Panafrican News Agency

UNHCR urges greater support as violence continues unabated in Burkina Faso

Geneva, Switzerland (PANA) - The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is warning of escalating humanitarian needs for displaced people in Burkina Faso leading to an increase in refugees fleeing the country.

As violence against civilians and intercommunity conflicts continue, close to 50,000 refugees have fled to Niger, Mali, and further south to the coastal states of Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Togo and Ghana to seek safety in the last two years, UNHCR Representative in Burkina Faso, Abdouraouf Gnon-Konde, told a new conference in Geneva on Tuesday.

He said with a total of 1.76 million registered internally displaced people, Burkina Faso is experiencing one of the fastest-growing displacement crises in the world, marked by violence, poverty, food shortages and the growing impact of the climate crisis.

Gnon-Konde noted that for several years, Burkinabes originally from northern and eastern regions have been fleeing violence and terrorist attacks to reach safer areas in and around the country’s main cities.

"But with insecurity now spreading throughout the country, urban areas are becoming overwhelmed by new arrivals," he said.

Host communities and the displaced are competing for natural resources, basic services and economic opportunities, Gnon-Konde said, adding that as intercommunity tensions become more acute, many displaced people are deciding to move again, looking for safety, better services and livelihood opportunities.

Since the beginning of the year, UNHCR and its partners have identified an increasing number of internally displaced people deciding to cross borders, in particular moving southwards toward coastal countries such as Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, and Benin. More than 23,000 internally displaced Burkinabés have crossed borders in 2022.

Geneva, Switzerland (PANA) - The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) is warning of escalating humanitarian needs for displaced people in Burkina Faso leading to an increase in refugees fleeing the country.

As violence against civilians and intercommunity conflicts continue, close to 50,000 refugees have fled to Niger, Mali, and further south to the coastal states of Benin, Côte d’Ivoire, Togo and Ghana to seek safety in the last two years, UNHCR Representative in Burkina Faso, Abdouraouf Gnon-Konde, told a new conference in Geneva on Tuesday.

He said with a total of 1.76 million registered internally displaced people, Burkina Faso is experiencing one of the fastest-growing displacement crises in the world, marked by violence, poverty, food shortages and the growing impact of the climate crisis.

Gnon-Konde noted that for several years, Burkinabes originally from northern and eastern regions have been fleeing violence and terrorist attacks to reach safer areas in and around the country’s main cities.

"But with insecurity now spreading throughout the country, urban areas are becoming overwhelmed by new arrivals," he said.

Host communities and the displaced are competing for natural resources, basic services and economic opportunities, Gnon-Konde said, adding that as intercommunity tensions become more acute, many displaced people are deciding to move again, looking for safety, better services and livelihood opportunities.

Since the beginning of the year, UNHCR and its partners have identified an increasing number of internally displaced people deciding to cross borders, in particular moving southwards toward coastal countries such as Ivory Coast, Ghana, Togo, and Benin. More than 23,000 internally displaced Burkinabés have crossed borders in 2022.

Gnon-Konde said to respond to the new displacement, UNHCR is working closely with local authorities and partners to provide shelter and life-saving assistance to the most vulnerable, such as children and survivors of gender-based violence.

However, more resources are needed to prevent internally displaced Burkinabes from becoming refugees and to find durable solutions for them.

Newly-arrived Burkinabe refugees – mostly women and children – currently have limited access to food, shelter, hygiene and sanitation.

This plight of the displaced is being made worse by severe underfunding, the UN refugee agency said and called on the international community to provide greater solidarity and support for the displaced in Burkina Faso and their hosts through urgent financial assistance.

Despite the growing needs in Burkina Faso and neighbouring countries, just 52 per cent of the US$336.9 million required by UNHCR this year has been funded.

-0- PANA MA 29Nov2022