Dadaab: The Camps Cannot Go On
Dadaab: The Camps Cannot Go On
Médecins Sans Frontières Calls For Solutions For Dadaab’s Half A Million Somali Refugees
18 June 2012. It is only a
matter of time before the next emergency hits
Dadaab
refugee camp, says a briefing paper released today by
Médecins Sans
Frontières ahead of World Refugee Day.
Dadaab: Shadows of Lives describes
the plight of half a
million refugees living in increasingly
insecure
conditions with nowhere else to go, and argues
that there is an urgent need
to explore
alternatives.
One year after the humanitarian crisis of
2011, malnutrition and mortality
rates have dropped to
pre-emergency levels, says Médecins Sans
Frontières.
But the situation in the camps remains
unacceptable, and – without
significant change – this
pattern of health crises followed by periods of
relative
calm will continue indefinitely, with medical workers
constantly
on their guard for the next
emergency.
“Today, even though people are fed, Dadaab is
no longer a refuge,” says Dr
Elena Velilla, Médecins
Sans Frontières’ country representative in
Kenya.
“It is clear that the current model of the camps
is not working. How many
more nutritional crises or
measles epidemics will it take before we start
looking
for a solution?”
Refugees – most of them women, young
children and the elderly – continue to
arrive from
Somalia. But Dadaab can no longer offer them safety. In
and
around Dadaab, the security situation is getting
worse, affecting services
and the provision of aid by
Médecins Sans Frontières and
other
organisations.
After a number of serious
incidents in October 2011, including the
kidnapping of
two Médecins Sans Frontières aid workers,
humanitarian
activities in the camps were scaled down and
registration and medical
screening of newly arrived
refugees brought to a halt. In the eight months
since
then, new arrivals have had to find shelter with long-term
refugees
in the already overcrowded camps, and there have
been outbreaks of measles
and cholera.
Possible
alternatives to Dadaab put forward by Médecins Sans
Frontières
include persuading the international
community to allow more refugees to
resettle abroad,
relocating the refugees to a safer area in camps of a
more
manageable size, and developing opportunities for
refugees to become more
self-reliant.
“A refugee camp
is not a long-term solution,” says Dr Velilla.
“Thousands
of vulnerable people have already suffered
too much. In a safe haven,
health and dignity should be
guaranteed. As long as no action is taken, the
Somali
refugees will continue to pay the price.”
Médecins Sans
Frontières runs a 300-bed hospital in Dagahaley, one of
the
five camps that make up Dadaab. There are currently
more than 850 severely
malnourished children enrolled in
the nutrition programme. Médecins Sans
Frontières staff
carry out an average of 14,000 medical consultations
each
month and admit 1,000 refugees as inpatients. The
hospital also provides
maternity care, surgery and
treatment for HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis.
Médecins Sans
Frontières also runs four health posts in Dagahaley
providing
basic healthcare including antenatal care,
vaccinations and
mental
healthcare.
ENDS