Rising number of people cross to Senegal from Gambia amid tension

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Rising number of people cross to Senegal from Gambia amid tension

UNHCR, 13 Jan 2017

URL: http://kora.unhcr.org/rising-number-people-cross-senegal-gambia-amid-growing-tension/
Most new arrivals are children, sent by their parents to Senegal as a precautionary measure.

Several thousand people, mainly children, have crossed into Senegal from the Gambia in the last 10 days to escape growing tension over the results of last month’s presidential election. While some people have decided to stay in the Gambia, many have begun sending their children to Senegal as a precautionary measure amid the political impasse, fearing potential unrest. UNHCR teams report seeing buses filled with children, accompanied by women, cross the border.

UNHCR, other aid agencies and the Senegalese authorities have been monitoring the borders since the political crisis erupted last month, deploying joint field missions last week and this week to Casamance, in southern Senegal, bordering Gambia, and its surroundings. Much of the daily border crossing is regular traffic, but preliminary findings also suggest that several thousand people have crossed to Senegal to seek shelter, mainly in the Ziguinchor, Sédhiou, Kaolack and Kolda areas.

“Together with the Senegalese authorities, we are working to strengthen registration systems, which will help clarify figures” says Liz Ahua, UNHCR regional representative for West Africa in Dakar. “Most arrivals in Senegal are Gambians and Senegalese who have been working or living in the Gambia. Our teams also report Ghanaians, Guineans, Liberians, Mauritanians and Lebanese among the arrivals”.

Most are staying with relatives or host families. Some households have more than doubled or tripled in size, which risks putting a strain on their resources, especially food. UNHCR is working closely with the Senegalese authorities and aid agencies to establish contingency plans in case of future influxes. These include identifying and preparing transit and hosting sites near existing facilities providing basic services.

A UNHCR team left yesterday (Thursday) to Casamance’s Zinguichor area to assess existing protection capacity.The UNHCR office and the authorities in Guinea Bissau are also sending a team to Cacheu in the north-west of that country, where some 400 people have reportedly arrived from the Gambia in recent days. In addition to UNHCR and Senegal’s National Committee for Refugees, Returnees and Displaced People, interagency missions also included OCHA, UNICEF, the World Food Programme, IOM and few other stakeholders

Diplomatic efforts from various international actors, including ECOWAS, the African Union and the UN, are still under way to convince President Yaya Jammeh to step down after he lost December’s presidential election to Adama Barrow, who should assume his new functions next week on January 19.

Contacts
In Dakar: Helene Caux, Senior Regional Public Information Officer, caux@unhcr.org, Tel:_+221 77 333 1291
Simplice Kpandji, Regional reporting officer, kpandji@unhcr.org, Tel: +221 77 333 9883

In Geneva, Leo Dobbs, Communications Officer, dobbs@unhcr.org, Tel: +41 79 833 63 47