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afrol.com, 27 October - UN staff have visited several Guinean refugees camps for the first time since mid-September, and were met with a "deteriorating nutritional situation". Food distribution has now resumed, and there are discussions underway to move some of the 460,000 refugees Guinea hosts to safer areas. The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) today informed that it has sent various staff members to the camps in the border regions of Guinea to assess the security situation as well as refugee needs. Some of the camps had not been visited by international staff for several weeks following the withdrawal in mid-September of UNHCR and other organisations in the wake of a spate of attacks which cost the life of the agency's head of office in Macenta and the abduction of another UNHCR worker. According to Guinean authorities, there have been 15 attacks in the region bordering Liberia and Sierra Leone in recent months, resulting in some 360 Guinean deaths. UNHCR administers dozens of camps in the area. A technical mission to Kissidougou and Guéckédou last week found that there was less harassment at checkpoints by young vigilantes and there had been few incidents in the camps themselves, despite continuing rumours of possible attacks in the Guéckédou area, the agency's spokesman Ron Redmond today informed. UNHCR’s medical coordinator warned of a "deteriorating nutritional situation" in the camps. Food distribution has now resumed, beginning in Forécariah with supplies for 27,000 beneficiaries between 17 and 21 October. Next week, distribution will resume in Guéckédou, with deliveries for 43,000 beneficiaries. Most of the refugees in Guéckédou have not received food since the June-August period. New camp sites A site identification mission has been sent to the area to determine the cost of developing the proposed sites, which are all located in the Kissidougou area, some 100 kms from the border. In 1999, UNHCR and its partners had started moving 20,000 refugees from border areas in Guéckédou, but the operation came to a standstill because of a lack of funds. Discussions are also underway for the relocation of up to 30,000 refugees in the Forécariah Prefecture, which is only 30 kms from the Sierra Leone border. Guinea hosts a total of 460,000 refugees, including 330,000 Sierra Leoneans and 130,000 Liberians. Source: Based on UNHCR
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