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UNHCR launches aid distribution to displaced Kenyans

News Stories, 9 January 2008

© Brendan Bannon
Two displaced children shelter in St Monica's near Nairobi's Dandora Estate slum. UNHCR family kits can also be seen.

NAIROBI, Kenya, January 9 (UNHCR) The UN refugee agency on Wednesday launched the distribution of basic household items to hundreds of displaced Kenyans in the capital, Nairobi.

UNHCR and the Kenya Red Cross Society distributed kits containing plastic sheeting for shelter, blankets, mats, kitchen sets, mosquito nets and soap to 115 needy families (almost 600 people) who are camping in churches, schools and police stations in the city's poor suburbs. Further distributions are expected to reach some 50,000 displaced people, mainly in Kenya's Rift Valley Province.

Deputy High Commissioner for Refugees L. Craig Johnstone said last weekend that UNHCR would provide immediate aid for up to 100,000 people as part of the overall UN response. Aid supplies in Nairobi and Dadaab in the north-east are being tapped, while additional items will be brought in from emergency stockpiles in Dubai or Tanzania.

Many of the displaced who received supplies from UNHCR Wednesday are destitute. The former residents of Mathare Valley, one of Nairobi's sprawling slums, said they fled their homes without food, clothes, bedding, money or other belongings to escape post-election violence that has killed hundreds of people.

"They burnt our house. They told us to get out before setting the house on fire. I have nothing. Even this mattress I have been given here. My children are sleeping out in the cold with no blankets," said 30-year-old Pauline, who fled from her tiny tin shack in Mathare slums. She has found refuge in nearby Huruma police station, which now houses an estimated 1,200 people.

Others told tales of lucky escapes from death. At Nairobi's St. Monica Catholic Church, mother-of-five Benter waited Wednesday for her 18-year-old son to return from a nearby health clinic, where he had gone to seek treatment for machete wounds. Musa was attacked when he fled the family house when it was torched hours after the election results were broadcast on December 30.

Miyawa was also sheltering in the church with her five children after losing her house and most of her possessions during an attack some 10 days ago on the Dandora Estate, close to the Mathare slums. "All I am asking for is peace, only peace," Miyawa said.

"Groups of youths were shouting at each other. One group shouted ODM and the other PNU. Then all hell broke loose and people began burning houses," she recalled, referring to Kenya's main rival political parties the Orange Democratic Movement (ODM) and the ruling Party of National Unity (PNU), whose narrow polls win has been bitterly disputed by the opposition.

Up to 600 people are believed to have been killed in the post-election violence in and another 255,000 people displaced from their homes, mainly in the Rift Valley, Western and Nairobi provinces.

The government is recommending the consolidation of displacement sites for better security and more efficient delivery of assistance. On Wednesday morning, a four-person UNHCR team travelled to the flashpoint town of Eldoret, located some 400 kilometres north of Nairobi, to help with camp coordination. Another UNHCR team will travel to Nakuru, capital of Rift Valley Province.

"We expect to work with local authorities and various non-governmental organizations managing camps to agree on minimum standards on services in each camp and also ensure consistency in the delivery of services in the sites." said Eddie Gedalof, UNHCR's acting representative in Kenya.

In neighbouring Uganda, the situation remains relatively stable. Some 3,400 Kenyans have been registered by the Ugandan Red Cross in Busia, Malaba and Lwakhakha. Small numbers of people continue to arrive through the border crossings at Busia and Malaba.

Many of the refugees are camping in schools that are set to reopen for the new school year in February. UNHCR is working with the government of Uganda to look at alternative accommodation for the refugees.

By Emmanuel Nyabera and Millicent Mutuli in Nairobi, Kenya

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Kenya Floods Threaten Refugees

Flood waters in north-eastern Kenya in mid-November, caused havoc in the Dadaab refugee complex of three camps. Over 100,000 of the 160,000 refugees have been badly affected by the flooding, particularly in Ifo camp. Refugees' homes were swept away and latrines have overflowed and collapsed. The main supply route linking Dadaab to the rest of Kenya has been cut by the rains, blocking all aid deliveries by road.

To get refugees to safety on higher ground, UNHCR started transferring people to Hagadera camp, 20kms away – often using donkey carts. A series of airlifts has brought in fuel for generators, emergency health kits, tarpaulins, and shovels to fill sandbags to keep the flood waters at bay. Essentials items such as plastic tarpaulins, sleeping mats, and food have been distributed to refugees who lost everything.

These floods have been compared to the massive flooding which followed the record 1997 El Nino rains that swamped much of low-lying eastern Kenya.

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Flood Airdrop in Kenya

Over the weekend, UNHCR with the help of the US military began an emergency airdrop of some 200 tonnes of relief supplies for thousands of refugees badly hit by massive flooding in the Dadaab refugee camps in northern Kenya.

In a spectacular sight, 16 tonnes of plastic sheeting, mosquito nets, tents and blankets, were dropped on each run from the C-130 transport plane onto a site cleared of animals and people. Refugees loaded the supplies on trucks to take to the camps.

Dadaab, a three-camp complex hosting some 160,000 refugees, mainly from Somalia, has been cut off from the world for a month by heavy rains that washed away the road connecting the remote camps to the Kenyan capital, Nairobi. Air transport is the only way to get supplies into the camps.

UNHCR has moved 7,000 refugees from Ifo camp, worst affected by the flooding, to Hagadera camp, some 20 km away. A further 7,000 refugees have been moved to higher ground at a new site, called Ifo 2.

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