UN Agency Saddened By Death of Partner in Chad
UN AGENCY SADDENED BY KILLING OF GOVERNMENT PARTNER IN EASTERN CHAD
New York, Oct 27 2009 10:10AM
The United Nations refugee agency today expressed its shock and sadness at the death of a colleague working for its government counterpart in eastern Chad who was killed in an ambush over the weekend.
Michel Mitna was head of the Chadian
refugee body CNAR (Commission National d'Accueil et de
Réinsertion des réfugiés) in Guéréda and worked daily
with the UN High Commissioner for Refugees
(<"http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home">UNHCR) to
protect and assist refugees and internally displaced persons
(IDPs).
The 40-year-old Chadian national, who leaves behind a wife and five children, had worked in eastern Chad for six years.
He was riding about 110 kilometres
north-east of Abéché on Saturday morning in a vehicle
clearly marked with the CNAR and UNHCR logos when he was
attacked by armed bandits and killed. His driver was wounded
and the unidentified bandits managed to escape.
“UNHCR is deeply shocked and saddened by this
tragic killing,” spokesperson Andrej Mahecic
<"http://www.unhcr.org/4ae6d7499.html">told reporters in
Geneva. “This is the 51st armed attack on a humanitarian
vehicle in eastern Chad this year alone, 31 of which
belonged to UNHCR and its partners.”
Just last week,
five staff working for Première Urgence, a French
non-governmental partner of UNHCR, were kidnapped while
travelling in convoy. The bandits only freed the kidnapped
staff when their hijacked vehicle was involved in an
accident. Two of the five aid workers are still in hospital
in the capital, N'Djamena.
UNHCR said armed banditry
is the greatest security threat for aid workers in eastern
Chad, where humanitarian agencies are working to assist some
250,000 refugees from neighbouring Sudan since 2003, as well
as 160,000 internally displaced Chadians since
2006.
ENDS