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News Story
Human Rights Watch
May 8, 2007
(New York) - We write to voice concern over the expulsion
of persons of Rwandan and Burundian origin from Tanzania in
recent months. According to testimony received by Human Rights
Watch researchers, some expelled persons were threatened,
beaten, and saw their property looted by Tanzanian officials,
soldiers, and police officers or by militia groups acting with
the apparent compliance of government officials. The expelled
persons—including some who were recognized as refugees and
others who were naturalized Tanzanian citizens—were driven
from their homes without any semblance of legal procedure.
It is urgent that you to take action to prevent such
ill-treatment in the coming months, especially since Tanzania
has announced its intention to send tens of thousands more
persons across the borders into Rwanda and Burundi.
We ask you also to ensure that those persons unlawfully
deprived of their rights—whether rights to asylum or to
citizenship or to property—be afforded every opportunity to be
restored to full enjoyment of these rights under international
human rights law.
All individuals claiming refugee status in Tanzania are
protected under international law from ill-treatment and
forced return to their countries of origin, pending
determination of their claim. As a party to the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR); the 1951
Convention relating to the Status of Refugees (1951
Convention) and its 1967 Protocol; and the OAU Convention
Governing the Specific Aspects of Refugee Problems in Africa (OAU
Convention), and according to the Tanzanian Refugees Act of
1998 (1998 Act), Tanzania has committed itself to protecting
asylum-seekers and refugees against ill-treatment, forced
return, or forced displacement from their usual places of
residence.
We ask also that Tanzanian authorities investigate and hold
to account those responsible for violating the rights of the
expelled persons.
Ill-treatment and expulsion of persons of Rwandan
origin
In May 2006, the Government of Tanzania began forcibly
expelling persons of Rwandan origin living in Tanzania,
providing estimates that a total of some 60,000 persons would
be affected. Of these some 15,000 persons had arrived in
Rwanda by early 2007, many from villages in the Mureba,
Karagwe, Ngara, and Bukoba districts of Tanzania.
According to the Government of Tanzania, the persons
targeted were “illegal immigrants” (Joint Communiqué at the
Closure of the Joint Meeting Between Tanzania and Rwanda,
22-23 June 2006). Many of those expelled, however, claim to
have had Tanzanian citizenship or temporary residence status.
Some expellees interviewed in a Rwandan transit camp in July
2006 showed Human Rights Watch researchers Tanzanian voting
cards and photocopies of naturalization documents. Others said
that Tanzanian officials had confiscated and torn up their
citizenship papers. Some of those expelled were born in
Tanzania and do not speak Kinyarwanda, having grown up
speaking Kiswahili or local Tanzanian languages. Other
expelled persons were married to Tanzanians and were forcibly
separated from their spouses and children.
Expelled persons said that many had had their property
looted, including herds of cattle illegally ‘confiscated’ by
members of the security forces, administrative authorities,
and militia, known as ‘sungu-sungu’. One woman told Human
Rights Watch researchers, “If you say that you have
citizenship, they say, ‘citizenship doesn’t exist for the
Rwandese. They must leave.’ It’s not just words. The
sungu-sungu and the army beat us...” Others have seen property
destroyed, including houses and other property deliberately
burned.
According to as-yet unverified complaints to Human Rights
Watch and regional human rights organizations, some expelled
women were raped and other persons were deliberately killed.
(La Ligue des Droits de la Personne dans la Region des Grands
Lacs, ‘Pres de Deux Cent Rwandais Expulses Forcement par la
Tanzanie’, May 19, 2006). According to the International
Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, many of
the affected population are “exhibiting signs of mental
trauma” (DREF Bulletin, September 20 2006).
A Joint Technical Team (JTT) was established by the
governments of Tanzania and Rwanda in July 2006 with a mandate
to identify persons of Rwandan origin, list their property
including that to be left in Tanzania, reunite separated
families, and handle complaints by those affected. Now in
existence for nine months, the team has yet to investigate the
alleged abuses, reunite any separated families, or provide
compensation to those whose rights were violated. (Agreed
Minutes of the Meeting of the Government Officials of the
United Republic of Tanzania and the Republic of Rwanda on the
Evaluation of the Implementation of the Repatriation Process
of Rwandans, February 26 2007).
Ill-treatment and refoulement of Burundian refugees
Since August 2006, Tanzanian officials have been expelling
Burundians living outside refugee camps in the Kagera region,
many of whom might qualify as refugees. Tanzanian authorities
have deemed them "illegal immigrants" and expelled them. (IRIN
News, Expelled Burundians are Illegal Migrants says
Government, August 16, 2006.) However, under international
law, refugees cannot be deprived of their right not to be
forcibly returned solely because they live outside refugee
camps. Before taking action, authorities must make a fair
assessment of the claims of such persons and of their need for
international protection.
Tanzanian officials also expelled registered refugees,
residing in Lukole camp but who had been found seeking wood or
other essentials of life outside the camp boundaries.
Residents of refugee camps in Tanzania are severely restricted
in their freedom of movement and face arrest, detention, and
expulsion should they leave the camp area. Several such
persons were expelled to Burundi during 2007 and thus were
subjected to refoulement, an act specifically prohibited by
the OAU Convention and the 1951 Refugee Convention.
In addition, according to reports by the UNHCR and
interviews conducted by Human Rights Watch, Tanzanian
officials expelled other persons of Burundian origin who had
been long-term residents of Tanzania.
Tanzanian officials have carried out these expulsions in a
hasty fashion, with no regard for legal procedures, and
without giving these individuals an opportunity to contest the
decision or to have their interests represented. As a result
some families were divided and in two known instances, mothers
were separated from their infants. Expellees told a Human
Rights Watch researcher that Tanzanian officials had beaten
and intimidated them and some showed cuts, bruises, and other
injuries they said had been caused by such violence. Many said
their property had been looted by Tanzanian officials.
Furthermore, many of these people were issued “Prohibited
Immigrant Notices”, making it extremely difficult for them to
return to Tanzania.
Human Rights Watch has raised its concerns about the
expulsion operation with Ambassador Francis Mndolwa in Burundi
who has undertaken to look into this issue. Between January 1
and May 1, 2007, the Burundian government project for the
reintegration of war-affected persons has registered more than
2,000 persons expelled from Tanzania.
Tanzanian obligations toward refugees under
national and international law
The 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol, the OAU Convention,
and Tanzania’s 1998 Refugee Act explicitly prohibit expulsion
or forced return of refugees. Article 33 of the 1951
Convention prohibits expulsion or return of any refugee “in
any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of territories where
his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his
race, religion, nationality, membership of a political social
group or political opinion.” Article 2 of the 1998 Act
reflects the international prohibition on refoulement when a
refugee “will be tried or punished for an offence of a
political character after arrival in the territory from which
he came or is likely to be subjected to physical attack in
such territory.” Under the 1951 Convention and 1998 Act,
derogation from this principle is permissible only after an
individual determination that an individual poses a threat to
state security. Tanzania’s expulsion of refugees clearly
violates all these obligations.
Article 7 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights—to which Tanzania acceded in 1976—prohibits
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of all persons.
Tanzanian officials who mistreat and threaten refugees or
immigrants violate Tanzania’s obligations under the ICCPR. The
ICCPR also protects all persons’ right to liberty and freedom
of movement and prohibits the inhibition of freedom of
movement for all persons lawfully within a territory (Article
13). Until an individual determination has been made that a
person is unlawfully in Tanzania, his or her right to freedom
of movement is protected by the ICCPR.
Finally, refugees’ rights to property are protected by both
the 1951 Refugee Convention and the 1998 Act. Article 13 of
the 1951 Convention requires that refugees receive the same
rights to property as do other aliens. Articles 13 and 14 of
the 1998 Act require that compensation be paid to refugees
from whom property, such as cattle or vehicles, is seized.
Tanzanian officials violate these articles when they seize
cattle and other property from expelled persons and pay them
no compensation.
Remedies and Future Action
Tanzania has long enjoyed the reputation of a generous host to
refugees and others seeking protection, a reputation put at
risk by actions taken over the last year. Recent news accounts
of joint action by the Tanzanian and Rwandan governments and
the return to Tanzania of fourteen persons of Rwandan origin
in order to resolve property claims are, however, encouraging
developments.
Like all sovereign nations, Tanzania has the right to expel
those unlawfully in its territory but all such expulsions
should take place following appropriate procedures affording a
fair process to all claiming a legitimate reason for being in
Tanzania. Given reports of expected further expulsions from
Tanzania, we urge the government of Tanzania to conduct
screenings of all persons before expelling them, ideally in
conjunction with UNHCR staff who are best equipped to assess
which persons meet the legal requirements of refugee status as
defined in the 1951 Convention. Furthermore, should these
screenings determine that a person is not legally a refugee in
Tanzania, that person should be returned to his or her country
of origin in dignity with his or her belongings and family
members, free from intimidation or harm. Persons able to
demonstrate that they are citizens of Tanzania should be
permitted to exercise their rights fully, including that of
residing in Tanzania, without discrimination of any kind.
Thank you for your attention to these matters. We look
forward to hearing from you at your earliest convenience.
Sincerely,
Alison Des Forges
Senior Advisor, Africa Division
Human Rights Watch
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