---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Mon, 29 Aug 2011 14:47:07 -0000
Subject: KENYA-SOMALIA: Border town feels the refugee pressure
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>

KENYA-SOMALIA: Border town feels the refugee pressure

LIBOI, 29 August 2011 (IRIN) - As Somali refugees continue to pour
into Kenya, pressure is mounting on the government to quickly re-open
a transit centre to not only ease their hardship but to take pressure
off residents of Liboi, a border town closest to Dadaab, the world's
largest refugee complex.

 Kenyans hosting the new arrivals, donors, human rights organizations
and aid agencies have been leaning on the Kenyan authorities to assist
the refugees with food and medical help, and to resume screening them
for security threats.

 The drought-triggered crisis that has affected both countries has
left the local host community in Liboi feeling less hospitable, as
they are obliged to share limited food and water resources with the
new arrivals.

 Another concern is the lack of screening of refugees, leaving locals
worried about security threats from Al-Shabab insurgents, as well as
disease. Outbreaks of cholera, diarrhoea and measles have been
reported in Somalia's capital.

 Until Kenya officially closed its border with Somalia in January 2007
as a security measure, Liboi, a dusty town about 18km from the
frontier and 80km from Dadaab, was the major transit and screening
centre for refugees. At least 200,000 Somalis passed through the town
during the early 1990s. Transport to Daadab saved refugees a difficult
trek through the desert.

 The suspension of screening proved unpopular with NGOs and UN
agencies as it effectively trapped refugees in the nearby town of
Dobley. [ http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportId=71164 ]

 But refugees have continued to stream in, vulnerable to abuse either
by bandits or Kenyan law enforcement officials, according to Amnesty
International and Human Rights Watch (HRW).

 Neela Ghosal, a researcher with HRW, said Somalis cited police
extortion, violence, arbitrary arrest and detention, and unlawful
deportation to Somalia during their trek to Dadaab.

 Last year, Dadaab received an average of 6,000 to 8,000 Somalis every
month, according to the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR). In 2011, the
monthly average increased to 10,000, with more than 55,000 new
arrivals since the beginning of the year, dropping to 700-800 daily in
the past few weeks, according to some agencies. [
http://www.unhcr.org/4e0475f69.html ]

 Benedicte Goderiaux, an Africa researcher with Amnesty, said the
Kenyan government had failed to respond to the protection needs of the
refugees.

 Host community

 The Kenyan government has been divided over the need to provide
protection for the refugees or deter the influx that could also
include Al-Shabab militants by keeping the borders officially closed.

 Since famine was declared in Somalia in July, refugee numbers have
soared, leading to increased concern among Kenyans living near the
border.

 "It is not that we don't want to share our food - how can we not help
women and children sitting under the tree in the open and hungry?"
asked Dekow Mohammed, chair of Leboi's water and sanitation committee,
when IRIN visited the town.

 "We share the same faith, we are all [ethnically] Somalis but we are
also affected by the drought - we pay for our water which we share
with them," he said.

 "But these people have been sitting here for two days now - what if
they are carrying some weapons in their bags? What if they have a
disease? We have to think about our people as well," added Mohammed.

 When IRIN visited Liboi on 14 August, 262 Somalis, mostly women and
children, sat under trees - the largest number to arrive in recent
weeks.

 Liboi is only of the several border towns; the others are Mandera and
El Wak. Despite the border closure, local authorities have allowed
local trade and movement in most instances at their own discretion.

 Security concerns

 Badu Katelo, Kenya's acting commissioner for refugees, maintained
that the borders had never been closed for refugees.

 Katelo told IRIN the government was poised to re-open the reception
centre and resume screening Somali refugees in Liboi. He said the
situation had improved along the border, where the Somali Transitional
Federal Government was in control.

 The centre and screening facilities could be operational again within
a few weeks. "The modalities are still being worked out but we will
have a small registration process [at the new centre] - where we will
do short profiles of people." The screening will include a medical
examination and a security check. The centre will be run by UNHCR, he
said.

 Emmanuel Nyabera, UNHCR spokesman, said the agency was in
negotiations with the government and the "centre and screening
facilities will open soon". He said they hoped to provide medical
assistance and some food to the new arrivals.

 After the official screening the refugees can now be transported to
Dadaab. A small accommodation area is also in the works, said Katelo,
for refugees who cannot be moved within 24 hours.

 But some aid workers regard the announcement with some apprehension,
saying some government officials feel the re-opening would encourage
more people to come to Kenya.

 "We are not going to open transit centres in other border towns - we
will only limit it to Liboi," maintained Katelo.

 jk/am/mw[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93611



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