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Cash incentives for returning Burundian exiles
2007-07-05
By Guardian Reporter
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in collaboration with Burundi, Tanzania, key donors, UN Agencies and operational partners are launching a new measure as part of efforts to promote voluntary repatriation of Burundian refugees to their home country.
A statement released by the UNHCR in Dar es Salaam yesterday said a cash grant would be availed to every registered refugee returning home from the four Burundian camps in northwestern Tanzania.
`The individual cash grant amounting to Burundian francs 50,000 (about 46 US dollars) per returnee will complement the assistance presently provided upon arrival in Burundi, namely household items plus four months food ration,` it stated.
The grant will assist returning refugees to restart life back home where socio-economic conditions continue to be difficult, the statement said.
It reads: `The cash grant will be available on a `first come first served basis,` subject to the availability of funds.` It said the cash grant programme will commence on July 10 this year.
`The money will be distributed to returnees through a network of local co-operatives (COOPEC) upon arrival in Burundi,` read the statement. All measures for proper implementation and monitoring have been put in place both in Burundi and Tanzania,` it said.
Judging by the pace of return in past years, UNHCR anticipates an increase in the number of Burundian refugees wishing to go home in between July and November following the end of the school year, rainy and harvest seasons.
The UNHCR 2007 planning figure for voluntary repatriation has been set at 60,000 returns from Tanzania. Since the beginning of the year, 3,539 Burundians have been repatriated from Tanzania under the auspices of UNHCR.
The announcement on introduction of the additional measure has been welcomed by both the Tanzanian and Burundi governments as a timely initiative of promoting the voluntary repatriation of the exiles and facilitating their initial stage of reintegration.
There are currently 153,000 Burundian refugees living in camps in northwestern Tanzania. Since UNHCR started to facilitate the return of Burundians in 2002, some 300,000 Burundians - mainly returnees from Tanzania - have come back home.
SOURCE: Guardian
2007-07-05
By Guardian Reporter
The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in collaboration with Burundi, Tanzania, key donors, UN Agencies and operational partners are launching a new measure as part of efforts to promote voluntary repatriation of Burundian refugees to their home country.
A statement released by the UNHCR in Dar es Salaam yesterday said a cash grant would be availed to every registered refugee returning home from the four Burundian camps in northwestern Tanzania.
`The individual cash grant amounting to Burundian francs 50,000 (about 46 US dollars) per returnee will complement the assistance presently provided upon arrival in Burundi, namely household items plus four months food ration,` it stated.
The grant will assist returning refugees to restart life back home where socio-economic conditions continue to be difficult, the statement said.
It reads: `The cash grant will be available on a `first come first served basis,` subject to the availability of funds.` It said the cash grant programme will commence on July 10 this year.
`The money will be distributed to returnees through a network of local co-operatives (COOPEC) upon arrival in Burundi,` read the statement. All measures for proper implementation and monitoring have been put in place both in Burundi and Tanzania,` it said.
Judging by the pace of return in past years, UNHCR anticipates an increase in the number of Burundian refugees wishing to go home in between July and November following the end of the school year, rainy and harvest seasons.
The UNHCR 2007 planning figure for voluntary repatriation has been set at 60,000 returns from Tanzania. Since the beginning of the year, 3,539 Burundians have been repatriated from Tanzania under the auspices of UNHCR.
The announcement on introduction of the additional measure has been welcomed by both the Tanzanian and Burundi governments as a timely initiative of promoting the voluntary repatriation of the exiles and facilitating their initial stage of reintegration.
There are currently 153,000 Burundian refugees living in camps in northwestern Tanzania. Since UNHCR started to facilitate the return of Burundians in 2002, some 300,000 Burundians - mainly returnees from Tanzania - have come back home.
SOURCE: Guardian