By Djerassem Mbaiorem in Ngaoui, Cameroon
NGAOUI, Cameroon, March 14 (UNHCR) – The
UN refugee agency and its partners have stepped up efforts to help the
growing numbers of Central African refugees arriving ill in Cameroon due
to hunger and exhaustion during their arduous flight.
One of the many malnourished children arriving in eastern Cameroon from Central African Republic. |
Most of the new arrivals have spent weeks living in the bush without
access to sufficient water and food and have walked great distances to
reach safety in the eastern Cameroon. An estimated 80 per cent are
suffering from serious ailments such as malaria, diarrhoea, anaemia and
respiratory infections, while more than 20 per cent of children are
severely malnourished.
Many families have lost relatives to hunger along the way or shortly
after reaching Cameroon. The
y are also traumatized by the horrors they
experienced in north-west Central African Republic, where Anti-Balaka
militias have been targeting Muslims in revenge attacks.
Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba, a UNHCR spokesperson, said the refugee agency
and its partners had taken important steps to improve the welfare and
health of the desperate new arrivals. "We have moved nearly 10,000
refugees who were sleeping out in the open to settlements we have
established close to the villages of Lolo, Mborguene, Borgop and Gado.
There, they receive food, clean drinking water, family shelters and
basic relief items."
She added that UNHCR had stepped up assistance in border areas and
deployed emergency staff, including nutrition specialists and site
planners. "We have funded health posts and mobile clinics in Kenzou as
well as Ngaoui, Yamba and Gbatoua-Godoli in the neighbouring Adamawa
region. We have also erected community shelters and latrines in Garoua
Boulai and Kenzou to house women, children and elderly people."
But despite these emergency efforts, more needs to be done to cover
all the needs. "We will require more donor support to expand facilities
in Garoua Boulai and Kenzou and to turn them into transit centres where
all arrivals can be medically screened and treated without delay. We
will also be able to provide food and non-food assistance in order to
avert further deaths," Lejeune-Kaba said, adding that nobody had died in
the refugee sites to date.
One of the challenges facing medical workers is that people do not
realize how serious malnutrition is and the importance of going straight
to UNHCR or its partners for help. "We have observed that many families
with malnourished children do not come to health consultations," said
Dago Inegba, a UNHCR doctor.
Before the current crisis, Cameroon was hosting 92,000 refugees from
the Central African Republic, who started to arrive in 2004 to escape
from rebel groups and bandits in the north of their country. Since March
last year, Cameroon has received more than 44,200 refugees from the
Central African Republic. New arrivals are living with host families or
sheltering in mosques, churches, a stadium or in makeshift sites. Some
are sleeping out in the open.
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