By Tom Matoke and Ivan Mugisha
In Summary
- The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is targeting 20,000 Rwandan refugees in DR Congo with the cash scheme, in the hope that it will persuade them to return home before the deadline, after which they will no longer be considered refugees by Rwanda.
- An adult returning to Rwanda this year will receive $250, a child $150, as UNHCR moves to decongest camps.
Rwanda could this year receive the largest number of
returnees — refugees who fled the 1994 genocide — in a UN-funded
repatriation programme that offers cash to every adult and child who
chooses to return home voluntarily.
Supported by a budget of $4 million, the UN has agreed to offer a
cash incentive to Rwandan refugees who are currently living in exile
around the world, but especially in the DRC, with those opting to return
home before the December 2017 deadline will each receive $250 for
adults and $150 for children.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees is targeting
20,000 Rwandan refugees in DR Congo with the cash scheme, in the hope
that it will persuade them to return home before the deadline, after
which they will no longer be considered refugees by Rwanda.
The cash programme began in 2016 as a pilot project and has
already benefited 403 returning families. In two months — November and
December last year — the UNHCR disbursed $283,650 to 1,481 individuals —
615 adults and 866 children.
'Mass exodus of refugees'
“We are targeting 20,000 refugees this year. We started giving
out cash in November 2016 to gauge if this was the right direction. We
will now continue with the programme until the cessation clause,” said
Erika Fitzpatrick, UNHCR Rwanda associate reporting officer. “We have so
far given cash to 13 families and realised that this programme can be
helpful in getting as many refugees as possible back home,” she added.
The UN expects the monetary incentive to result in a “mass exodus of refugees” currently living in foreign countries.
The UNHCR approved the Rwanda Cessation Clause in 2011. It was
then extended to 2013 and later to December 31, 2017. Rwanda then put in
place a repatriation and reintegration programme to encourage refugees
to return, and the Ministry of Disaster Management and Refugees says
that between 1994 and 2014, over 3.4 million refugees have voluntarily
returned home.
Reintegration programme
“Upon their return, we give them livestock, construction
material, while others are offered training in various vocational
skills,” said Minister in charge of Refugees Seraphine Mukantabana.
“Returnees are visited on a regular basis by our reintegration
staff to ensure that they are smoothly reintegrated into the community,
and we also try to help those who are still facing challenges,” she
added.
Other incentives from the UN for refugees who willingly opt to
return home include one year free medical insurance for treatment in
government hospitals, free transportation within Rwanda and free mobile
phones.
Saber Azam, the UNHCR representative for Rwandan refugees, said
that the government of Rwanda had sufficient funding that to ensure the
returnees are provided with permanent settlement in the country.
According to the UNHCR, returning refugees were previously being
provided with household items but this eventually failed since most
returnees were tempted to sell the items for cash.
“We are optimistic that the cash award option we have adopted now will be a success,” he said.The UNHCR estimates that by the end of August 1994, at least 2.1 million
Rwandan refugees had fled into neighbouring countries. To date, at
least more than 3.4 million refugees have since returned according to
the Rwanda Ministry of Disaster Management and Refugees.
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