By Sheriff Bojang Jnr
RFI - Africans who have sought shelter in Senegal are today meeting officials of the UN High Commission for Refugees in Dakar to discuss their plight. It is estimated that thousands of refugees, mainly Mauritanians, are living in Senegal. The meeting is expected to focus on refugee grievances.
Senegal plays host to thousands of refugees from different African countries, partly because of its political stability. Most of these arrived in Senegal expecting personal security and better living conditions.
But many refugees say Senegal has failed them. They complain about neglect and discrimination by both UNHCR and the Senegalese government.
They report that locals sometimes call them "nyags", which means "little rats".
"People beat our kids; do many many things. I'm just fed up really," said one Sierra Leonean refugee.
Another said they were not treated like humans.
"No support, no nothing, no shelter, no supply for food, no help for our children," she said. "We are suffering in this country."
UNHCR Representative for West Africa Elike Segbor said assistance to some refugees had been stopped.
"We have stopped assistance to a lot of them because they have been refugees for the past ten years or so," he said. "We felt that the country has reached a certain stage where they can go back home. We initiated the repatriation. A lot of them went home. Those who decided to stay, we warned them that if you stay you stay on your own."
For John, a Sierra Leonean refugee who arrived in Senegal 1989, going home is not an option.
"Over our dead body we are returning home," he said. "If I am dying here I die, but the UNHCR is supposed to rectify our problems."
Today’s meeting will at least bring the angry refugees face to face with the authorities they blame for their sufferings.
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