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Last updated: 31 January, 2012 - Published 18:00 GMT
 
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Bound for Canada, stranded in Togo
 

 
 
Stadium in Lome
Stadium, in the country’s capital Lome
Some two hundred Sri Lankan refugees stranded in the tiny West African state of Togo have told the BBC that they fear for their life if they are deported back to their country.

They are detained at an open stadium, in the country’s capital Lome, which they say belong to the Military.

“We have been arrested and detained here on charges of over staying our visa period since 24th October last year and have been told that unless we voluntarily return to Sri Lanka, we would be deported forcefully," a resident at the detention centre told the Tamil Service.

Over 200 people mainly from the North and East of Sri Lanka, sought to flee from the country with the aim of arriving in Canada through boat, have been duped by an agent and dumped in Togo, the inmates in Lome detention centre say.

They say they were taken from Colombo to Mumbai and then to Addis Ababa from there and onto Lome by air on visit visa and where holed up in five houses, being assured that they would be taken to Ghana and from there by boat to Canada.

According to the detainees, Officials from the UN refugee agency (UNHCR), International Organization for migration- IOM and Canadian govt along with the local immigration authorities have visited and have told them that it would be better to be deported than being put in the local prison.

Fear for safety

Repeated efforts to reach the officials of the government of Togo for their comments have failed and BBC is unable to independently verify the claims of the detainees.

“Many of us were in Mullivaikaal-where the final phase of the war took place, and if we are deported back, our safety and life will be in jeopardy” another inmate told.

But another detainee say many of them have lost all hopes of their onward journey to Canada and have now resigned to their fate of going back to Sri Lanka, rather than being put in local prisons in Togo.

Many people from the erstwhile war torn areas of north and east of Sri Lanka have been continuously attempting to leave illegally by boat either heading for Australia or Canada.

Both the countries have tightened their immigration system and have resisted these types of attempts.

Even those who arrived in Canada similarly by two boats last year are yet to be fully cleared and granted asylum, while many of them who tried to reach Australia have either been detained in a detention centre there or in Indonesia or Malaysia en route.

The detainees in Togo say that they are provided food by the ICRC though they allege it’s insipid and insufficient.

Difficult situation

“Every morning we are woken around 4.30AM and by 6 AM we will be asked to sweep the entire stadium and clean the toilets used by the Military personnel inside the stadium where were detained” another inmate says.

Many of them allege that they have had a bout of Malaria fever and no proper medical facilities were available to them.

But the inmates now say that they are taken in batches for medical examination and found fit will be deported back to Sri Lanka with IOM providing the tickets.

They also say they are forbid from meeting anyone to express their difficulties and the only people to have visited them were international bodies who they allege are pressurising them to return back voluntarily.

Earlier nine people who have returned back to Eastern Sri Lanka from Lome, who has told the BBC that there are similar people stranded in Benin and Ghana also.

According to latest reports there are 19 women and 11 children in the open detention centre and 28 people are returning back to Sri Lanka on 03 or 04 February after signing papers with the intervention of IOM.

 
 
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