Fraud in Africa Priority Three (P-3) Program (Nov. 12) Fact Sheet
P-2 Designation for Eritrean Refugees in Shimelba Camp, Ethiopia (Oct. 7) Fact Sheet
The refugee situation across the continent is complex and dynamic. Almost all African countries host refugees; many generate them as well. In a number of cases they are both host and generator. There is broad Bureau involvement across the continent; there is not a refugee/conflict victim humanitarian situation with which we are not involved given our mandate.
Afri (estimates as of April 2008) Source: UNHCR • 450,000 Somalis • 290,000 • 300,000 Congolese (150,000 returnees) • 500,000 Sudanese (250,000 returnees) • 150,000 Eritreans • 100,000 Angolans (400,000 returnees) • 100,000 Central Afri • 90,000 W. Saharans • 75,000 Liberians (250,000+ returnees) • 70,000 Rwandans (1,000,000+ returnees) • 60,000 Chadians • 34,000 Ethiopians • 30,000 Mauritanians • 15,000 • 14,000 Senegalese • 10,000 Togolese • 10,000 Sierra Leoneans • Others Total: ~ 2,500,000 |
•4,500,000 Sudanese •1,200,000 Ugandans •1,000,000 Congolese •1,000,000 Somalis • 700,000 Ivoirians • 250,000 Kenyans • 200,000 CAR • 200,000 Chadians • 100,000 Total: ~ 9,950,000 |
The Bureau programmed approximately $300 million for refugees, returnees, and IDPs in Africa -- 35% of our overseas assistance budget.
Our regional refugee coordinator in Ndjamena covers Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad and Darfur (Sudan).
In Kampala – Burundi, DRCongo, ROCongo, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda.
In Addis Ababa – Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya, Somalia, and Sudan.
In Accra and Nairobi, we have Admissions refugee coordinators who split the continent.
Repatriation and reintegration projects in places such as southern Sudan, Burundi, DRCongo, Angola, Sierra Leone, and Liberia have involved multiple countries, have taken place over a number of years, have required close coordination where there are both returning refugees and returning internally displaced persons (IDPs), and have tried (but not in the main succeeded) to close the relief to development gap.
Our colleagues in the European Community Humanitarian Office (ECHO) have described the Chad/CAR/Darfur area as a “complex regional protracted emergency”, which is a good label. The conflicts in the three countries are distinct but intertwined, requiring a sophisticated analysis that is often beyond the patience of many observers. Sustaining 250,000 Darfur refugees and 180,000 Chadian internally displaced persons (IDPs) in the harsh remote area of eastern Chad has required enormous support -- some $40 million annually from the U.S. Government alone.
Among the newest Bureau programs have been emergency response to:
In the area of durable solutions:
For decades, we have contributed to UNHCR's and ICRC's Africa-wide programs that address ongoing protection and assistance needs of refugees and conflict victims in protracted situations.
Examples of groups that we have helped include:
Examples of the end of refugee crises, and the end of Bureau programming:
Where refugees and conflict victims achieve a good measure of self-reliance, Bureau assistance programming may be able to be reduced, but many of the current refugees across Africa are living in remote and/or inhospitable places where self-sufficiency is almost impossible.
Action Against Hunger
Africare
Agence d'aide à lacoopération technique et au developpement (ACTED)
AirServ
American Red Cross
American Refugee Committee
CARE
Catholic Relief Services
Center for Victims of Torture
Christian Children's Fund
Christian Outreach and Development Organization
Cooperative Housing Foundation
FilmAid
Food for the Hungry International
Handicap International
Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society
International Medical Corps
International Relief and Development
International Rescue Committee
InterNews
Jesuit Refugee Services
Lutheran World Federation/Relief
Médecins Sans Frontières (not funded by the USG at present)
Mercy Corps
Mines Action Advisory Group
Norwegian Peoples' Aid
Refugee Education Trust
Relief International
Right to Play
Save the Children
Search for Common Ground
United Methodist Committee on Relief
Women for Women International
World Concern
World Relief
World Vision
The Office of Electronic Information, Bureau of Public Affairs, manages this site as a portal for information from the U.S. State Department. External links to other Internet sites should not be construed as an endorsement of the views or privacy policies contained therein.