Fighting in Mozambique prompts refugee flight to Malawi
Nearly 3,500 people flee to neighbouring country, raising concerns of new refugee crisis in Southern Africa.
Intermittent fighting between government forces and the Mozambican National Resistance (Renamo) has sparked a flight of nearly 3,500 people into neighbouring Malawi, raising concerns of a new refugee crisis in Southern Africa.
Bestone Chisamile, Malawi’s commissioner for refugees, told Al Jazeera on Friday that with no end to fighting in sight across the border, his government had no choice but to take in the refugees and asylum seekers who continued to arrive daily.
“We don’t have much of a choice. Most of those coming are women and children. We have to assist them on humanitarian grounds,” Chisamile said.
Refugees have been fleeing fighting between Renamo and government forces in the province of Tete since July.
Renamo has refused to accept the results of elections in late 2014 that saw the return of the Frelimo party to power.
The group has repeatedly threatened to take power by force in central and northern Mozambique.
Clashes have intensified in recent weeks, prompting an exodus from the area, following a pledge by Renamo leader Afonso Dhlakama in December that he would take six of Mozambique’s 11 provinces by March 2016.
The United Nations said that most refugees were arriving at Kapise, a village in the Mwanza district, around 100km away from the country’s second biggest city Blantyre, while others had made their way to villages in the district of Chikwawa.
On Thursday, the UNHCR, the UN’s refugee agency, told Al Jazeera that as of January 20, a total of 3,477 people had fled to Malawi, with as many as 50 or 60 arriving daily.
“We were not expecting these numbers. It suggests that people are not going to return any time soon [and] at this rate we could have between 5,000 to 6,000 refugees by March,” Monique Ekoko, a UNHCR representative, said.
Malawi already hosts some 25,000 refugees mostly from the Great Lakes region in Dzaleka camp, some 35km from Lilongwe.
The camp is already stretched to the limit, and the World Food Programme has warned that a lack of funding will have consequences for those housed there.
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It said that they were forced to reduce food rations and suspend the provision of foodstuffs over the past six months.
“Refugees are only receiving 40 percent of the recommended minimum daily kilocalories, compromising long-standing efforts to achieve food security in Dzaleka camp,” the it said in a statement.
Cholera scare
Malawi has been particularly hard hit by a catastrophic drought in Southern Africa. At least 2.8 million people in the country need food aid out of an estimated 14 million facing hunger in the region.
Chisamile denied that the situation in Mwanza district had reached crisis levels, but added that his government needed help to handle the numbers, especially to avert an outbreak of any waterborne diseases, such as cholera.
“I wouldn’t say it’s a crisis as yet; it’s not the first time Malawi has hosted refugees. Remember we hosted a million refugees at one point,” he said.
Chisamile said his government was considering reopening the Luwani refugee camp, in southern Malawi, which previously housed refugees from Mozambique’s civil war between 1977 and 1992.