E/CN.4/2006/73/Add.2
page 13
54.
It is therefore a population of working age, made up chiefly of men who in Côte d’Ivoire
were employed in farming, while their wives mostly looked after the home. The occupations
which are the most popular with returnees are therefore farming (50 per cent), small trade
(27 per cent) or stock raising (12 per cent).14
55.
As far as possible returnees who were employed in farming in Côte d’Ivoire have tried to
continue doing the same type of work in Burkina Faso. Occasionally local authorities have tried
to give them plots of land. For two main reasons, however, this type of measure has not
provided employment for all returnees trying to return to farming: (a) the quality of land; (b) the
insufficient area of plots, which are unable to supply a decent source of revenue. In some
regions, moreover, one way out of the problem has been to engage in deforestation, which raises
the further issues of environmental protection and the depletion of already scarce natural
resources.
56.
Many returnees used to be businessmen or plantation owners in Côte d’Ivoire. But
despite their spirit of initiative and the means available to undertake new economic activities
in Bukina Faso, these people complain of lack of support on the part of the public authorities.
“The authorities have given preference to short-term activities at the expense of medium- and
long-term plans. The Bayiri operation has brought people back to the villages and then has left
them to fend for themselves. We are not beggars. Our plight is to be blamed on the Government
of Burkina Faso”, according to the president of an association of returnees, formerly a
businessman in Côte d’Ivoire. “There is no public employment policy”, he added, “the
authorities are merely waiting for people to leave again”.
57.
Most of the men do go back to Côte d’Ivoire in the hope of a better life, leaving their
wives and children behind in Burkina Faso in view of the political and socio-economic unrest
prevailing in Côte d’Ivoire. Very often they are unable to send their families who have stayed at
home sufficient money for their needs, thus leaving them in conditions of extreme hardship.
58.
The Bayiri operation was aimed at humanitarian assistance and socio-economic
resettlement. This is the Operational Plan to support the socio-economic resettlement of
returnees, which was adopted in July 2003 by the Council of Ministers of the Government of
Burkina Faso. It is a three-year programme centred on the communities rather than on the
returnees in order to avoid favouring some groups at the expense of others.
59.
The Government has told the Special Rapporteur that it did not have sufficient support
from the international community for the socio-economic resettlement programme, although this
is one of its top priorities.
60.
The Special Rapporteur received a number of proposals for economic resettlement
projects which deserve consideration. For instance, the IOM has developed a project to assist the
resettlement of returnees from Côte d’Ivoire, whose general objective is to provide backing for
the Government’s Operational Plan to support the socio-economic resettlement of returnees, as
well as assist 2,000 families through microprojects and income-generating activities.15