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War sends floods of migrants back
home to bleak future
November 25, 2005 - (IRIN) Mariam’s twisted fingers will
forever remain a brutal reminder of her violent escape three years
ago to Burkina Faso from Cote d’Ivoire, her home for 25 years
until war broke out there in 2002.
Millions of people have left impoverished Burkina Faso in past decades
in search of work on the thriving cocoa and coffee plantations of
Cote d’Ivoire, the region’s economic powerhouse, and
at least four million people originally from Burkina Faso and Mali
have settled there.
But in the last three years, war and ethnic tension have driven
hundreds of thousands back home - only to find the future seems
bleak in a nation rated the world’s third poorest by the United
Nations.
Mariam says the scars left by the beatings during her flight home
to shelter are nothing compared with the suffering since.
For three years now Mariam has survived by sweeping the sand off
the streets in a dusty neighbourhood outside Ouagadougou, the capital.
With the help of a little extra cash doing the washing for the neighbours,
two of her seven children are in school. As for the others, two
of whom are at university, “they look after themselves,”
she told IRIN.
Mariam is one of 366,000 Burkinabe migrant workers officially reckoned
to have decided to return home when civil war erupted in Cote d’Ivoire
in September 2002, splitting the country in two and unleashing a
torrent of spite against migrant workers.
Humanitarian aid workers say that as many as a million Burkinabe
people may have fled the world’s top cocoa producer.
Because they hailed from Cote d’Ivoire’s northern neighbour
states, they were quickly stigmatised by President Laurent Gbagbo’s
southern-based loyalist camp as supporters of the rebels who control
the northern part of the country.
“I came home to stay, but there is too much suffering,”
said the 47-year-old whose fingers were deformed by blows dealt
by security forces on the road running between southern Abidjan,
the country’s main city, and Bouake, the rebel headquarter
town once the country’s second biggest.
Like most of the 700 women who have joined the Teeg-Taaba association
for the survival of people repatriated from Cote d’Ivoire,
she and her children live on the streets for lack of a home. Her
tailor husband, also without a job, remains in Cote d’Ivoire
but sends little news. “He’s alive though,” she
said.
Many other women lost their husbands in the war, said Sabine Nana,
an unmarried woman in her 30s committed “to saving my sisters
from the misery” left by the Ivorian civil war.
“Women were assaulted, beaten up and some were even raped
during the journey to their husbands’ villages. They thought
they’d find shelter there but instead they were thrown out.
Some of the men, who’d lost everything they ever owned, wound
up committing suicide,” said Nana.
Trauma difficult to heal
“The trauma was bad and staying together was the only means
we could think of. No one’s come forward to help, we are desperately
alone,” she said, adding that more than 2,000 children have
been unable to attend school for lack of money since arriving in
Burkina Faso.
Official sources estimate that around 3.5 million Burkinabes were
residents of Cote d’Ivoire in the 1990s, working on farms,
in trade and in transport.
But Albert Ouedraogo, a lecturer who runs an association set up
in 2004 to defend the rights of migrants and returnees - Le Tocsin
- said there were no reliable statistics on the number of emigrants.
“No one really cares about the diaspora,” he said. “Burkinabe
people living abroad don’t have the right to vote and nobody
wants them to have it - they might be too independently-minded.”
Observers and analysts believe on the other hand that persecution
against Burkinabe migrants in Cote d’Ivoire helped President
Blaise Compaore’s landslide re-election this month, in which
he won a mammoth 80.3 percent of the vote after 18 years in office.
Angered by the hate campaigns, the 13 million people of Burkina
Faso rallied around Compaore as standard-bearer of the nation.
“No one can forget that thousands of us have suffered,”
Compaore told a group of foreign reporters ahead of the 13 November
poll.
But Nana said none of the sympathy had translated into real help.
“Since we set up the association we haven’t received
any cash, women don’t even have mats to sleep on.”
Destitute returnees weigh down social structures
Ouedraogo too was disheartened by the poor response to the plight
of the returnees. “We thought there’d be more consideration,
more feeling for people who’d lost everything they had,”
he said. “Instead, they’re often made to feel guilty
for returning empty-handed.”
After being run out of her husband’s village, Mariam gave
up on family. “Relatives don’t like it when you’ve
got nothing to offer. Solidarity? There’s no such thing.”
Because of the lack of work and support, more than half of the returnees
- men still young enough to work - have emigrated once again, notably
to Cote d’Ivoire, according to officials and aid agencies.
“Healthy men have left the women and children behind and returned
to the cocoa regions in the Ivorian southwest, but haven’t
been able to get to the plantations because of the lack of safety
and are hanging out in urban centres,” Ouedraogo said.
His Le Tocsin association was behind the state-funded “Baayiri”
or “Homeland” Operation, which enabled the return of
more than 7,000 people, most of them members of Burkina Faso’s
majority Mossi people from the arid central plateau.
Felix Sanfo, of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA), said that many of these returnees, once home, headed
instantly for Burkina Faso’s thriving southwest, near Cote
d’Ivoire, which before the three-year war was a hive of industry.
The area is home to Burkina Faso’s lively cotton industry
- the country will be the world’s fifth producer this year
- as well as sugar, fruit and vegetables. But its flourmills are
closed down for lack of grain imports from Cote d’Ivoire and
a once flourishing motorbike plant has slashed production for lack
of buyers.
So the region now faces “a latent crisis,” according
to UN officials, because of increasing demand for the few available
jobs and added pressure on available land. “Tensions surfaced
in 2003, making cohabitation difficult between outsiders and locals,”
Sanfo said.
The returnees too added pressure on already limited health services
and overcrowded schools, making life even more difficult for the
local population, already hard-hit by price increases of basic goods
following the war-imposed closure of the trading route between the
port city of Abidjan, and the Burkina cities of Bobo Dioulasso and
Ouagadougou.
Speaking to journalists, Compaore said the southwest was in trouble
due to the closure of the border with Cote d’Ivoire but insisted
that landlocked Burkina “is in the process of overcoming the
crisis.”
Speaking to IRIN, Agriculture Minister Salif Diallo agreed, saying
that the negative consequences of the Ivorian conflict on Burkina’s
economy would be absorbed by this year’s record grain harvest,
due to produce a surplus 1.2 million tonnes that would bring prices
down.
International observers say that to their surprise, Burkina’s
economy has adapted well and swiftly to the Ivorian crisis, with
many sectors unaffected by the conflict.
“We were expecting the effects to be catastrophic but they
have succeeded in adapting flow and trading routes to the new conditions,”
redirecting transport to Tema in Ghana, Lome in Togo and Cotonou
in Benin, said Helia Mateus, the head of the Economy and Social
Affairs section at the European Commission office in Burkina.
The prices of palm oil, coffee, oranges and pineapples, now imported
from Ghana or Malaysia, have even gone down, according to Burkina
traders involved in the informal sector.
Transport companies, facing stiffer competition following the return
of many operators from Cote d’Ivoire, cut back their profit
margins, resulting in cheaper transport and goods, while the authorities
for their part simplified administrative paperwork for the private
sector, which rarely gets government help, Mateus said.
Yet life is far from rosy in this West African nation, holder of
the world’s record illiteracy rate for adults.
With the monthly minimum wage at 30,000 CFA francs (US $54), and
world oil prices on the rise, the flood of returnees has helped
cause a rise in the price of land and real estate.
“Urban poverty is on the rise, as is corruption, but Burkina
continues to be held up as a positive example by the international
community,” said Mateus. The commission supports the national
budget to the tune of 50 million euros (US $58 million) a year.
But few are complaining, and after almost two decades at the helm
the head of state continues to rally popular support.
“There is a feeling of nationalism in Burkina Faso, the crisis
has been managed with responsibility and there is no questioning
of policy,” said one international observer who asked not
to be identified.
And even returnees such as Sabine Nana live on hope, rather than
hate. “If we can win what we want for the women and children,
that is the possibility of working and going to school we will not
depart.”
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=50335&SelectRegion=West_Africa&SelectCountry=BURKINA_FASO-COTE_D_IVOIRE
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