Business Day

Camp’s closure will imperil Somali refugees

- Agency Staff Nairobi /AFP

At least 250,000 Somali refugees face violence back home if Kenya continues with plans to shut the vast Dadaab camp, rights groups warned on Thursday.

Kenya has submitted plans to shut the camp complex, located in the east of the country near the Somali border by August, according to UN documents.

“Many Somali refugees are themselves victims of violence, from which they fled to seek protection,” said Otsieno Namwaya from Human Rights Watch, adding that the plan “threatens the rights and safety” of the people.

“Forcing them to go back to face violence or persecutio­n would be inhumane and a violation of Kenya’s legal obligation­s,” Namwaya said.

RESETTLEME­NT

Amnesty Internatio­nal said Kenya should look for solutions, including integratio­n into Kenyan society and resettleme­nt to third countries.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said it was committed to working with the government on voluntary repatriati­on to countries of origin, relocating refugees to other parts of Kenya and resettleme­nt to third countries.

A Kenyan foreign ministry official confirmed, on condition of anonymity, that the government had sent a note to the UNHCR advising them of the closure of the camp.

“Kenya courts a humanitari­an disaster and internatio­nal criticism if it intends to forcibly return hundreds of thousands of refugees to Somalia without proper consultati­on, planning and regard for their safety,” Kenya’s Amnesty chief Irungu Houghton said.

Dadaab is home to about 230,000 people. The vast majority of them are Somalis who fled civil war in 1991. Many have lived there ever since. For many years Dadaab was the world’s largest refugee camp — with once as many as 580,000 residents — although it is now far smaller and dwarfed in size by Cox’s Bazaar in Bangladesh, home to about 600,000 people fleeing Myanmar.

Kenya, which sent troops into Somalia in 2011 following a spate of kidnapping­s by Somaliled al-Shabaab insurgents, claims the camp is a security risk. Kenya’s military remains in Somalia, prompting revenge attacks by the al-Qaeda-linked Shabaab in the country.

Kenya has moved to shut the camp before. In 2016, Kenya decided to close the camp, and tens of thousands of refugees returned to Somalia under a repatriati­on package. However, many encountere­d dire conditions in a country destroyed by decades of conflict.

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