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On the eve of a visit by the United Nations Security Council delegation to West Africa, and as fighting intensifies around Liberia's capital, Monrovia, Amnesty International urged the countries of the sub-region and the international community to do everything possible to protect Liberian refugees and all others caught in the middle of these two conflicts.

News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International

AI INDEX: AFR 31/014/2003 24 June 2003

Côte d'Ivoire: Liberian refugees caught between two conflicts: a solution
is urgently needed

On the eve of a visit by United Nations Security Council delegation to West
Africa, and as fighting intensifies around Liberia's capital, Monrovia,
Amnesty International urges the countries of the subregion and the
international community to do everything possible to protect Liberian
refugees and all others caught in the middle of these two conflicts.

In a document published today, Côte d'Ivoire: No escape. Liberian refugees
in Côte d'Ivoire (full text of the report at ) Amnesty International
appeals to the international community to implement a humanitarian
evacuation programme that includes resettlement in other countries for
these refugees, who do not know which way to turn to.

At the beginning of April 2003 thousands of people who, a few weeks
earlier, had sought refuge from the Côte d'Ivoire crisis by fleeing to
Liberia, crossed the border in the opposite direction after increasingly
violent clashes in the region where they had sought asylum. These hasty and
panic-stricken displacements illustrate the situation of tens of thousands
of people -- Liberian refugees, Côte d'Ivoire nationals and people from
elsewhere in the subregion -- caught in the middle of two conflicts, one in
West Côte d'Ivoire and one in East Liberia, and who do not know where to go
to for effective protection.

The lives of some 70,000 Liberian refugees, who had successfully sought
asylum in Côte d'Ivoire after the war broke out in Liberia in 1989, have
been shattered by the crisis that has shaken the country since September 2002.

"The Liberian refugees are the victims of atrocities committed by various
parties to the conflict, who loot their possessions and ill-treat them, and
sometimes forcibly recruit them into their ranks, while at the same time
accusing them of supporting their opponents; they cannot return to Liberia,
where the situation gets worse every day; and no other neighbouring country
seems disposed to welcome them, because they are often perceived as
trouble-makers," Amnesty International said.

The document published today includes accounts made by many Liberian
refugees an Amnesty International delegation met in Abidjan in March 2003.
These accounts show why they feel they cannot escape from the situation
they find themselves in. One Liberian refugee told the Amnesty
International delegation: "Many Liberians now feel that they would even
prefer to be put out to sea on a boat than to remain in Côte d'Ivoire".

The situation of Liberian refugees is of particular concern in the west of
Côte d'Ivoire, where most of these refugees live, and where they have for
months been the victims often of forced recruitment by armed opposition
groups and government forces alike.

"Refugees, especially those living in Abidjan, have been victims of
harassment, humiliation and sometimes arrest. Members of the security
forces and certain segments of the Côte d'Ivoire population, encouraged by
some xenophobic media, consider them to be accomplices of the armed
opposition groups that appeared in the west of the country at the end of
November 2002," Amnesty International asserted.

Unable to remain safely in Côte d'Ivoire, tens of thousands of desperate
Liberian refugees have returned to their own country despite the war that
is raging there. In addition to these Liberians, tens of thousands of Côte
d'Ivoire nationals and people from other countries of the subregion have
also fled to Liberia. Figures published by the UNHCR in March 2003 showed
that about 100,000 people had fled to Liberia since the beginning of the
Côte d'Ivoire conflict, although many of them have been forced to return to
Côte d'Ivoire.

In these circumstances, Amnesty International believes that these
population movements represent de facto 'refoulement'. Even if the Côte
d'Ivoire and Liberian authorities do not directly expel these refugees and
the civilian population fleeing the war zones, it is nevertheless obvious
that the conflict is forcing these people to go to regions where their
security is under serious threat.

Amnesty International therefore reminds the international community of its
duty to assume responsibility for finding a solution to this problem. A
major concerted effort by the international community is indispensable,
especially in relation to fundraising for humanitarian action in the field,
if this crisis, in which hundreds of thousands of people have lost
everything, is to be resolved.

Unfortunately, the international community has been slow to react, despite
the efforts of the UNHCR, the World Food Programme and UNICEF. The United
Nations has launched several appeals for funds, but the sums collected
have, so far piled against the enormous needs created by one of the most
serious current humanitarian crises.

Amnesty International appeals to the Côte d'Ivoire government and armed
opposition groups operating in Côte d'Ivoire to immediately cease attacks
on Liberian refugees.

The organization also urges the international community to urgently find a
comprehensive and long term solution to the crisis that ensures the
effective protection of Liberian refugees and others who cannot stay in the
subregion and who should therefore be resettled elsewhere.

Background

The Liberian refugee problem is only one aspect of the serious humanitarian
crisis that has shaken Côte d'Ivoire since the armed uprising of September
2002. The conflict has caused the massive displacement of civilians, who
have fled from areas where fighting is taking place. Hundreds of thousands
of people -- Côte d'Ivoire nationals as well as other people from the
subregion, especially Burkina Faso, Mali and Guinea -- have had to leave
their homes to escape the atrocities committed by all parties to the
conflict. The number of people displaced within Côte d'Ivoire itself is
more than one and a half million according to the Côte d'Ivoire authorities.

Since the September 2002 uprising, about 50,000 Mali citizens and 150,000
Burkina Faso citizens have fled to Mali and Burkina Faso where they face
serious reintegration problems, despite the efforts made by the governments
and civil society in these countries. It is, therefore, the entire
subregion that faces a very serious humanitarian crisis.

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NO ESCAPE - Liberian refugees in Côte d'Ivoire: Take action! Visit
http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabchqaaYNpdbdxUCdb/

For more information on refugees please visit Amnesty International's new
'Refugees have rights' pages at
http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabchqaaYNpebdxUCdb/

For the full text of the report, please see:
http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabchqaaYNzLbdxUCdb/

View all documents on Côte d'Ivoire at
http://amnesty-news.c.tclk.net/maabchqaaYNpfbdxUCdb/