Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search

Somali refugees to be relocated away from border
Issue 286
Front Page
Index
Headlines

US Forces Meddle In Berbera Port Traffic

Police Prevent ‘Qaran Party’ Meeting In Gebiley

Does Somaliland’s national TV belong to the nation or UDUB?

Give Somaliland a chance

Somalia oil deal for China

Islamists vow to attack Somalia peace meeting

Written answers

Somaliland Warns Getting Impatient With Hypocrisy Over Recognition

The 'arms smuggler', the murdered judge, and a scandal threatening to engulf Chirac

Former SFDA chief executed for corruption

Regional Affairs

SONYO Trains 21 Youths From Six Regions

Ethiopian president in talks with mayors of Addis, Hargeysa

Editorial
Special Report

International News

USA-Russia: Hitting the Same Gate, or Playing One and the Same Game?

Investigators search home of Chirac's Africa adviser

Ethiopia, Zimbabwe and the "Politics of Naming"

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

UNISA's College of Human Sciences in the limelight

The new Seven Wonders of the World

Police plea on genital mutilation

The Somali Community in the Port of London

ETHIOPIA

Food for thought

Opinions

Testing Times for Somalia

THE WEAKEST LINK

Comments on today's BBC news

UDUB, UCID, and KULMIYE: Are There Any Differences?

Democracy Requires An Informed Citizenry

The Mayor Of Hargeysa—The New Mohammed Dheere Of Somaliland


13 Jul 2007

The refugees are part of a group of 4,000 Somali refugees who have recently been granted refugee status by UNHCR and the government's Authority for Refugees and Returnees Affairs (ARRA). An estimated 7,000 additional Somalis who also claim to have fled fighting and insecurity in Somalia, are waiting to be screened at other sites in eastern Ethiopia.

The new camp site at Teferi Ber, some 120 km north of Kebribeyah, was formerly a UNHCR camp which in the 1990s hosted some 49,000 mainly Somalis refugees who had fled fighting in their country. The camp was officially closed in 2001 after all the refugees returned, mainly to the self -declared republic of Somaliland.

After arriving at Teferi Ber, the refugees will spend three days in a reception centre where they will be allocated plots of land to construct homes and given building materials. They will also be given food as well as tarpaulins, blankets, sleeping mats, kitchen sets, jerry cans, kerosene stoves, and soap. The ARRA has established a temporary health centre until permanent structures can be built.

The Somali Region of Ethiopia already hosts more than16,500 refugees. With the new arrivals, the total is 20,300. At the peak of the Somali refugee crisis in the early 90s, the region hosted 628,000 refugees in eight camps. The overwhelming majority went home between 1997 and 2005, and all of the camps were closed except a camp at Kebribeyah.

Source: UNHCR news


Home | Contact us | Links | Archives | Search