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In the News

Page 3
September, 2000


 


Refugee crisis and turmoil.  Conde trial.

Security tight in Guinea after rebel attacks  9/00
Guinea rounds up refugees 9/00
Guinea panic as President condemns refugees 9/00
RUF Rebels kidnap Italian priests  9/00
A plethora of news on the unrest over the refugees in Guinea, 9/00
Alpha Cond� sentenced to five years in prison
Guinea 'inciting refugee attacks'
UN Scales Down W. Africa Operation 9/18
UN remembers its dead 9/21
Scores of civilians flee border village 9/25
Attack in Guinea kills nearly 70, 9/30

    October, 2000
    The refugee crisis continues

    Civil war fears in Guinea 10/23
    Threat of Widening War in West Africa; 400,000 Refugees in Guinea Are Vulnerable 10/19
    Liberia Refutes Guinean Claim Of Shooting Down Helicopter, 10/18
    U.N. Fights Polio in Africa, 10/10
    Guinean security forces invade Liberian ambassador's residence 10/10
    The Pope's call over Guinea Killings 10/07

     

     

    October, 2000
     

    Monday, 23 October, 2000, 13:07 GMT 14:07 UK

    Civil war fears in Guinea

    Guinea blames rebel attacks on neighbouring countries

    By BBC regional analyst Elizabeth Blunt
    Following a series of border attacks from rebels, the West African
    republic of Guinea may now be threatened with the kind of civil war faced by
    neighbours, Sierra Leone and Liberia.
    Since the beginning of September, raiders have struck from the two both
    countries killing civilians and burning villages.
    The attacks were mainly from across two parts of the Sierra Leone
    border, and also from Liberia near the town of Macenta. Nearly 360 people have been killed in the raids though a local member of
    the parliament for the Forest region around Macenta says the death toll in
    the Liberian border region alone could be as high as 1,500.

    Dissidents
    The attacks have been claimed by a dissident movement known as the
    'Rassemblement des Forces Democratiques de Guinee'.

    Taylor accuses Guinea of supporting Liberian rebels
    Someone calling himself Mohamed Lamine Fofana and describing himself as
    their spokesman has been calling international radio stations on their behalf.
    But no-one has heard of a Mr Fofana before, and the Guinean Government
    refuses to accept that Guinean dissidents have anything to do with the
    raids. The government's version is that the country is suffering a foreign
    invasion, from Liberia, and by Liberian-backed RUF rebels from Sierra Leone.
    In fact two different things seem to be going on at the same time.
    In the Forest region, around Macenta, the fighting is mostly a Liberian
    affair, with President Charles Taylor's forces mounting cross-border
    raids against Liberian rebel bases. The presence of these rebels is an open secret in Guinea.
    In the capital, Conakry, the Liberian oppositon is discreet, but in
    Macenta Ulimo-K fighters are there for all to see, manning road blocks, and
    playing an active part in the defence of the city.

    Mutineers
    But on the Sierra leone border, Guinean dissidents do seem to be involved.

    Conte wants refugees out of Guinea
    There have been persistant reports of a rebel group training inside
    Liberia with, at its core, Gbago Zoumanigui and the army mutineers who fled
    after narrowly failing to overthrow the government in 1996. After training, the rebels are reported to have moved across the border
    to Sierra Leone and linked up with the Liberian backed movement there, the
    RUF. This alliance seems to be responsible for the attacks near Kindia and
    Forecariah. So far the assailants do not seem to have taken ground, and the attacks
    have been pushed back. But they could still cause serious trouble for Guinea.
    They have put pressure on the army, which already has a history of
    mutiny and coups d'etat. In the Forest region, fighting between Liberian dissidents - mostly
    Mandingo - and Liberian Government forces (substantially Gio or Mano) has stirred
    up resentments between the same tribes within Guinea.

    Fate of refugees
    Caught in the middle are the refugees- nearly half a million of them,
    some of whom have lived in Guinea for as long as 10 years.

    Most refugees have lived in Guinea for nearly 10 years
    Shortly after the attacks started President Lansana Conte spoke on the
    radio, not in French, but in his own language, Soussou, saying that the
    refugees had been there long enough, and they should go home, or at least be confined
    to camps. Some Guineans took this as an open invitation to express their
    resentment against foreigners. Liberians and Sierra Leoneans were arrested, abused, threatened, evicted
    from their lodgings and in some cases beaten or raped.
    Now the government and the UN refugee agency, the UNHCR, are negotiating
    their future. The situation in Sierra Leone in particular is still too dangerous for
    many of them to go home, though the government is insisting that they at
    least be moved well away from the border. But moving several hundred thousand people in a country like Guinea will
    be a monumental task.


    From U.S. Committee for Refugees
    October 19, 2000
    www.refugees.org

    Threat of Widening War in West Africa;
    400,000 Refugees in Guinea Are Vulnerable

    The West African country of Guinea--which has hosted more refugees than any
    other country in Africa for much of the past decade--finds itself edging closer to the brink of war.

    The U.S. Committee for Refugees (USCR) calls on the international community
    to respond with greater urgency to the deteriorating security and humanitarian situation in
    Guinea, and to take all necessary steps to protect an estimated 400,000 refugees from other
    countries who live in Guinea and face special protection problems. A USCR policy analyst is currently in
    the region to assess the growing dangers.

    Guinea, bordering the war-ravaged countries of Sierra Leone and Liberia, has
    suffered 15 insurgent attacks that have killed some 360 people during the past year, according to
    the Guinean government. The attacks are believed to have come from Liberia and Sierra Leone.
    Uncounted numbers of Guineans have become internally displaced in the widening violence, and the
    number of uprooted people could grow if attacks continue.

    Guinean troops allege that they shot down a Liberian military helicopter
    yesterday along the border between the two countries.  Liberian officials deny the incident occurred.
    The governments of Guinea and Liberia have regularly accused each other of supporting armed attacks in
    border areas.  The newest allegations, true or not, are certain to heighten military tensions
    and will create greater risks for residents and refugees who inhabit border villages and camps.

    The widening cross-border violence has begun to destabilize Guinea and has
    triggered a violent backlash in recent weeks against the hundreds of thousands of Liberian and
    Sierra Leonean refugees who have sought protection in Guinea from years of bloodshed in their own
    countries.  After years of relative hospitality toward refugees on their soil, Guinean authorities and
    segments of Guinean society increasingly blame the refugee population for bringing the violence of
    Sierra Leone and Liberia into Guinea.

    Guinean officials currently accuse Sierra Leonean refugees of harboring
    Sierra Leone's notorious Revolutionary United Front rebels-a dubious accusation given that the
    refugees originally fled to Guinea to escape those same rebels.  Refugees in Guinea have suffered a
    series of violent attacks, rapes, detentions, and Guinean government-sponsored anti-refugee propaganda
    since September. Humanitarian aid and protection for the refugees have virtually ceased since
    a UN relief worker was killed in Guinea Sept. 17 in a cross-border attack from Liberia.

    Although tensions have risen dramatically in recent weeks, the potential for
    widening violence was apparent a full year ago.  A USCR report in November 1999 warned that the
    "potential for additional security incidents remains high, particularly in border areas and refugee
    zones of Guinea....  Odds are high that security incidents will occur in 2000."  USCR warned last November
    that many refugees living in Guinea "have encountered increased harassment and detention by
    Guinean police and military, including detentions, physical threats, and demands for bribes."

    One of the largest international humanitarian agencies operating in Guinea,
    the International Rescue Committee (IRC), reported Monday that "hospitality toward refugees has run
    dangerously low" in Guinea and warned that "without immediate assistance, refugees in Guinea
    face widespread food shortages."  IRC and other relief agencies have temporarily suspended most
    emergency aid programs in Guinea because of security concerns.

    "We need assurances of security for refugee and local Guinean populations along the border, and safe access to refugee populations," IRC reported.  "The government of Guinea has the responsibility to ensure the safety of refugee populations and humanitarian operations."

    USCR concurs with the IRC recommendations.  The Guinean government and the
    UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) should immediately identify acceptable new
    sites in Guinea to transfer refugee camps away from their current dangerous border locations.
    USCR urges the UN refugee agency to assign--immediately--additional high-level emergency staff
    to Guinea to augment the efforts of UNHCR's depleted relief contingent in the country.

    International donors, including the U.S. State Department's refugee bureau,
    should immediately pledge the $13 million or more that UNHCR needs to strengthen its staff in
    Guinea and to establish safer new refugee camps there.  The U.S. government, which currently has
    U.S. military personnel in Guinea helping to train Guinean troops, should press Guinean authorities to
    discipline their own troops and civilian militia and should push Guinean authorities to provide proper
    protection to refugees on Guinean soil.



    Liberia Refutes Guinean Claim Of Shooting Down
    Helicopter

    Panafrican News Agency
    October 18, 2000

    Monrovia, Liberia

    The defence ministry in Monrovia Wednesday refuted claims by
    Guinea that it shot down a Liberian helicopter gunship recently while
    on a bombing raid of a Guinea border town.

    Defence spokesman Philibert Browne told PANA the claim was a
    fabrication because the Liberian army does not own a helicopter
    gunship, as the Guinean government would want the world to believe.

    Guinea claimed in a news report Wednesday it had shop down a
    Liberian helicopter gunship which was on a bombing mission in a
    Guinean border town, while two others escaped and headed for
    Monrovia.

    Browne said what the Liberian army has are three helicopters that are
    used to transport troops and supplies to the war front in the north of
    the
    country where government forces have been locked in battle with
    dissidents for over three months now.

    He said the choppers, along with one belonging to the Liberian police,
    are in service and are not built to function as gunship.

    "You can visit the local and international airports to see for yourself,
    our choppers are all accounted for," Browne said.

    The Liberian government recently acquired the four helicopters that
    are operated by foreign nationals believed to be Ukrainians.

    Guinea at the weekend declared it was in effect in a state of war with
    Liberia following three cross-border incursions that left over 320
    people dead and property damaged.

    Commenting on the declaration, Browne said Liberia's primary
    concern was to protect its territorial integrity from violation by
    outsiders, and was therefore somewhat defensive.

    He said Liberia would not be the aggressor, but would not hesitate
    also to defend its territory from external aggression by any force.

    Liberia and Guinea have been accusing one another of supporting
    dissidents to destabilise their respective countries, claims which both
    neighbours persistently continued to deny.

    Guinea alleges recent raids into its territory by armed men were
    supported by the Liberian government, while Liberia says dissidents
    fighting in the north of the country for over three months now were
    using Guinean territory with the knowledge of Guinean authorities.


    Tuesday October 10 8:43 AM ET
    U.N. Fights Polio in Africa

    GENEVA (AP) - The United Nations (news - web sites) is
    preparing for a five-day immunization campaign that it
    hopes will immunize 70 million children in 14 West
    African countries against polio, the U.N. Children's
    Fund said Tuesday.

    The campaign, which runs from Monday to Friday next
    week, comes as U.N. agencies embark on a final
    five-year plan to wipe out the disease by 2005 - a
    target set in 1988. Taking part next week are Benin,
    Burkina Faso, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau,
    Liberia, Mali, Mauritania, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal,
    Sierra Leone and Togo.

    Three more countries - Cameroon, Chad and Ivory Coast
    - will join a second round of mass immunizations in
    November, UNICEF said. The agency identified Nigeria,
    Africa's most populous nation, as a key to the effort
    to eradicate polio.

    The push comes as incidences of polio have been
    dropping sharply: Twelve years ago, there were at
    least 350,000 polio cases around the world. Last year
    there were 7,000 cases. So far this year, there have
    been 1,149 cases.

    Polio is highly infectious. It usually strikes
    children under 5, affecting the spinal cord and brain
    and causing paralysis and sometimes death.

    The disease now is limited to 30 countries in South
    and Southeast Asia and sub-Saharan Africa. But
    stamping out polio in some of those countries - such
    as Congo and Sierra Leone - is complicated by the need
    for access to war zones.

    UNICEF spokeswoman Lynn Geldof conceded that
    rebel-held areas in Sierra Leone will not be reached
    by next week's effort, billed as the largest public
    health initiative yet undertaken in the region.

    The simultaneous effort, involving thousands of health
    workers and volunteers, is aimed at ensuring children
    are immunized in a region where frequent cross-border
    movements caused by conflicts have reduced the
    effectiveness of single-country campaigns.


    The News (Monrovia)
    Guinean security forces invade Liberian ambassador's residence
    10-10-00

     Monrovia - Guinean security forces are reported to have broke into the diplomatic residence of the Liberian Ambassador in
     Conakry, ransacking the building and manhandling Liberian refugees.
    The latest incident is reported to have worsen the already fluid relations between Liberia and Guinea following a recent clamp down in Guinea on thousands of Liberian and Sierra Leonean refugees by Guinean security forces and civilians in retaliation to armed attacks in Guinea which said were from Liberia and Sierra Leone. Guinea and Liberia have been trading accusations of harboring dissidents against each other. The continuing fighting between dissidents and government forces in Liberia's northern Lofa County is being blamed on Guinea for allowing the use of its territory by rebels to attack Liberia, a claim denied by Conakry. An official statement quoted by Liberia' state-owned radio said Saturday that the government has drew the attention of the Guinean authority to the weekend ransacking of its diplomatic premises in Conakry. The statement described the action as a violation of Article 22 of th Vienna Convention protecting diplomatic premises from unwarranted intrusions. The report said Liberia requested Guinea to thoroughly investigate the violation and bring the culprits to justice. At the same time, the Liberian government has called on Guinea to take the necessary steps to protect the premises of the Liberia mission in Conakry against any violation of the mission and its dignity. There have been no reason given by Guinean authority over the forceful entry of its forces into the Liberian diplomatic premises in Conakry. Meanwhile, the Guinean government has reportedly granted permission for the landing of an aircraft and the docking of a ship from Liberia to evacuate Liberian refugees desirous of returning home. There have been calls by Liberia for Guinea to allow the emergency landing of a Liberian aircraft or ship to repatriate Liberians caught up by the Guinean xenophobia against foreigners following the armed attacks on that country. An Information Ministry release now said Liberia's Charge d' Affairs in Conakry, Siafa Fahnbulleh, informed the Foreign Ministry that the Guinean government granted the landing rights early last week for Liberian aircraft to land and ship dock to evacuate Liberian refugees.


    The Pope's call over Guinea Killings 10/07

    Report from Forecariah (in French), 10/07


    September, 2000

    Thursday, 7 September, 2000, 19:28 GMT 20:28 UK
    Security tight in Guinea after attacks

    The authorities in Guinea have introduced tough security measures after
    three rebel attacks in a week.
    In the capital, Conakry, security forces carried out searches of cars and
    individuals. Reports say Sierra Leoneans and Liberians were particularly targetted,
    and several arrests made.  The latest attack took place early yesterday Wednesday on the town of
    Pamalap, close to the border with Sierra Leone.  Security sources said they later chased the rebels back across the
    border.  BBC correspondent in Conakry says the government appears to believe
    Guinean  dissidents backed by mercenaries from Liberia and Sierra Leone are
    carrying  out the raids.
    From the newsroom of the BBC World Service



    Guinea rounds up refugees
    BBC

    Sierra Leonean refugees have always been on the move
    Security forces in Guinea have started rounding up refugees from
    neighbouring Liberia and Sierra Leone after President Lansana Conte accused them of
    rebel activities. "I am giving orders that we bring together all foreigners in (Guinean)
    neighbourhoods, so that we know what they are doing...and that we search
    and arrest suspects," Mr Conte said In a nation-wide broadcast
    "They should go home. We know that there are rebels among the refugees,"
    the president added. Chaotic scenes broke out after the speech when gangs of youths came out
    onto the streets and started rounding up Liberians and Sierra Leoneans.
    According to the United Nations there are an estimated 125,000 Liberians
    and 330,000 Sierra Leoneans currently in Guinea.
    The president also accused the opposition leader Alpha Conde, who is on
    trial for sedition, of recruiting mercenaries to topple his government.

    Under siege
    After the speech was broadcast, the Sierra Leonean embassy was besieged
    by frightened nationals who went there to seek refuge.

    Charles Taylor accused Guinea of harbouring rebels
    About 3,000 refugees, mainly elderly people and women with babies and
    young children, were reported to have gathered in the embassy's compound on
    Saturday afternoon. President Conte also called for the mobilisation of the nation's forces
    to fight rebels who have been involved in persistent cross-border raids.
    "Civilians and soldiers, let's defend our country together. Crush the
    invaders... because they have chosen war, we will fight them. The gun is
    our last resort, " Mr Conte said.
    Nearly 80 people have been killed in cross-border raids since the start
    of this month. President Charles Taylor of Liberia has repeatedly accused Guinea of
    harbouring rebels who have been attacking Liberia's northern Lofa
    county. Liberia has in turn been accused of supporting Revolutionary United
    Front rebels from Sierra Leone who are fighting the government of President
    Ahmed Tejan Kabbah. Correspondents say the war in the region has led to the creation of a
    volatile triangle along the borders of Guinea, Liberian and Sierra
    Leone.



     

    Saturday, 9 September, 2000, 22:26 GMT 23:26 UK
    Guinea panic as President condemns refugees


    There's been widespread panic in the Guinean capital, Conakry, after
    President Lansana Conte ordered the rounding-up of refugees from Liberia
    and Sierra Leone.
    Thousands sought refuge at the Sierra Leonean embassy as security forces
    and gangs of Guinean youths began making the arrests.
    The arrests followed a nationwide broadcast by President Conte in which he
    accused foreigners of being involved in recent attacks along Guinea's
    borders. Eighty people have been killed in the armed-raids which began just over
    a week ago. A BBC correspondent in Conakry described the situation as chaotic with
    refugees being locked-up or herded into open fields. Guinea is home to
    about half-a-million refugees who've fled the conflicts in Liberia and Sierra
    Leone.
    From the newsroom of the BBC World Service



    RUF rebels kidnap Italian priests
    BBC

    Italian missionary, Vittorio Mosile, kidnapped by RUF rebels
    Reports say two Italian catholic priests have been kidnapped by the
    rebel militia, the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) from a Guinean village
    near the Sierra Leone border. The two men were taken hostage during a heavy exchange of fire between
    the rebels and the Guinea Conakry army along the common border.
    According to the AP, the two priests were identified as Vittorio Mosile,
    64 and Franco Manganello, 62.

    RUF rebels go to Pamalap in Guinea Conakry for frequent supplies
    They were taken hostage in Pamalap town together with an unknown number
    of people believed to be Sierra Leoneans.
    Last month, 11 members of the Royal Irish Regiment, together with one
    Sierra Leonean solider, were captured by the militia group the West Side Boys
    on 25 August. Five of the British soldiers were released last week.

    UN sanctions
    RUF members are said to make frequent trips to the border town where
    they obtain supplies in exchange for diamonds dug out of Sierra Leone.

    RUF rebels exchange diamonds for supplies
    However reports say, a new military commander appointed by the Guinea
    Conakry government has brought an end to the practice.
    The new commander is said to be opposed to it because of the UN
    sanctions against illegal diamond sales from Sierra Leone.
    Aid workers in Pamalap say the Conakry army has repulsed the rebels who
    had resorted to attacks against refugees camped in the town.
    A senior figure of the Catholic church in Sierra Leone, Bishop George
    Biguzzi has appealed to the rebels to immediately release the two priests.


    A plethora of news on the unrest over the refugees in Guinea.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_918000/918900.stm
    Guinea refugee tension rises
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/world/africa/newsid_925000/925989.stm
    AFRICAN PRESS REVIEW WITH COMMENT ON GUINEA SITUATION
    UN EMPLOYEE KILLED IN GUINEA
    LA CODEM R�AGIT A L'AGRESSION CONTRE LA GUIN�E
     

    Article taken from the French press agency AFP,
    translated by Brian Farenell:

    The trial of the Guinean opposition figure Alpha
    Cond�, which began on 12 April, concluded Monday in
    Conakry after a tense weekend punctuated by a massive
    roundup of foreigners suspected of hiding or
    supporting 'rebels', witnesses indicated.

    The state security court, a court which is composed of
    civlians and military members (an exception under
    Guinean law), started its deliberations late in the
    afternoon [on Monday]. During closing argument, Alpha
    Conde took the floor for the first time and assured
    that "everything they've accused [him] of is false."

    "All the state's witnesses are false witness," Cond�
    stated....

    Imprisoned since December 1998 and on trial with 47
    others since April for "threatening the authority of
    the state and the integrity of the national
    territory", Alpha Conde is accused of planning to
    raise an army of mercenairies to topple the regime.

    He and 40 other co-accused risk a sentence of life in
    prison, demanded by the prosecution.

    In a speech made on Saturday, Guinean president
    Lansana Conte clearly accused friends of Alpha Conde
    of being involved in the combats taking place at the
    borders.

    According to Conakry, which also accused Burkina Faso
    of having armed the "rebels", incursions emenating
    from Sierra Leone and Liberia have caused 80 deaths
    and dozens of disappearances since 1 September.

    President Conte also called on Guineans to "crush the
    invader" and ask the international community to "free"
    [d�barasser] his country from refugees. The president
    had "given the order to regroup all foreigners in the
    quartiers so as to find out who's doing what."

    Shortly thereafter, the roundup began.

    According to witnesses, thousands of people,
    principally Sierra Leonian and Liberian, were taken in
    for questioning. The UN High Commission for Refugees
    (HCR) however estimated the number at about 1000.

    Certain people arrested were released near the end of
    Monday, while identity verification continued among
    the foreigners brought in for questioning.

    According to the HCR, some 125,000 Liberian and
    330,000 Sierra Leonian refugees, who fled the violence
    in their countries, live in camps in Guinea.

    [...]

    Ref: http://fr.news.yahoo.com/000911/1/msrd.html



    Alpha Cond� sentenced to five years in prison



    Wednesday, 13 September, 2000, 19:06 GMT 20:06 UK
    Guinea 'inciting refugee attacks'
     

    Guinea is home to about half a million refugees
    Human Rights Watch has accused the Guinean government of inciting armed
    attacks against Sierra Leonean and Liberian refugees in the country.
    The New York-based organisation released on Wednesday first hand
    accounts from women who say they were raped and from refugees whose homes were
    looted. Its report quotes one teenage mother as saying her baby was thrown to
    the floor and a soldier and one other man raped her before stealing most of
    her possessions. At least one refugee is reported to have died in detention.
    Guinea hosts about half a million refugees who have fled conflicts in
    Liberia and Sierra Leone.

    Refugees leave
    Human Rights Watch condemned President Lansana Conte's call on his
    people to protect the country from rebel attacks by Sierra Leonians and Liberians.

    Conte: Believes refugees should go home
    The call prompted an emergency evacuation as groups of Sierra Leoneans
    who were among thousands detained in Guinea at the weekend, begun returning
    home. They boarded boats at Conakry for the trip to the Sierra Leone capital,
    Freetown. Reports say only ticket-holders were being accepted on the boats, but
    negotiations are taking place to allow a full-scale evacuation.
    Crisis talks President Conte has discussed the crisis with regional leaders.

    He met Sierra Leonean President Ahmed Tejan Kabbah and the chairman of
    Economic Community of West African States, Malian President Omar Alpha
    Konare. President Kabbah said he had been assured by Mr Conte that the safety of
    refugees from his country would be guaranteed.
    He said both sides had agreed to do everything to prevent the
    destabilisation
    of each other's country.
    He called on everybody to remain calm "as the situation is under
    control." President Konare has visited both Liberia and Guinea to help ease tensions.

    Liberia 'encouraged'
    Liberian President Charles Taylor said he was encouraged by Mr Konare's
    efforts. "I think his coming will help to lower tension in the sub-region," Mr
    Taylor said after meeting the Malian leader.

    Taylor: Aircraft on standby to evacuate Liberians from Guinea
    "In this country we have issued strict instructions that no Guinean
    national should be touched. We believe that there should be reciprocity," the
    Liberian president added.
    He said Liberia had air transport on standby to evacuate Liberians from
    Guinea and said President Conte had a "moral duty" to protect Liberians
    in Guinea.
    In a BBC interview, Mr Taylor said his country was prepared to exchange
    security personnel and information that would lead to the arrest of
    trouble makers in both countries.
    There have been reports of reprisal attacks against Guineans in
    Freetown, and troops surrounded the Guinean embassy in the Liberian capital Monrovia
    after threats on Guinean citizens there.



    UN Scales Down W. Africa Operation
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
    Sept. 18

    Filed at 12:05 p.m. ET
    GENEVA (AP) -- The U.N. refugee agency said Monday it has scaled down operations along the Guinea-Liberia border in West Africa because of fighting that left one worker dead and another missing. The U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees stopped work in the Guinean  town of Macenta since the head of its mission, Mensah Kpognon, 50, was killed  Sunday by gunmen at his home. Another staffer, Sapeu Laurence Djeya, was  kidnapped during the unrest. ``There is still fighting in the area,'' said UNHCR spokesman Ron  Redmond. Nonessential UNHCR personnel were to remain in their homes and all  dependents of international staff were being taken to Conakry, the capital of  Guinea, Redmond said. Guinea hosts more than 460,000 refugees, one of the largest refugee populations in Africa. About 330,000 are from Sierra Leone and 126,000
    from Liberia. Because of security concerns, UNHCR operations -- and those of other  agencies and charities -- may be scaled back, Redmond said. The main impact of the cutback would be on 10,000 Liberians who
    crossed  into Guinea about a year ago, said Kris Janowski, another UNCHR spokesman. The Liberians are dependent on the agency for food and would probably  start running out of supplies only after several weeks, Janowski said. The remaining 108,000 refugees in the area have been there longer and  have their own garden plots to supply food. The agency's main service to
    them is to make sure authorities don't force them back into Liberia, where
    they are perceived as opposition to the government. ``They might be in trouble,'' Janowski said. A still greater concern would be if the pullback spreads westward,  where  the agency is caring for 300,000 refugees from Sierra Leone. Liberia has accused Guinea of harboring rebels who crossed into  northern Liberia in July and have been fighting government forces there ever
    since. Most of the refugees in the Macenta area are Liberian, but some Sierra Leonean refugees have fled into the area recently following attacks by Sierra Leonean rebels. Sunday's attack at the U.N. worker's home came less than two weeks
    after three UNHCR staff members were killed by pro-Indonesia militiamen in a
    West Timor office of the agency. ``Why are innocent, unarmed humanitarians like Mensah Kpognon, a
    father of four children who was simply trying to make the world a better place,
    being struck down in the most brutal way?'' asked U.N. High Commissioner
    Sadako Ogata, who was in Herat, Afghanistan, when word came of the latest
    attack. The U.N. agency renewed its appeal for international help in finding
    and freeing Djeya. Redmond said UNHCR had contacted all governments in the area,
    particularly Liberia, because Djeya was last seen being taken by her abductors
    toward Liberia. She was in Macenta after delivering supplies from the UNHCR
    office in Danane, Ivory Coast. There was no indication that the staff in Macenta had been targeted
    becausethey worked for the agency, UNHCR said.Many other buildings in the town were burned as the assailants wereretreating from Macenta following a pre-dawn raid on the town's
    military garrison, said UNHCR. An unspecified number of Guineans were also killed inSunday's raid, UNHCR said.



    UN remembers its dead , 9/21


    GUINEA: Scores of civilians flee border village

    ABIDJAN, 25 September (IRIN) - Scores of civilians have been fleeing
    the Guinean border village of Guekedou in anticipation of further armed
    attacks from Liberia, UNHCR spokeswoman Delphine Marie said on Friday in
    Geneva. "People are reportedly moving north toward Kissidougou Prefecture, as
    well as other locations in Upper and Middle Guinea, and Conakry," she added.
    Armed men from Liberia attacked the Guinean town of Macenta on 17
    September, killing a UNHCR official and abducting another. Marie said the Guinean
    Ministry of Territorial Administration, Decentralisation and Security
    reported possibly 17,000 internally displaced people in Kindia and
    21,000 in Forecariah following attacks on the two locations. Both areas border
    northwestern Sierra Leone.


    (30 September)  BBC
    Attack in Guinea kills nearly 70

    Guinea is home to about half a million refugees
    Reports from Guinea say at least 67 people have been killed in an
    attack by an armed group on two villages near the border with Liberia.
    Security officials say three government soldiers were among those
    killed onFriday night in the southern Macenta region.

    The officials say eight of the attackers were captured, while the rest
    escaped with some communication equipment and weapons.
    Correspondents say this is the fourth such attack in Guinea since the
    beginning of the month. Thirty-five people were killed in a similar incident in the same area
    last month, including an aid worker for the United Nations refugee agency.

    Regional tensions
    The government says the rebels are operating from Liberian territory
    with the support of guerrilla groups from Burkina Faso and Sierra Leone.
    The Liberian Government has denied the accusations, which have set off
    tensions around the region. Guinea hosts about 500,000 refugees who have fled conflicts in Liberia
    and Sierra Leone. But earlier this month, President Lansana Conte accused them of aiding
    the rebels and has told them to leave Guinean civilians joined enthusiastically in hunting down refugees, in
    what correspondents described as an outpouring of resentment against
    foreigners, which had been building up for years.


     

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