See also:
» 27.04.2011 - Niger, Chad receive 75,000 refugees from Libya
» 02.03.2011 - "Kenya, Niger, Mali troops support Ghaddafi"
» 26.02.2011 - African mercenaries in Libya: Fact or racism?
» 22.08.2008 - Niger extends state of alert
» 21.08.2008 - Niger rebels deny ceasefire
» 31.03.2008 - Niger rebels seize village
» 03.03.2008 - RSF chief denied Niger visa
» 27.10.2006 - Chad enters Niger's nomadic fray











China wholesale online through DHgate.com


Houlihan's coupons


Finn autentiske matoppskrifter fra hele verden på Verdensmat.no:
Gazpacho Børek Kartoffelsalat Taboulé Gulasj Albóndigas Cevapi Rougaille Japrak sarma Zwiebelbrot Klopse Giouvetsi Paella Pljeskavica Pica pau Pulpo a la gallega Flammkuchen Langosj Tapenade Chatsjapuri Pasulj Lassi Kartoffelpuffer Tortilla Raznjici Knödel Lentejas Bœuf bourguignon Korianderchutney Brenneslesuppe Proia Sæbsi kavurma Sardinske calamares


Autentiske matoppskrifter fra hele verden finner du på Verdensmat.no:
Réunion Portugal Aserbajdsjan Serbia Tyskland Seychellene Bosnia Spania Libanon Belgia India Kroatia Hellas Italia Ungarn Komorene Georgia Mauritius Østerrike Romania Frankrike


Niger
Human rights | Society

Fears of instability after Niger expels Arabs

afrol News / IRIN, 26 October - Authorities in Niger have started expelling 4,000 Arab settlers into neighbouring Chad, but community leaders have warned the government's decision could kick-start inter-ethnic violence in the dirt-poor country. The expulsions will be conducted "with respect for human dignity" and only target people "not in conformity with Niger's laws," Niger's interior Minister Mounkaila Modi however pledged on national television.

Niger's authorities announced plans to repatriate Mahamid Arabs from the region around the town Diffa, close to the border with Chad, in the vast country's remote southeast region on Tuesday.

On Wednesday, Arab leaders said the Nigerien armed forces were patrolling the sandy streets and roads in Diffa and the surrounding region, harrying the Arab population to pack their bags. Trucks full of women, children and old people had been already sent to the town of Kabelawa, 100 kilometres to the north of Diffa on the Chadian border, they added.

A government official in the Diffa region confirmed to the UN media 'IRIN' that the repatriation operations actually started on Friday, before the government's official announcement. "Regrouping operations started on Friday. We must gather the people and livestock in Kabelawa, but it will take a terribly long time for them all to return to Chad", said Abdourahmane Ari, a government official at Nguigmi, around 100 kilometres northeast of Diffa.

Some of the 4,000-strong Mahamid community has been in Niger since a devastating drought in 1973 caused upheavals throughout the region and forced them to flee their homes near Biltine in eastern Chad, more than 1,000 kilometres east. More of the Arab tribe followed in the 1980s, when a brutal civil war made Chad one of the most dangerous places to live in the world.

During the decades, many have been integrated into the Nigerien society. A census carried out in Niger in 2001 showed many members of the Arab community had been issued national identity cards by local authorities. But the Niger government said their presence has now become untenable because of quarrels with local inhabitants. It also said the Arabs pose a "threat to national security," although did not specify how.

The Arab community in Niger said in a statement on Wednesday that "this decision made by the government is extremely dangerous... it will fuel the hatred between ethnic communities in Diffa and will lead inevitably to a widespread conflict whose wounds will take time to heal."

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) told 'IRIN' it would send someone to Niger soon to see what - if anything - it could do. "This group does not have refugee status, it is the very first time we hear about it", Helene Caux, UNHCR spokewoman in Geneva said. "We first need to evaluate if these people will suffer discrimination if they go back to Chad."

Jean-Baptiste Mattei, spokesperson for the French government, said France "is paying close attention to this question for the sake of avoiding the risk of regional destabilisation. We are in touch with Nigerien authorities and the UN to get the most detailed analysis of the situation, particularly on the humanitarian angle."

The report accompanying the 2001 national census, obtained by 'IRIN', hinted at mounting tension between the Mahamids and dominant ethnic groups in the northeast of Niger, the Touaregs and Toubous. "Mahamid, nomad pastoralists coming from Chad, are very restive," the report said. "Cohabitation with the other communities is strained," it added.

According to the report, the reduction of pastoral land because of successive droughts, combined with the growth of large camel herds, had fuelled discord between pastoralists and herdsmen in the region. "They do not stand by the common pastoral rules. Conflicts erupt very often around the wells that they consider as state owned. They use them as they want", an indigenous local chief was quoted as having said.

"Some inhabitants think the Mahamid must leave the region, unconditionally and without delay. A relative unanimity prevails among the population who want them to leave the area", the 2001 report concluded.

Niger's democratically elected president, Mamadou Tandja, originally comes from the Diffa region, which has a similar ethnic make-up to Chad. The region was at the centre of an unsuccessful military uprising in 2002.



- Create an e-mail alert for Niger news
- Create an e-mail alert for Human rights news
- Create an e-mail alert for Society news


 
    Printable version


On the Afrol News front page now

Rwanda
Rwanda succeeds including citizens in formal financial sector

afrol News - It is called "financial inclusion", and it is a key government policy in Rwanda. The goal is that, by 2020, 90 percent of the population is to have and actively use bank accounts. And in only four years, financial inclusion has doubled in Rwanda.

Famine warning: "South Sudan is imploding"

afrol News - The UN's humanitarian agencies now warn about a devastating famine in Sudan and especially in South Sudan, where the situation is said to be "imploding". Relief officials are appealing to donors to urgently fund life-saving activities in the two countries.
Guinea
Panic in West Africa after Ebola outbreak in Guinea

afrol News - Fear is spreading all over West Africa after the health ministry in Guinea confirmed the first Ebola outbreak in this part of Africa. According to official numbers, at least 86 are infected and 59 are dead as a result of this very contagious disease.
Ethiopia
Ethiopia tightens its already strict anti-gay laws

afrol News - It is already a crime being homosexual in Ethiopia, but parliament is now making sure the anti-gay laws will be applied in practical life. No pardoning of gays will be allowed in future, but activist fear this only is a signal of further repression being prepared.
Ethiopia
Ethiopia plans Africa's biggest dam

afrol News / Africa Renewal - Ethiopia's ambitious plan to build a US$ 4.2 billion dam in the Benishangul-Gumuz region, 40 km from its border with Sudan, is expected to provide 6,000 megawatts of electricity, enough for its population plus some excess it can sell to neighbouring countries.



front page | news | countries | archive | currencies | news alerts login | about afrol News | contact | advertise | español 

©  afrol News. Reproducing or buying afrol News' articles.

   You can contact us at mail@afrol.com