.

    Cameroon is currently home to more than 370,000 refugees, including some 100,000 from Nigeria, according to UNHCR.

    “We are gravely concerned for the safety and well-being of all these people”, said the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Filippo Grandi.

    The UN refugee agency said on January 16, “267 Nigerian refugees, who had crossed into Cameroon in 2014, were forcibly returned.

    It regretted that at dusk on January 14, militants attacked and ransacked the border town of Rann, about 10 kilometers from the Cameroon border.

    UNHCR said that at least 14 people were reportedly killed and an estimated 9,000 fled to Cameroon.

    Grandi said: “This action was totally unexpected and puts lives of thousands of refugees at risk.

    “I am appealing to Cameroon to continue its open door and hospitable policy and practices and halt immediately any more returns and to ensure full compliance with its refugee protection obligations under its own national legislation, as well as international law”.

    North-eastern Nigeria has been particularly hard-hit by the insurgency being waged in the region since 2009, the UN said.

    Meanwhile, the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for Nigeria, Mr. Edward Kallon, has said the deadly attack interrupted aid delivery to some 76,000 internally displaced people in Rann.

    Kallon said the attackers looted or destroyed a medical clinic, humanitarian supply warehouses and aid workers’ accommodations, and burned down the nearby market and camp shelters.

     

  • FG to bring back 91,000 Nigerians from Cameroon

    FG to bring back 91,000 Nigerians from Cameroon

    The Federal Government has commenced the process of repatriating 91,000 Nigerian refugees from Cameroon.

    The move, which is a tripartite arrangement between Nigeria, Cameroon and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), will ensure the repatriation of the Nigerians who are presently at the Minawao Refugee Camp.

    The Head Humanitarian, Resettlement and Assistance Department, Presidential Committee on the North East Initiative (PCNI), Dr. Sidi Ali, said the process was designed to back bring back the Nigerian refugees who were desperate to return to the country.

    He said the federal government is hoping that by the end of February the final process of bringing the people back to the country would have commenced fully.

    He said: ” As we speak the Nigerian, Cameroonian governments and UNHCR have formed the tripartite commission with the sole responsibility of bringing the refugees back to Nigeria. They are currently in Minawao camp in Cameroon. The processes has already began, we are doing the profiling,  making arrangements and putting the reception centers in place. Initially we are looking at February, early February but by and large, we are hoping that by the end of February the final process of bringing them back into the country will commence.

    “Considering the relocation of IDPs and stabilization of camps, returnees registration and profiling, the number of people that we are bringing back to the country from our neighbouring countries particularly Cameroon has grown from 80,000 last year to 91,000. It is a task that we must be able to accomplish in 2018 by putting all hands on deck to bring these people back to Nigeria.”

     

  • Cameroon expels 500 Nigerian refugees

    No fewer than 500 Nigerian refugees in Cameroon have been forcibly repatriated, the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR), has said.

    The agency, which was concerned that people fleeing Boko Haram attacks were being forced back, distanced itself from the operation.

    A UNHCR report said between February 10 to 15, 517 Nigerians were repatriated, including 313 asylum seekers who were deported after their arrest.

    “UNHCR, aware of the security challenges in the area due to the recurring attacks, continues to advocate with the Cameroonian authorities to maintain access to asylum and respect the rights of asylum seekers,” the report said.

    UNHCR added that it would, on March 2, sign an agreement with both countries to allow for the voluntary return of more than 85,000 Nigerian refugees

    As at February 17, more than 61,000 Nigerian refugees had been registered in Minawao camp (far north of Cameroon), but many others live outside the site, according to UNHCR.

    The attacks also forced many Cameroonians to in border towns to flee their villages.

  • BOKO HARAM : Nigerian refugees in dire conditions in Cameroun

    BOKO HARAM : Nigerian refugees in dire conditions in Cameroun

    Ateba 1Simon Ateba who visited Cameroun reports on the lot of Nigerian refugees in the country.

    As heavy rain fell on August 28, many refugees stood under a temporary shelter barely covering their heads and upper bodies at the Minawao camp in Cameroun’s far north region.

    Their legs were wet and stained as drops of water hit the ground and lifted mud onto them. They wrapped their arms around their chests to shield themselves from the pestering cold.

    The new sets of refugees had arrived from North East Nigeria where a Boko Haram insurgency had wreaked havoc since 2009, and their belongings were still scattered on the muddy ground as they waited desperately to be admitted into the unfenced camp located in the bush, seven kilometres from the nearest tarred road.

    It was a familiar scene to gendarmes protecting the camp and humanitarian aid workers catering for the ever growing number of Nigerians rendered helpless by the insurgency.

    That insurgency has killed more than 23,000 people since it began six years ago and displaced 2.3 million others in Nigeria, Cameroun, Chad and Niger since May 2013. In the past five months alone, 500,000 children have been uprooted, bringing the total number of minors on the run in Nigeria and neighbouring countries to over 1.4 million. Many of these children are out of school.

    Collapsed business and lives

    Worse, trade is almost nonexistent, farmers are unable to tend their fields, and business activity in the region has virtually collapsed.

    As the violence persists, fathers, mothers, children of all ages and families of all economic backgrounds flee from towns and villages under attacks and attempt to cross the Nigeria-Cameroun border.

    Those who are successful arrive there tired, sick, hungry, thirsty and desperately looking for help.

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    The displaced persons first spend weeks or months in Camerounian villages or towns along the border and then trek for several more weeks or even months to reach the Minawao camp where 96 percent of the population comes from Borno State, two percent from Adamawa State and another two per cent from elsewhere.

    There at the Minawao camp, stranded in the bush of Cameroun’s far north region, and surrounded by a hostile environment with a weather that easily switches from too hot to too cold, about 45,000 refugees live in makeshift shelters, 70 kilometres from the border with Nigeria in the district of Mokolo, the department of Mayo-Tsanaga.

     

    The refugees, most of them women and children (53 percent of the population in the camp consists of women, while 61 percent are children under the age of 18 years of age) arrive with no money, food, water or even clothes other than the ones on their backs. On arrival, it takes them many days to be screened before they are admitted into the camp and several more days to receive their first ration of food, water or medication as many arrive there sick.

    They wait for many more days to receive utensils, blankets and any other basic thing from the United Nations Refugee Agency (UNHCR), which has run the camp since 2013. Until that happens, they fend for themselves or hope that those who have been in the camp for a longer period will share from their little leftovers, if there is any.

    Living at the edges

    The location of the unfenced camp makes many refugees fear possible attacks from wild animals or even from potential invaders as the camp has only one police post with about ten gendarmes protecting tens of thousands of people.

    Because instability has persisted in North east Nigeria for six years and many areas had fallen into the hands of Boko Haram for a long time, the health system has nearly collapsed and many of the refugees had been living without proper medical care for years. They arrive sick and in need of medical checkups. As newcomers flock in, the pressure on the health services at the Minawao is increasing.

    In August, about 2,671 women had serious medical complications while 1,007 persons who were living with various disabilities had no wheelchairs and walking aids, hearing and vision aids, artificial limbs and surgical appliances as well as communication aids.

    There were also no elastic stockings, appliances for colostomies, some types of trusses or wound dressings, urinary catheters, pressure relieving cushions and mattresses or continence pads for people with disabilities.

    The main hospital in Mokolo district where the camp is located did not have equipment to cope with patients with special needs nor were there qualified medical personnel to efficiently monitor the 269 refugees who have been suffering from mental illnesses.

    There were also in the camp more than a thousand elders with various health challenges. With the rainy season, overpopulation and scarce water, there were fears of a cholera outbreak.

    As at August, the camp had two health centres with not many beds and one maternity unit. It had only 2,555 toilets for all the refugees. This had some health implications, especially because each refugee has right to only 17 litres of water every day to drink, cook, wash and bath.

    The Minawao camp was established in 2013 to house up to 20, 000 people escaping Boko Haram violence in North east Nigeria, but with no end to the conflict in sight, there were, as at August 18 this year, 44, 889 Nigerian refugees crowded in the camp and sharing 11,954 shelters.

    A minimum of four persons were sharing each shelter, but about 5,000 refugees still lived in classrooms and community shelters, and many displaced persons remained stuck in border towns and villages with no international help.

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    Between January and August, more than 22,000 new refugees had already been registered, and by the end of the year, it is projected that the number of refugees in the camp may shoot beyond 50,000 people.

    And as more people troop into the Minawao camp and the surrounding bushes and classrooms, the needs of these new arrivals are growing fast but the availability of basic services such as the provision of water, sanitation, education and food is shrinking and the living conditions of refugees are worsening.

    Médecins Sans Frontières, for instance, is struggling to bring in new staff to give more consultations, vaccinations and treatments.

    Education is also provided in dire circumstances. The camp has two primary schools with 24 classrooms for over 6,000 (out of 11,000) children between the ages of six and 13. There are also about 2,000 students in secondary school between the ages of 14 and 17.

    Camerounian curriculum, not Nigerian, is taught as there is scarcity of good teachers who could provide education in English. Teaching equipment and learning materials such as exercise books were also missing and the number of classrooms is not enough.

    The 79 unaccompanied children who lived in the camp as at August 28, away from missing or dead parents were also a concern to humanitarian workers.

    For now, the capacity of the Minawao camp has reached its limits and new needs have been created.

    The fresh needs include the construction of shelters at a new camp to decongest Minawao and accommodate newcomers, the deployment of more security operatives from the current single security post, the supply of more water as well as the implementation of new measures to prevent cholera outbreak among others.

    These challengers are worsened by the dilapidated road between Zamai, the nearest town, and the camp. Many trucks had broken down along the way with provisions in them and many humanitarian aid workers had been stranded and forced to turn back as they were trying to reach the camp. The road is often over flooded during rainy seasons and our correspondent had to be carried by two men to cross some parts of that road.

    The increased needs, however, require enormous resources. But money is what is lacking the most, UNHCR says.

    In its “2015 Refugee Response Plan” interagency report, made available on  August 9, and which covered the period between  July 20 and 26, 2015, the UNHCR and partnering agencies disclosed that out of 62.7 million dollars needed to tackle the refugee crisis in Cameroun, only 29 percent of the cash has been made available.

    “What is really worrisome is that despite the growing number of refugees and their needs, donors do not seem to understand the urgency,” an official said.

    This reporter’s investigation was cut short when he was arrested on August 28 and kept in a cell for three nights and day on suspicions that he was a spy for Boko Haram.

     

    *Investigation carried out with funding from The International Centre for Investigative Reporting (ICIR Nigeria) and Ford Foundation

     

  • Cameroon repatriating 12,000 Nigerians

    About 12,000 Nigerians are being repatriated over the next three to four days after seeking refuge in Cameroon over attacks by Boko Haram sect, the National Emergency Management Agency, said on Wednesday.

    NEMA spokesman, Manzo Ezekiel, said the returnees would be accommodated mainly in the town of Mubi in Adamawa State, close to the border.

    “We already cleared about 1,150 people but border officers projected that 12,000 people would be arriving,” Reuters quoted Ezekiel as saying on the issue.

    Cameroonian authorities expelled about 2,800 Nigerians over the weekend following a series of suicide bomb attacks in July.

    The six-year-old insurgency waged by Boko Haram to establish an Islamist state in the northeast of Nigeria has displaced around 1.5 million people internally and forced thousands to flee into neighbouring Cameroon, Niger and Chad.

    A multi-national joint taskforce combining 8,700 troops from Nigeria and its neighbours is being set up in Chad’s capital N’Djamena to combat the militants.

    A similar-sized repatriation occurred in May from the Lake Chad islands in Niger when Nigerien authorities told residents, many of them Nigerians, to evacuate before military operations.

    About 25,000 people were forced to leave, sometimes brutally. Some died en route due to inadequate evacuation assistance.