Burundian returnee Donatien, 35, sits with his family at the Kinazi Transit Center in Muyinga, Burundi. © UNHCR/Will Swanson
Hope and expectation as Burundian refugees return home after years in exile in Rwanda.
By Linda Muriuki in Bujumbura, Burundi
Donatien, 35, is on his phone negotiating the rent for a house he hopes his family can move into when they return home to Burundi.
He and his wife and three children were among a group of 159 Burundian refugees who decided to return home – a 72-kilometre drive across the Nemba border point into Burundi.
“We have come home because a country is like a parent. When you are away from your parents, you feel like something is missing,” said Donatien, as he waited to go through COVID-19 testing and screening at the Kinazi transit center in Burundi.
Four years ago, he left everything behind when political violence displaced over 300,000 Burundians. He fled with his family to neighbouring Rwanda.
“I left my country because there was a lot that happened that caused people to scatter,” he said. “We kept talking to relatives, friends and neighbours who remained, to know what progress there was in our community.”
UNHCR, the UN Refugee Agency, is facilitating the return of Burundian refugees who have decided to go back home.