Ivory Coast fighting sparks fresh influx of refugees in Liberia
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As Ivory Coast strongman Laurent Gbagbo continues to hide inside a bunker under the presidential palace in Abidjan, many of his country鈥檚 citizens face an even more perilous ordeal.
Over the past four months, more than 120,000 people have fled Ivory Coast for neighboring Liberia to escape the violence in their home country. A large number of those refugees have now been away from home for months; Oxfam warned recently that their living conditions have become 鈥渄angerously inadequate.鈥
Back in January, I went up to Liberia鈥檚 border with Ivory Coast to report on the situation for the Monitor. At the time, some 30,000 refugees had been registered in Liberia. Three months later, the figure has quadrupled.
When I was there, the United Nations and other aid agencies had just begun clearing land for a refugee camp near the dusty town of Bahn, about 30 miles from the border with Ivory Coast. The camp was finished in February; refugees were invited to move in.
But so far only 2,500 people have chosen to settle in the camp, even though it was built to accommodate six times that many. The rest are staying near the border, filling into the homes of Liberian villagers who, for the most part, have welcomed them with open arms.
All of that neighborliness isn鈥檛 making life any easier for aid workers trying to reach the swelling population of refugees, who are straining the resources of the Liberians a little bit more each day. The refugees are scattered across 90 villages near the border. Roads in the region are narrow and deeply rutted, so travel is painfully slow.
鈥淭he border areas are dangerous, and living conditions there are desperately poor,鈥 Oxfam鈥檚 Liberia country director, Chals Wontewe, said in a press release last month. 鈥淒espite the gravity of the situation, it is not getting the attention or funding it deserves.鈥
Liberia is no stranger to this kind of crisis; it suffered through 14 years of off-and-on civil war that only came to an end in 2003. Now, there are fears that the Ivorian violence could spill over the border and destabilize the country鈥檚 fragile peace.
Back in Monrovia in February, I interviewed Liberia鈥檚 president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf.
I asked her, among other things, what she would say to Gbagbo if she could sit down with him for 20 minutes.
She paused at the question, then took a breath.
鈥淚 would say, 鈥楶lease consider the experience and the tragedy of Liberia,鈥 " she told me.
鈥淲hen a country descends into conflict, the damage that is done is so profound. It's not worth any one person; it's not worth the destruction of your country,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t's so easy to destroy but so hard to rebuild.鈥