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Horn of Africa drought: the refugees and the empty camp 0

Water systems, latrines and healthcare facilities are ready to use but are standing idle.The new Ifo II camp, in Kenya, was built to try and ease the severe overcrowding in Dadaab, where camps designed for 90,000 people now shelter over 380,000. But Kenya’s government refuses to open due to security fears.

Tens of thousands of Somali refugees fleeing the worsening food crisis and ongoing conflict in the Horn of Africa are being barred from a new aid camp that stands empty and unused while refugee families live in shocking conditions a few kilometers away, Oxfam said.

In Kenya the new Ifo II camp was built to try and ease the severe overcrowding in Dadaab, where camps designed for 90,000 people now shelter over 380,000. Yet despite the influx of new arrivals, Ifo II remains empty as the Government of Kenya has refused to allow people to move in.

Agencies are scaling up efforts to assist the new arrivals, but the quickest and most efficient way would be to let refugees access service that are already in place.

“Women and children have made the most incredible journeys, walking for weeks through the desert and braving hunger and attacks by armed robbers and wild animals, to get to the camps in Kenya. They arrive extremely weak and malnourished, and the least that we can do is ensure that there is water, food and care for them when they get here,” said Joost van de Lest, head of Oxfam in Kenya.

“It is tragic that vulnerable families are trapped in limbo, forced to endure appalling conditions while there are fully functioning services right next door. Their basic needs are being ignored,” said Van der Lest.

Oxfam stressed that the Kenyan government deserves recognition for taking on much of the burden of Somalia’s refugee crisis over the years, allowing hundreds of thousands of people into the country when other nations have closed their eyes to the crisis. Oxfam called on the international community to provide more funds and support to help Kenya cope with the influx, and to step up efforts to promote a lasting solution to the humanitarian crisis inside Somalia, from which so many refugees are fleeing.

Unable to settle in the new camp, Oxfam said that refugees are forced to settle on community land, exacerbating existing tensions between refugees and the local host community, which is one of the poorest in Kenya and is itself suffering from severe shortages of food and water, after northern Kenya’s driest year for six decades.

Beyond the fences of the camp, the drought has ravaged many more lives – an estimated 10 million people will need food assistance, according to the UN World Food Programme.

The head of the United Nations refugee agency Antonio Guterres has described the situation in drought-hit Somalia as the “worst humanitarian disaster” in the world, after meeting with those affected at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya.

“I have no doubt that in today’s world, Somalia corresponds to the worst humanitarian disaster. I have never seen in a refugee camp people coming in such desperate conditions,” he told Al Jazeera.

By Staff – Afronline

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