Speaking during the celebrations to mark
the World Refugees Day at Nyarugusu Camp here, the Kigoma Regional
Commissioner, Brigadier General (Retired) Emmanuel Maganga, said there
are special camps for refugees who were former members of security
forces in their home country. The RC was representing the Deputy
Minister for Home Affairs, Mr Hamad Masauni.
The RC also called on refugees to
refrain from engaging in criminal activities noting that those with fire
arms should surrender them to respective authorities. RC Maganga
appealed to the international community for more refugees support,
noting that the support should not be classified according to a country
but should all be the same.
He pointed out that some refugees in
other countries have permanent structures while in Tanzania they are
housed in camps which get flooded during rainy season.
Speaking during the celebrations, the
UNHCR Country representative in Tanzania, Ms Chansa Kapaya praised
Tanzania as a country that is leading by example, noting that at one
time it hosted one of the largest refugee populations -over half a
million- in Africa.
Ms Kapaya said for decades Tanzania has
been an exemplary leader not only generously sheltering and assisting
others in need, but also in finding comprehensive solutions to end the
cycle of displacement.
“We shall never forget, the
unprecedented and historic offer of citizenship to over 162,000 former
1972 Burundian refugees, who were granted Tanzanian citizenship in 2010,
and who had spent over 40 years in this country as refugees, many of
them born in Tanzania, a country which they have now come to love and
regard as home,” she explained.
She noted that Tanzania has over the
years demonstrated a remarkable leadership role in the region, promoting
peace, dialogue, reconciliation and stability. “The test of time has
not weakened Tanzanian generosity.
When the ongoing political tension in
Burundi forced thousands to flee to Tanzania again last year, Tanzania
welcomed the fleeing people, for many of whom this is not the first time
their lives have been disrupted and have previously sought asylum in
Tanzania,” she added.
Prior to the influx of Burundian
refugees in April last year, Nyarugusu refugee Camp was the only single
remaining refugee camp in Tanzania, accommodating just over 65,000
refugees, mainly Congolese from DRC.
“As a result of the political and civil
unrest in Burundi, Nyarugusu in addition became home to thousands of
Burundian refugees with the new arrival hitting the 100,000 mark by 1st
of October 2015, surging the camp population to over three times its
carrying capacity and making it one of the largest and most overcrowded
camps in the world,” Ms Kapaya explained.
The influx of Burundian refugees
necessitated the re-opening of Nduta and Mtendeli, former refugee camps
in October 2015 and January 2016 respectively.
“The celebration are being held in
Kigoma region in recognition of the extraordinary generosity of the
government and the people of Tanzania in providing shelter in response
to the new influx of Burundian refugees,” she explained.
In their brief to the RC, the refugees
appealed to the government to prioritise health in the camp and assist
in providing education to girls who drop out of school often due to
various reasons.
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