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UN Refugee Chief Concerned About Refugees in Eastern Chad
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http://enews.voanews.com/t?ctl=15721C1:A6F02AD83191E160EF18D1C81A883CF79574F7DCC14957C0 Dozens of refugee
camps strung along the Chadian-Sudanese border have been in the
cross-fire of army raids, inter-ethnic clashes On a two-day visit to
Chad, the UN's top refugee official is trying to raise awareness about
the volatile conditions in refugee camps in eastern Chad. His agency
is looking into the relocation of these camps away from what has
become a center of violence among rebels, refugees, residents and
soldiers. Phuong Tran reports from VOA's Dakar Bureau.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees, Antonio Guterres, met with
Chad's Prime Minister Pascal Yoadimnadji, government and UN officials
on Thursday to discuss what the UN refugee agency calls one of the
world's worst humanitarian crises.







A girl stands near a straw hut in a refugee camp, near Goz Beida, Chad
(File)Guterres said he is studying the possibility of relocating more
than 200,000 refugees to an area 600 kilometers deeper into Chad, away
from what has become a deadly and lawless border zone.

The dozen refugee camps strung along the Chadian-Sudanese border have
been in the cross-fire of army raids, inter-ethnic clashes that some
say have been instigated by the Sudanese government and attacks by
Chadian rebels who are hoping to oust President Idriss Deby.

The UN refugee agency says that since last month, 70 villages in Chad
along the border have been attacked, burned or emptied, and that more
than $1 million worth of UN aid was stolen from a warehouse.

Guterres said a group of representatives from aid agencies and the
Chadian government already visited possible new sites for refugee
camps. He said the mass relocation would be an "enormous challenge."

Tens of thousands of Sudanese have fled the Darfur region since 2003
to escape political and inter-ethnic fighting.

Jennifer Pagonis, a spokeswoman for the UN refugee agency, is
accompanying Guterres on his visit in Chad.

"It's always an extraordinarily difficult situation, not only because
of the political situation in terms of what is going on in Darfur, but
also the environmental implications for a country, especially a desert
region, of having 200,000 refugees on its territory," she said.

The UN has given the Sudanese government until January 1 to accept
hybrid UN-African Union peacekeeping forces. The Sudanese government
had rejected such forces, suggesting that the West wanted access to
Sudan's oil.

Under the "hybrid" plan approved in Addis Ababa last November, some
13,000 U.N. troops and logistics personnel would go to Darfur to
reinforce the beleaguered 7,000 member AU observer mission already
there.

Guterres said that this peacekeeping force is essential to prevent the
entire Central African region from descending into violence.

International agencies scaled back their operations and pulled staff
out of eastern Chad after an escalation in clashes between government
soldiers and rebel forces, as well as attacks by janjaweed, Arab
militiamen supported by the Sudanese government.

Refugee camps along the eastern border of Chad are mostly run by the
refugees themselves, with international aid staff flying in for a few
days at a time to help, says Jennifer Pagonis.

A group that is maintaining a skeleton staff in eastern Chad is the UN
children's advocacy organization, UNICEF. The advisor for child
protection for Central and West Africa, Jean-Claude Legrand, is
concerned about child soldiers being recruited directly from the
refugee camps.

"We can use this opportunity to put much more pressure on the Chadian
government to renew their commitment to not recruit children," he
said. "We have a lot of anecdotal evidence of this recruitment."

UNICEF estimates that more than half of the refugees in the camps are
children, and that both the rebels and government have recruited
children to fight.

The UN High Commissioner Guterres said that relocating the refugees
would help avoid the forced recruitment of refugees by armed groups
that patrol the porous, desolate Sudanese-Chadian border.

Meanwhile, some 50,000 refugees fled the Central African Republic into
Chad last week to escape fighting in their country. They are joining
more than 200,000 Sudanese refugees and some 90,000 Chadians displaced
by fighting.

Relief organizations have been requesting an international security
force in Chad to protect civilians and refugees. Chad's President Deby
has agreed to such a force. Last week, the UN Security Council said it
was awaiting recommendations on improving security in eastern Chad.