MSF calls on the Government of Kenya and UNHCR to relocate refugees to the better Ifo 2 camp, as agreed 12 days ago.
The international medical aid agency Medécins Sans Frontières MSF (Doctors Without Borders) is deeply concerned by the relocation of Somali refugees in Dadaab to Ifo 3 extension camp. The relocation, which began yesterday under the auspices of the UNHCR, has been carried out with little transparency or consultation with other agencies on the ground and the refugee community.

Some 200 families per day are being relocated to Ifo 3, a camp with little existing basic services, including water and sanitation. It is expected that the camp will hold a total of 60,000 refugees, which is 20,000 more people than it was originally designed for. NGOs were alerted only last Friday of the relocation exercise and although water is currently being trucked to the new camp and latrines are rapidly being dug, the camp does not meet the minimum humanitarian standards.
Further this camp has no hospital structure, which will force MSF to refer patients in need of hospitalization or in-patient therapeutic feeding to either Dagahaley camp or Ifo camp hospitals, both of which are already operating beyond full capacity.
Click here to see more photos by Brendan Bannon at the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya.
Meanwhile, just a few
kilometers away lies Ifo 2, a camp which was due to open last November,
and is already equipped with boreholes, latrines and showers,
electricity, some shelter and schools. MSF calls on the Government of
Kenya and the UNHCR to ensure the immediate relocation of refugees to
Ifo 2 as announced by the government 12 days ago.
Refugees
fleeing drought and conflict in Somalia continue to arrive in large
numbers in Dadaab, and last week alone, 5,117 new refugees arrived in
Dadaab, bringing the total of new arrivals since January to 81,463 and
the total number of refugees in Dadaab to 387,893. Whilst many of these
refugees remain on the outskirts of the camps they are still not
receiving adequate assistance, with delays in registration and access
to food, water and shelter is tipping them over the edge.
MSF is currently treating over 2400 children in its ambulatory
therapeutic programme in Dadaab and 138 in its in-patient therapeutic
feeding centre. 5047 children with moderate acute malnutrition are
enrolled in the supplementary feeding programme.
MSF has
been working in Dagahaley camp since March 2009, providing medical care
including surgery and maternal health services, in a 170-bed hospital,
and offers vaccinations, antenatal care and mental healthcare in six
health posts in the camps and outskirts. In addition, since earlier
this year MSF is working on the outskirts of Ifo camp, providing
primary health care and nutritional assistance to the new arrivals.


