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Kenya: UNHCR seeks funds to respond to flooding in Dadaab refugee camps


This is a summary of what was said by UNHCR spokesperson Andrej Mahecic – to whom quoted text may be attributed – at the press briefing, on 6 November 2009, at the Palais des Nations in Geneva.

UNHCR is asking donor countries for $2.8 million to help more than 300,000 refugees in two camps in Kenya threatened by flooding. We have already begun to make engineering improvements in the two camps – Kakuma in northwestern Kenya and Dadaab in the east on the Somalia border. Much of the money will be used to pre-position essential items such as fuel, blankets, plasticsheets, and to respond to possible outbreaks of disease.

We fear that the looming El Niño phenomenon – a change in the atmosphere and ocean of the tropical Pacific region that produces floods, droughts and other weather disturbances in many regions of the world – may now threaten the 338,000 mostly Somali refugees in the two camps, which in any case usually are flooded for three months every year.

When heavy rains started three weeks ago, UNHCR began digging trenches and placing sandbags around hospitals, boreholes and other strategic locations in both camps. We have also been repairing culverts on seasonal riverbeds that connect different parts of the camps, particularly Dadaab, which is actually a complex of three camps. Without these measures, many sections of these camps would have been inundated.

We are also preparing to locate to higher ground within the camps refugees who might be worst affected by the floods, particularly the chronically ill, disabled people, the elderly and children and teenagers on their own.

In order to protect refugees in Kakuma, the camp harder hit by floods in the past, we have diverted two seasonal rivers, the Tarach and Lodoket, that have often inundated lower grounds.

The worst flooding in Kakuma was recorded in May 2003 when some 16,800 refugees saw their homes destroyed. A number of latrines also overflowed and collapsed, leading to the spread of water-bone diseases, including cholera and dysentery. The overcrowded Dadaab complex, now home to more refugees than any other site in the world, last experienced severe flooding in 2006.

For further information on this topic, please contact:

In Nairobi, Yusuf Hassan on mobile: +254 737 564 033

In Nairobi, Emmanuel Nyabera on mobile: +254 733 995 975

In Geneva, Fatoumata Lejeune-Kaba on mobile: +41 79 249 34 83

With the exception of public UN sources, reproduction or redistribution of the above text, in whole, part or in any form, requires the prior consent of the original source. The opinions expressed in the documents carried by this site are those of the authors and are not necessarily shared by UN OCHA or ReliefWeb.
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FIND RELATED DOCUMENTS


By Emergency: Somalia; Kenya: Floods - Sep 2009
By Country: Kenya
By Source: United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR)
By Type: Press Releases