5,000 Nigerian refugees start returning home from Cameroon
Published : 09 Mar 2021, 14:26
Nigerian refugees who fled to Cameroon due to Boko Haram insurgency began returning to their homeland on Monday in a voluntary repatriation process, reported Xinhua.
The first batch, consisting of 5,000 refugees who spent six years in Cameroon's Minawao refugee camp, boarded buses as they began the journey.
"We have taken all the precautions and all the necessary measures for you to have a safe trip," Cameroon's Minister of Territorial Administration Paul Atanga Nji told the returnees in Maroua, the chief town of Cameroon's Far North region just before take-off for Nigeria's Borno state.
He said the journey was taking place in strict respect of anti-COVID 19 measures and announced that Cameroon has provided "special relief package" for the returnees as they start their new life.
"As a result of the insurgency, bulk of the town has been destroyed but in the last one year, serious rehabilitation efforts have been ongoing by the Borno state government. So we are now ready to receive the returnees. They are going to live in new neighborhoods," Lawan Abba Wakilbe, Special Adviser to the governor of Borno State told reporters in Maroua on the eve of departure.
More than 57,000 Nigerians, mostly from Borno, have been taking refuge in the Minawao refugee camp, located in Mokolo, the Far North region of Cameroon, according to the UN.