Togolese refugee finds a new beginning in Liberia

News Stories, 31 August 2015

© UNHCR/D. Diaz
Togolese refugee Paul Gbedji -- a civil engineer has built a new life in Liberia after losing entire family in post-election violence

MONROVIA, Aug 31, (UNHCR) Paul Gbedji is a civil engineer. But the hardest thing he has ever had to build was a new life.

Staring out through the pouring rain across the construction site in Liberia where he has been working for eight years, he says with a smile: "I am doing a nice job

Paul is a refugee who lost his entire family back in Togo.

"Togo is a beautiful country," he sighs. "And I was living good, working in my brother's construction company. I could sit down, design and create."

Life was shattered in 1998 during the country's presidential election campaign.

Thousands of people became victims of systematic human rights abuses, including torture, murder, forced disappearances, and arbitrary arrests, causing the massive displacement of Togolese nationals within and through international borders.

Paul was one of more than 16,000 persons who fled to find safety. But it cost him everything.

"When I left, I lost my family," he said. "Almost everybody I left behind me. My brother died, my father died, my sisters I lost all of them."

After weeks of persecution and fleeing from one country to another, Paul managed to reach the border between Ivory Coast and Liberia. However, his worries were not over.

"At that time war started in Lofa, and one day because of the war they arrested me. They wanted to know my identity, why I was here… they sent me to a military base."

Paul remembers meeting officials from the West African ECOMOG force in the middle of the night who helped him to contact UNHCR to apply for his refugee status. "They welcomed me, they gave me food, I ate. They called UNHCR; UNHCR said yes and came for me in a car."

He received his refugee ID several weeks later.

"When I got my refugee status I left and went to school where I was teaching 'ABC' in French from 1st grade to 9th grade. I was there just to survive, to make a life."

Years passed, and Paul continued to improve his life until Liberia signed its Comprehensive Peace Agreement in 2003. "At that time I was selling tea, but people did not know I had training, or that I was an engineer, anything," he recalled, with a smile on his face.

Eventually, after proving himself through volunteer work, Paul received his first construction contract. He is still working with the same company to this day.

At last, despite his ordeal and the loss of his family, this Togolese refugee has a place to sleep, a car, and a secure job that allows him to live life as he did before in Togo. "I thank God for Liberia," he says. "In West Africa, the parable says anywhere you find yourself a life comfortable, everything fine for you, that is your home."

By Diana Diaz Rodriguez in Monrovia, Liberia

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New flows of Ivorian refugees into Liberia

As of late March, more than 100,000 Ivorian refugees had crossed into eastern Liberia since lingering political tension from a disputed presidential election in neighbouring Côte d' Ivoire erupted into violence in February. Most have gone to Liberia's Nimba County, but in a sign that the fighting has shifted, some 6,000 Ivorians recently fled across the border into Liberia's Grand Gedeh County. Most of the new arrivals have settled in remote villages - some inaccessible by car. The UN refugee agency sent a mission to assess the needs of the refugees in the region.

Photographer Glenna Gordon photographed new arrivals near Zwedru in south-eastern Liberia.

New flows of Ivorian refugees into Liberia

Refugees move to new camp in Liberia

UNHCR has begun transferring refugees from Côte d'Ivoire to a new refugee camp in the north-eastern Liberian town of Bahn. Over the coming weeks UNHCR hopes to move up to 15,000 refugees into the facility, which has been carved out of the jungle. They are among almost 40,000 civilians from Côte d'Ivoire who have fled to escape mounting political tension in their country since the presidential election in late November.

The final number of people to move to Bahn will depend on how many wish to be relocated.from villages near the Liberia-Côte d'Ivoire border. Initially most of the refugees were taken in by host communities, living side-by-side with locals. Poor road conditions made it difficult for humanitarian agencies to deliver assistance. Supplies of food, medicine and water have been running low, making conditions difficult for both locals and refugees.

At the camp in Bahn, refugees will have easy access to basic services such as health care, clean water and primary school education.

Refugees move to new camp in Liberia

Photo Gallery: The Challenge of Forced Displacement in Africa

Africa is the continent most affected by the tragedy of forced displacement. While millions of refugees were able to return to Angola, Burundi, Liberia, Rwanda and South Sudan over the last 15 years, the numbers of internally displaced people continued to grow. At the beginning of 2009, in addition to some 2.3 million refugees, an estimated 11.6 million people were internally displaced by conflict in Africa.

To address forced displacement on the continent, the African Union is organizing a special summit on refugees, returnees and internally displaced people from October 19-23 in the Ugandan capital, Kampala. Heads of state and government will look at the challenges and at ways to find solutions to forced displacement. They are also expected to adopt a Convention for the protection and assistance of internally displaced people (IDP) in Africa, which would be the first legally binding instrument on internal displacement with a continental scope. This photo gallery looks at some of the forcibly displaced around Africa, many of whom are helped by UNHCR.

Photo Gallery: The Challenge of Forced Displacement in Africa

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