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Burkina Faso: Thousands of migrants now living as strangers in their homeland

by lorenz on Feb 20, 2005 in Africa, migration

ReliefWeb

More than 365,000 people have fled from violence in Cote d'Ivoire to safety in Burkina Faso over the last two years. However there are no haunting images of refugee camps, packed to overflowing with people who have lost everything. For the new arrivals are former Burkinabe migrants going home. They have simply melted into the villages and the countryside, taken in by relatives and in some cases, even strangers. They are refugees in their own country.

The number of Burkinabe migrants that poured out of Cote d'Ivoire is almost double the number of Darfur refugees that have spilled across the Sudanese border into Chad. But while overcrowded refugees camps in eastern Chad have repeatedly come under the spotlight, attracting generous international aid, Burkina Faso's masses have largely fallen off the international community's radar screen. >> continue

SEE ALSO
11 Million People Without a State (OneWorld.net)
antropologi.info's links on migration (multilingual)

This entry was posted by admin and filed under Africa, migration.
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