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UNHCR appeals for US$60 million to help growing numbers of displaced Somalis

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UNHCR appeals for US$60 million to help growing numbers of displaced Somalis

UNHCR appeals for an extra US$60 million to fund operations helping forcibly displaced Somalis within their troubled state and in four neighbouring countries.
12 May 2010
Somali refugees in north-east Kenya's Dadaab refugee complex.

Somali refugees in north-east Kenya's Dadaab refugee complex. Kenya took part in the ministerial meeting.

GENEVA, May 12 (UNHCR) - The UN refugee agency, alarmed at the rapidly deteriorating security situation and growing displacement in Somalia, appealed on Wednesday for an extra US$60 million to fund operations helping forcibly displaced Somalis within the troubled state and in four neighbouring countries.

The two supplementary appeals launched in Geneva address the increasing needs in Somalia, Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya and Yemen as well as the extension of the Ifo camp in Dadaab, north-east Kenya. UNHCR's overall budgetary needs for this year in Somalia and the four neighbouring countries now amount to US$424.7 million. So far this year, UNHCR has received 36 per cent of its global comprehensive needs budget.

Escalating violence in southern and central Somalia has forced an estimated 200,000 Somalis to leave their homes this year alone. The vast majority remain displaced within the country as it is getting more dangerous and difficult to flee across the borders.

"The displacement crisis is worsening with the deterioration of the situation inside Somalia and we need to prepare fast for new and possibly large-scale displacement," said UNHCR Deputy High Commissioner T. Alexander Aleinikoff, who has visited Somalia, Ethiopia, Djibouti and Kenya within the past two weeks.

"We need to be ready. We have a duty of care to strengthen efforts to provide protection and to improve the living conditions of a refugee population that fled violence, indiscriminate fighting and human rights violations. We also need to be prepared for the possibility of continued instability in Somalia and the population displacement associated with that," Aleinikoff added.

In Somalia and all four neighbouring countries, UNHCR and its partners are struggling to respond fully and effectively to the protection and assistance needs of some 550,000 Somali refugees and 1.4 million internally displaced people.

The situation is particularly dire in Dadaab, Kenya - one of the world's oldest, largest and most congested refugee sites where there are growing fears of even more arrivals soon.

The emergency assistance to Somali refugees in Ifo, one of three refugee camps in Dadaab, focuses on relieving dramatic overcrowding. The three adjacent camps are stretched to three times their initial capacity and thousands more people are continuing to arrive each month. During the first four months of this year Kenya received more than 21,000 people.

Violence and fighting in their homeland forced more than 120,000 Somalis to seek refuge in neighbouring countries during 2009. Kenya bore the brunt of the displacement. This year to date, more than 37,000 Somalis have sought asylum in the region and further afield. Most arrived from Mogadishu and southern Somalia. The unfolding crisis is further compounded by severe drought, poverty, food insecurity and periodic heavy flooding in the Horn of Africa.

The new funding is mainly needed to improve services in existing camps, in particular water supply, shelter and health facilities. UNHCR will also use these funds to open two new camps for Somali refugees - one in Yemen and another in Djibouti. Additional funds are also needed for registration and legal assistance, complementary and supplementary feeding, and provision of basic aid items - especially for the hundreds of thousands of displaced inside Somalia.