At least 17,000 displaced people from the east of the region arrive in Diffa town

UNHCR Field Team registering new arrivals to the town of Diffa, from Bosso, Yebi and Toumour, following recent Boko Haram attacks (UNHCR Diffa)


United Nations agencies, the Regional Directorate of Civil Status and Refugees and NGO partners have been carrying out rapid registrations of displaced persons who continue to arrive to Diffa town, following the eruption of the violence in the south-east part of the region over the weekend. There are currently at least 17,000 people who have been registered, amongst whom at least 2,600 are children. As other groups of displaced continue to arrive in the town, registration activities are ongoing.

The local population of Diffa town is estimated to be around 55,000 inhabitants. The situation and arrival of these people is thus putting extreme pressure on the basic services and infrastructure available. Some displaced people are being hosted by family or relatives in the city, however most of the displaced are settling outdoors in precarious conditions, seeking shade to protect them from the sun and the temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius. Even before this massive population movement, a lot of local households in Diffa town were already hosting displaced families from Nigeria.

The majority of the newly displaced communities are coming from Bosso, Yebi and Toumour, east of Diffa town. They are estimated to be at least 50,0000. For this population, the capacity to reach Diffa is also linked with the availability of funds for transportation. In the whole region, the security situation is currently unclear. UNHCR and other humanitarian actors are working closely with the national authorities to develop a joint emergency response both in and outside Diffa town. However, mobility outside Diffa town and in the east part of region is extremely restricted.

Diffa : Le Gouvernement du Niger sollicite l’UNHCR pour ouvrir des camps de réfugiés

Face à l’afflux continu de déplacés en provenance du Nigeria et à la saturation de la capacité d’absorption des communautés hôtes, le Gouvernement du Niger a officiellement sollicité l’UNHCR pour ouvrir des camps de réfugiés dans la région du Diffa. Deux sites ont été retenus à Kablewa (département de N’Guigmi) et Sayiam Forage (département de Diffa). Un troisième à Goudoumaria ( département de Maine Soroa ) fera office de site de transit volontaire pour les personnes qui souhaiteraient regagner d’autres Etats du Nigeria moins touchés par les violences.
Dans son édition électronique de ce matin, RFI fait l’écho de cette information en relayant notamment les mots du Secrétaire General du Gouvernorat de Diffa. Cliquez sur le lien suivant pour lire l’article : http://www.rfi.fr/afrique/20141201-boko-haram-niger-afflux-refugies-nigeria-fuient-borno-damasak-diffa/


Bosso (photo ci-dessus), fait partie des endroits où la capacité d’accueil des familles hôtes arrive à saturation. © UNHCR/B.Moreno

Niger Government launches campaign to issue identity documents to displaced population in Diffa


At the launching ceremony of the documentation campaign, Mr Idder Adamou, President of the National Eligibility Commission and Secretary General of the Ministry of Interior, delivers a refugee certificate to a Nigerian family who fled the violence in northern Nigeria. © Arnaud, UNICEF

With smiles on their faces, the first group of men and women received their ID documents on Tuesday, 11 February in Diffa. An estimated 40,000 persons have fled the violence in Borno, Yobe and Adamawa States in northeastern Nigeria since May 2013 and sought refuge in neighbouring Niger. Most of them came empty handed just carrying the clothes and a few belongings they could grab.

There are no camps in Diffa region and this displaced population lives across a large stretch of land in 80 to 100 villages along the common border between Nigeria and Niger. They have sought shelter in host families while waiting that aid agencies, such as UNHCR and the Niger Red Cross, build temporary houses for them. The World Food Programme and the ICRC are providing food to this population that has settled in an area that is suffering chronically from dry weather conditions, poor harvests and food deficits.

But something else is also missing in most cases: a document which could identify the bearer. While living in their villages at peacetime most of them did not see the need to get themselves an ID document or a birth certificate for their children. Now, living in another country, next to a civil war zone, the lack of documentation poses a real protection risk: No ID document can mean restrictions in movement or temporary arrest in order to verify the identity of a person.

Unicef has been supporting the regional registry department for some years now, concentrating on local children and the need to provide them with birth certificates. The massive influx of displaced persons has not only overwhelmed the local host but also the administration. Hence, UNHCR has committed itself to help the government in documenting the population: Niger citizens previously living in Nigeria and displaced by the fighting will receive Niger ID-cards and so will the families which host them. Refugees, i.e. citizens from Nigeria, will receive refugee attestations.

The launch ceremony last Tuesday went well but the overall campaign is going to be difficult. There is first of all the lack of birth certificates on which to base the issuance of ID-cards. And then there is in many cases no clarity on the nationality of the person given that people use to marry across the border choosing a spouse of a different nationality than his or her own. Polygamy is also widespread and many women have returned with their children to Niger because their Nigerian husband has either died in the violence or - for the safety of his wife and children- has sent them back to their native Niger. And so it is likely that courts and judges will also be involved to make sure that the displaced population which has lost already so much will not suffer further because of a lack of identity papers.


A Niger citizen aged 56, proudly holds for the first time in his life his national identity card, together with the court auxiliary birth decision that helped him prove his nationality. ©Arnaud, UNICEF
Le Niger confronté à l'arrivée de réfugiés en provenance du Nigeria
To see the english video click here

Portraits of Nigerian displaced families and children who sought refugee in Niger.