Kenya Refugees Go Hungry as Africa Aid Needs Mount

Print

By Helen Nyambura

MSNBC News
January 22, 2003

The United Nations, which cut rations by 25 percent last week for 220,000 refugees camped in northern Kenya, said it was in danger of running out of food supplies in the next few months unless donors found more resources. With 38 million people in danger of starvation in Africa, donors risk neglecting refugees in Kenya in favour of higher profile crises in southern Africa and Ethiopia, aid workers said.


''The fact that there are so many more people in Africa in need of food does not mean that these people here are in less need than they were,'' said Laura Melo, spokeswoman for the U.N. emergency food aid arm, the World Food Programme (WFP). ''That is what we are stressing, do not forget these people because this food is all they get,'' she told Reuters in Kenya's Kakuma refugee camp while aid workers doled out maize and beans to hundreds of refugees gathered for their rations.

Kakuma, a large cluster of mud huts set in the parched northwest of Kenya, and Dadaab camp in the east, is home to refugees from across the Horn of Africa, with most coming from neighbouring Sudan and Somalia. The refugees have few opportunities to farm in the desolate wasteland surrounding Kakuma and Dadaab, rendering them almost entirely dependent on food aid. The WFP launches periodic appeals for food for the camps.

''I have no future in Kakuma,'' said 52-year-old Mary Achuoth, flipping maize meal pancakes outside her grass-thatched hut to feed 11 people in her household. ''If they abandon me here, I have nothing to survive on. The soil is infertile and there is no water.''

Refugees live on maize, beans, wheat flour and a little cooking oil handed out by aid workers. Vegetables are a luxury they can only afford when they barter their rations with the local Turkana people.

CHRONIC SHORTAGE

Aid workers say there is a chronic shortage of food in the camps, where rations meant to last families 15 days are usually finished within 12 days. Most of the refugee children going to school in the camp turn up for classes hungry.

Some 14 million people are threatened by food shortages in six south African countries -- Zimbabwe, Zambia, Mozambique, Malawi, Swaziland and Lesotho. The United Nations says time is running out to send food aid to 11 million people in drought-stricken Ethiopia. Neighbouring Eritrea called in November for urgent aid to feed 2.3 million people at risk of starvation because of drought.

The WFP has appealed for 20,000 tons of food, worth $10 million dollars, to feed refugees in Kenya until September. The number of refugees in Kenya has increased significantly since 1999 because of lingering insecurity in neighbouring Sudan, Somalia, Ethiopia and Eritrea.


More Information on UN Finance
More Information on UN Programmes, Funds and Specialized Agencies
More Information on World Hunger

FAIR USE NOTICE: This page contains copyrighted material the use of which has not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. Global Policy Forum distributes this material without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. We believe this constitutes a fair use of any such copyrighted material as provided for in 17 U.S.C § 107. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond fair use, you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.