Document #1250124
IRB – Immigration and Refugee Board of Canada (Author)
Information on the Lofa ethnic group could
not be found among the sources consulted by the DIRB. However, as
discussed, information is provided below on the Loma ethnic group,
which is found in Lofa County, Liberia.
According to The Encyclopedia of the
Third World and Liberia: A Country Study, the Loma are
one of sixteen tribal groupings recognized by the Liberian
government (1992, 1122; 1985, 89). According to 1990 population
data, there are 137,535 Loma in Liberia representing 5.3 per cent,
of Liberia's total population of 2,595,000 (The Encyclopedia of
the Third World 1992, 1121-22). Ethnologue: Languages of the
World states, (using 1991 figures,) that there are 141,800 Loma
speakers in Liberia (1992, 290). According to Liberia: A Country
Study and Ethnologue, the traditional area of the Loma
is the northwestern region of Liberia in Lofa County (1985, 93;
1992, 290). For additional information, including maps of the
country, please consult the attachments.
Specific information on the current
situation of the Loma is scarce among the sources consulted by the
DIRB. According to a Reuters report cited by the UNHCR, Francis
Massaguoi has been leading the Lofa Defence Force (LDF) in Lofa
County in response to attacks on civilians by fighters of the
United Liberation Movement for Democracy in Liberia (ULIMO) (UNHCR
Oct. 1994, 10). The New African reported in March 1995 that
the LDF is of Lorma [sic] ethnicity and Christian religious
orientation, and is supported militarily, economically and
politically by Nigeria (Mar. 1995, 12). According to
Ethnologue, Lorma is a variation of Loma (1992, 290).
Amnesty International reported in 1994 that
300 members of the Lorma ethnic group who opposed the ULIMO control
of Voinjama, were allegedly executed in that town (197). Amnesty
International also reported that "towns and villages were burned as
ULIMO contested control of Lofa County in March [1993]" (ibid.).
The United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
reported in February 1995 that relief efforts in the northwest of
Liberia have been interrupted by "internecine ULIMO fighting, as
well as ULIMO/LDF clashes" (3 Feb. 1995, 2). This fighting has
practically rendered upper Lofa County "inaccessible since December
1993" (ibid.).
For general information on conditions in
Lofa County during the past two years, please consult the chapter
on Liberia in Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for
1994 and Amnesty International Report 1994 available in
Regional Documentation Centres.
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.
Amnesty International. 1994. Amnesty
International Report 1994. New York: Amnesty International
USA.
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,
Tex.: Summer Institute of Linguistics.
Liberia: A Country Study. 1985.
3rd ed. Edited by Harold D. Nelson. Washington, DC: Secretary of
the Army.
New African [London]. March 1995.
No. 329. "Liberia on a Knife Edge."
United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees (UNHCR). October 1994. Background Paper on Liberian
Refugees and Asylum Seekers. Geneva: UNHCR.
United States Agency for International
Development (USAID). 3 February 1995. Situation Report No. 1.
Liberia: Civil Strife. Washington, DC: USAID.
Ethnologue: Languages of the
World. 1992. 12th ed. Edited by Barbara F. Grimes. Dallas,
Tex.: Summer Institute of Linguistics, pp. 288-90.
Liberia: A Country Study. 1985.
3rd ed. Edited by Harold D. Nelson. Washington, DC: Secretary of
the Army, pp. xx-xxi, 93, 292.