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Malawi: UNHCR Urges Malawi Against Forcing Refugees Return to Overcrowded Camp

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Blantyre, Malawi — The U.N. refugee agency, UNHCR, says it “deeply regrets” Malawi’s decision to force about 8,000 refugees living in rural and urban areas back to the overcrowded Dzaleka refugee camp. Malawi’s minister of homeland security last week said the forced relocations would start after November 30, when a deadline expires on voluntary returns.

UNHCR is asking the Malawi government to reconsider its decision to force refugees and asylum-seekers living in villages, towns, and cities back into the overcrowded Dzaleka camp.

In a statement released Saturday, UNHCR says relocating self-sufficient and productive people into the camp would not only lead to loss of livelihoods but also compel them to rely on dwindling humanitarian aid.

UNHCR says as of October 31 it had received less than a fourth of funds needed this year in Malawi to support the camp’s refugees and asylum-seekers.

The agency’s reporting officer in Malawi, Kenyi Emanuel, said adding the estimated 8,000 refugees living outside the camp would bring more misery.

“The camp itself is extremely overcrowded, he said. “The camp was only meant to host between 10,000 and 12,000 people but now, it is hosting 56,000 refugees and asylum seekers. It is a five-fold increase.”

Dzaleka is home to refugees and asylum-seekers from Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Rwanda, and Somalia.

In August, Malawi’s government set November 30 as a deadline for those living in rural areas outside the camp to return and February 1 for those living in cities.

The decision came after a high court in Blantyre dismissed the refugees’ appeal against the government’s decision last year to return them to the camp.

Malawi’s Minister of Homeland Security Jean Sendeza at a televised press conference Thursday said the returns were in line with rules against refugees working or living outside the camp.

“As we continue with the relocation exercise, I request patience for all the stakeholders as this is an ongoing process,” he said. “In the same vein, I appeal to the general public to refrain from getting into issues of the refugees, especially on the relocation exercise. Let those that are assigned to do the work do so without any form of interference.”

Limited aid at the Dzaleka camp led to refugees holding sporadic protests in November, some of which turned violent.