Reuters AlertNet Full site
Homepage | Newsdesk | NGO Latest | Crisis briefings | Country profiles | MediaWatch | Jobs | Alerting | Login
All aid workers may be required to use an armed guard after murder -U.N.
27 Oct 2009 17:18:00 GMT
Written by: George Fominyen

DAKAR (AlertNet) - Armed escorts may become obligatory for relief agencies working with the U.N. in eastern Chad after bandits killed an aid worker at the weekend, a U.N. refugee agency official has said.

U.N. staff are already obliged to travel with armed escorts but their partners -- both local and international -- are not and most humanitarian organisations prefer not to use guards in order to maintain a sense of neutrality.

"We need to review this situation because actually it is safer to travel with an armed escort even if it is quite heavy for some people to take," Annette Rehrl a spokesperson for the UNHCR in Chad told AlertNet in a telephone interview.

Last weekend Michel Mitna, head of the Chadian refugee body CNAR (Commission National d'Accueil et de Réinsertion des Réfugiés), was travelling nearly 1,000 km (about 600 miles) from the capital N'djamena in the north-east of Chad, in a vehicle marked with the CNAR and UNHCR logos . He did not have an armed escort.

A rmed bandits attacked his car and killed him. His driver was wounde. The unidentified bandits managed to escape.

Mitna's organisation has been working with the U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR) to coordinate many humanitarian agencies in eastern Chad to assist some 250,000 Sudanese refugees in 12 camps since 2003, as well as 160,000 internally displaced Chadians since 2006.

There have been 51 armed attacks on humanitarian workers in eastern Chad this year with 31 of them (including three deaths) involving the UNHCR or its partner organisations.

"We are targeted because we have cars and the people attacking us want these cars, so far there is no political statement going with these attacks," Rehrl said.

Armed banditry is the greatest security threat for aid workers in this area neighbouring the Darfur region of Sudan.

In a display of solidarity and sorrow following Mitna's death UNHCR staff in Guéréda where he operated did not work on Monday.

"It affects us because he is a Chadian colleague, working for Chadian refugees, so this is not just an international humanitarian being targeted or somebody from outside but it is a Chadian himself who has been targeted ," Rehrl said.

Reuters AlertNet is not responsible for the content of external websites.

Del.icio.us Del.icio.us  |   Digg Digg  |   NewsVine NewsVine  |   Reddit Reddit   
We welcome argument but AlertNet will not publish comments that are racist, abusive or libellous.

Leave a Reply

Enter the code shown on the left *

When you submit a comment to us we request your name, e-mail address and optionally a link to a website. Please note where you submit a website address, we may link to it via your name. By sending us a comment, you accept that we have the right to show the comment and your name to users. Although we require your email address, this will not be published on the site, and is only required to enable us to check facts with you, e.g. if you are making a claim we can not confirm easily. Additionally, if you would like your comment removed at anytime, you'll have to use this e-mail address when you contact us. To remove a comment at any time please e-mail us at blogs-(at)-reuters-(dot)-com (address obscured to avoid spam) specifying who you are and what you would like removed. We moderate all comments and will publish everything that advances the post directly or with relevant tangential information. We reserve the right to edit comments in order to maintain the quality of the comments, and may not include links to irrelevant material. We try not to publish comments that we think are offensive or appear to pass you off as another person, and we will be conservative if comments may be considered libelous. Reuters will use your data in accordance with Reuters privacy policy. Reuters Group is primarily responsible for managing your data. As Reuters is a global company your data will be transferred and available internationally, including in countries which do not have privacy laws but Reuters seeks to comply with its privacy policy.

Unlike some other content on this website, the written content in this article may be republished or redistributed by any means free of charge. Any use of photographs and graphics on this website is expressly prohibited. You must check whether written content contained in other articles on this website may be republished or redistributed without the express permission of Reuters or the relevant third party provider.

George Fominyen is AlertNet's humanitarian affairs correspondent for West and Central Africa, based in Dakar. He is also West Africa coordinator for Thomson Reuters Foundation's Emergency Information Service.

Related articles


Background information


Disclaimers |  Copyright |  Privacy |  Contact Us |  Feedback |  About Us |  RSS XML

Last updated:Wed Oct 28 08:49:49 2009