1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites
Politics

African refugees in Rwanda do not want to stay

Alex Ngarambe
November 27, 2019

African migrants and refugees relocated to Rwanda are relieved to have escaped hellish conditions in Libyan camps. But they will not give up on their original goal of reaching Europe and are starting to feel restless.

Young refugees in the Gashora Transit Center in Ruanda
Image: DW/A. Ngarambe

More than 200 African refugees are now housed in the Gashora Emergency Transit Center some 60 kilometers (37 miles) south of the capital, Kigali, since Rwanda's President Paul Kagame signed an agreement with the African Union and the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) in September.

Kagame promised to accommodate up to 30,000 asylum seekers who had crossed the continent in an attempt to reach Europe and the US, only to end up in Libyan camps under inhuman conditions. 

Refugees now living in the transit center told DW that life in Rwanda is much better than the horrors they experienced in Libya and said they were integrating well with their host community.

But they also said they had left their home countries and families in search of a better life. Being in a camp with better living conditions in Rwanda doesn't mean they will abandon their dream of living in the West.

Resettlement in Europe is not a given

Fourteen-year-old Abir from Eritrea, who chose not to give his full name, left his country at the age of 11. Together with a group of friends, he spent almost three years at a detention camp in Libya.

Like the majority of refugees now in the Gashora Center, he says he isn't willing either to return home or to stay in Rwanda any longer.

"Rwanda is good but we are still not satisfied because our final destination is not Rwanda but Europe," he told DW. "That is why I am not happy in Rwanda until I get to my final destination."

Around 200 refugees have been flown in from Libya since SeptemberImage: DW/A. Ngarambe

Samir, who is also from Eritrea and doesn't want to give his full name, has no issues with his Rwandan hosts and would even consider marrying a Rwandan woman if it weren't for his difficulties with the language. But the 27-year-old doesn't want to stay.

"According to the law and obligation of the UNHCR, we are asylum seekers and as asylum seekers we need a durable solution in a European country," he said.

The UNHCR, however, does not see it quite like that. Elise Villechalane, spokesperson of the agency in Rwanda, told DW by email that a transfer to the West is not a given for asylum-seekers.

"Resettlement is not granted and will depend on the readiness of resettlement countries to welcome them. In addition, resettlement is not the only durable solution available for refugees," she wrote. 

Those in the Gashora Center found not to require international protection will be either assisted to return home or given the possibility of regularizing their status in Rwanda.

Criticism of the UNHCR

The UNHCR is in charge of provisions in GashoraImage: DW/A. Ngarambe

Jean Claude Habananimana, a football coach for both a local team and that of the asylum seekers, says the two communities are getting along very well. Sport is helping the refugees better cope and integrate. They are learning the language and about Rwandan culture through several programs.

"Between us and the refugees, there is no problem. We are happy with each other and we always play football against each other as a means of helping them integrate," he told DW.

In the meantime, the UNHCR is providing shelter, education, food items, basic hygiene products and health care services for those relocated to Rwanda from Libya. But Samir, who fled poverty and political insecurity in his country, says the situation at the center is not what he and other refugees expected, because basic needs are not met: "We have no clothes. We have food and water, but no cash for bathing and washing soap."

The UNHCR says that at some point the refugees will receive cash. "But this will require the creation of bank accounts (like for other refugees) and it will take time, " Villechalane explained. "In addition, most of them are unaccompanied minors for whom creation of bank accounts or mobile money transfer is possible. We then need to find a solution for them as well."

World Stories - The Week in Reports

12:36

This browser does not support the video element.

 

Skip next section Explore more
Skip next section DW's Top Story

DW's Top Story

Skip next section More stories from DW