Dokument #1189583
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Autor)
According to Ethnologue, the Bassa
ethnic group is primarily located in southeast Liberia in Bassa,
Rivercess and Montserrado counties (1992, 287). Encyclopedia of
the Third World states that the Bassas constitute the second
largest ethnic group in Liberia and comprise 16.3 per cent of the
national population (1992, 1122). The same source notes that the
Bassa are one of the three ethnic groups that are completely
situated within Liberia (ibid.). According to a 2 April 1992
Reuters report, the Bassas and Krus have been neutral in the
Liberian factional conflict. However, this neutrality was broken by
the factional fighting in the southeast, which is a Bassa region.
For details, please refer to the attachment.
The BBC in a 27 May 1994 report stated that
one of the factions in the Liberian civil war, the National
Patriotic Front of Liberia (NPFL) has accused another faction, the
Liberian Peace Council (LPC), of attempting to "depopulate and hurt
the entire southeast of the country (ibid.). The same source states
that the LPC has "unleashed a reign of mayhem" on the Bassa, Kru
and Grebo who live in this part of Liberia. This BBC report notes
that the LPC acknowledges the ethnic groups as NPFL supporters.
The 21 June 1994 issue of International
Intelligence Report states that a new armed group called the
Bassa Defense Force (BDF) has emerged in the southeast. An ambush
attributed to the BDF killed two people and wounded five on the
Buchanan highway (ibid.). The emergence of the new group has also
led to insecurity on the main road to Buchanan, the capital of
Bassa County (ibid.). For further information concerning the goal
of this Bassa armed group, please refer to the attachment.
For details on the warring factions in
Liberia, their main areas of control and their harassment of rival
ethnic groups, please refer to the other attachments. For similar
information, please, also refer to pages 148 and 156 of Country
Reports 1993, page 3 of Human Rights Watch Africa (17
May 1994) and page 22 of News from Africa Watch (21 Oct.
1991), which are currently available at your Regional Documentation
Centre.
This response was prepared after
researching publicly accessible information currently available to
the DIRB within time constraints. This response is not, and does
not purport to be, conclusive as to the merit of any particular
claim to refugee status or asylum.
BBC Summary World Broadcasts. 27 May
1994. "NPFL Radio Says LPC is Trying to Depopulate Southeast of
NPFL Supporters." (NEXIS)
Encyclopedia of the Third World.
1992. 4th ed. Vol. 2. Edited by George Thomas Kurian. New York:
Facts on File.
Ethnologue: Languages of the
World. 1992. 12th ed. Edited by Barbara F. Grimes. Dallas:
Summer Institute of Linguistics, Inc.
International Intelligence
Reports [London]. 21 June 1994. "Factional Fighting Continues
Around Buchanan." (NEXIS)
Reuters. 2 April 1992. BC Cycle. Stanton
Peabody. "Fighting Takes New Tribal Twist in Liberia." (NEXIS)
BBC Summary World Broadcasts. 27 May
1994. "NPFL Radio Says LPC is Trying to Depopulate Southeast of
NPFL Supporters." (NEXIS)
Current History [Philadelphia].
May 1993. William O'Neil. "Liberia: An Avoidable Tragedy," pp.
213-17.
Encyclopedia of the Third World.
1992. 4th ed. Vol. 2. Edited by George Thomas Kurian. New York:
Facts on File, pp. 1121-22.
Ethnologue: Languages of the
World. 1992. 12th ed. Edited by Barbara F. Grimes. Dallas:
Summer Institute of Linguistics, Inc., pp. 287-88.
Human Rights Watch. December 1993.
Human Rights Watch Report 1994. New York: Human Rights
Watch, pp. 17-20.
International Intelligence
Reports [London]. 21 June 1994. "Factional Fighting Continues
Around Buchanan." (NEXIS)
Reuters. 22 June 1994. BC Cycle.
"Fighting Closes Main Road East of Liberian Capital." (NEXIS)
_____. 2 April 1992. BC Cycle. Stanton
Peabody. "Fighting Takes New Tribal Twist in Liberia." (NEXIS)
US Committee for Refugees (USCR).
February 1992. Uprooted Liberians: Casualties of a Brutal
War. Washington, DC: USCR, pp. 2-7, 10.