Choucha Refugee Camp
Choucha is a refugee camp in the south of Tunisia, in the Medinine Governorate. The camp is located within 10 kilometers of the border crossing Ras Ajdir with Libya. The camp was opened on the 24th of February, 2011 and run by the UNHCR, other NGOs and the Tunisian authorities. Choucha camp hosted mainly refugees who fled the conflict in Libya. The UNHCR officially closed the camp in 2013.
Background
Actors in camp
Residents
The residents in Choucha refugee camp fled from the ongoing violence in Libya. Most of them were third-country nationals that were working in Libya when the war started. Libyans that fled the war quickly found hosting families or other housing, therefore their presence in the refugee camp is minimal. The registration of refugees in the camp was done by the UNHCR. The organisation started the registration on the 8th of March, 2011. After the 29th of March, the number of inhabitants of all camps surrounding Choucha were counted together so that there are no exact numbers of the camp.| Total number of residents | Main ethnicity | |
| March 8 | 15.000 | - |
| March 9 | 16.558 | Bangladeshi |
| March 10 | 17.220 | Bangladeshi |
| March 13 | 17.130 | Bangladeshi |
| March 14 | 16.175 | Bangladeshi |
| March 15 | 15.751 | Bangladeshi |
| March 16 | 11.822 | Bangladeshi |
| March 18 | 8.829 | Bangladeshi |
| March 21 | 4.748 | - |
| March 22 | 7.716 | Sudanese |
| March 27 | 7.286 | Somali |
| March 29 | 7.465 | Chadian |
From the opening of Choucha, most inhabitants were Bangladeshi migrants who used to work in Libya. Most of them were repatriated to Bangladesh within the month of March through the Humanitarian Evacuation Cell that was set up by the IOM and UNHCR. From April 2011 on, the Choucha camp population would consist for the biggest part of sub-Saharan African nationals. Gradually, they would leave the camp either to go further into Tunisia or to leave for Europe. When the camp closed down in July 2013, the UNHCR reported that there were around 250 people left, to whom the Tunisian government offered temporary residence.
NGOs
Several NGOs were present in Choucha and the surrounding refugee camps.- Danish Refugee Council
- Doctors without Borders
- International Federation of [Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies|IFRC], Tunisian Red Crescent
- International Medical Corps
- International Relief Development
- Islamic Relief
- IOM
- Médecins du Monde
- Safe the Children
- UNHCR
- UNICEF
- WHO
Humanitarian situation
Medical situation
The quick influx of refugees from February 2011 on made the hygienic situation in Choucha difficult. The first weeks there were no showers and few water points. As more and more NGOs arrived in the refugee camp, more needs were met. The UNHCR started heading a Sanitary Alert system that held daily meetings with other NGOs, the Tunisian ministry of Health and EU-representatives to prevent epidemics. A lot of people who were migrant workers in Libya did not receive any health care before the civil war in Libya started. So the consumption of health care was higher than in most refugee camps. The health care in Choucha consisted of the following:From March 16, 2011 the Tunisian Ministry of Health together with the WHO started vaccination campaigns in Choucha.
MSF started offering mental health services in the camp.
Danish Refugee Council and UNICEF were available for children's health care. UNICEF started a vaccination campaign for children under 5 years old.
From October 2012 the UNHCR stopped providing medical care for people who were denied refugee status, but who remained in the camp.
Legal situation
In Tunisia there is no legal framework to ask for asylum. Therefore, residents of Choucha refugee camp could only be acknowledged by asking for international protection with the UNHCR. In asking for international protection, residents of the camp would agree with a resettlement program to a safe third country. There have been several European countries who were willing to host the residents of the camp who were granted international protection. However, there have been few actual resettlements. Moreover, there has been criticism of the inability for residents of Choucha to do an appeal when the UNHCR does not grant international protection.Incidents
There have been several incidents reported. In May 2011 and March 2012 there were fires in the camp that caused several fatalities and injured.In May 2011, several migrants demanded to be resettled immediately by the UNHCR after a big fire and this caused a lot of unrest, also with the local population. The situation turned violent and in the following days Choucha camp was destroyed for the biggest part.