Libya and flown to Rwanda on Thursday, on a flight
chartered by the U.N. refugee agency.
This
was the first group of refugees to benefit from a so-called Emergency
Transit Mechanism agreed to early this month by Rwanda, the U.N. High
Commissioner for Refugees and the African Union.
U.N. refugee agency spokesman Babar Baloch told VOA his agency expected
and hoped to continue the evacuations. He noted Rwanda's refugee center
has the capacity to care for 500 people.
"But
it does not mean that Rwanda will only have 500,” he said. "We hope
that as people come in, they are able to find solutions and move to
safer locations. … And, we hope that in the coming days and weeks, we
are able to fly out more refugees from Libya to safety."
Baloch said the UNHCR had registered more than 3,000 refugees in Libyan
detention centers. However, he noted, more than 5,000 refugees and
migrants are being held under brutal, appalling conditions in
government-run facilities.
26 children
He said 26 of the 66 refugees flown to Rwanda were children, nearly all
of them unaccompanied. He said one of the evacuees had not been outside a
detention center for more than four years.
Baloch said the refugees were registered and were given documentation
upon arrival in Kigali. They were then transferred to a transit center
in Gashora, 60 kilometers south of the capital, where they were provided
with accommodations, food, water and other basic relief.
"A team of nine health professionals, including a psychologist, will
work alongside counselors specialized in working with children and
survivors of sexual violence to provide health care and assist evacuees
who survived torture, sexual violence and human rights abuses during
their time in Libya," he said.
Baloch said all members of the group had been granted asylum-seeker
status while their refugee claims are being assessed. This, he said,
gives them the same rights as other refugees in Rwanda. They will be
able to access education and health care, and work.
He added that anyone who was not considered a refugee and in need of
international protection would either be helped to return home or given
the possibility of gaining regular status in Rwanda.
VOA