Somali Refugees Left in Kenya's Dadaab Face Dangerous Choices

Somali refugees in Dadaab
Somali refugees look through a barbed wire fence at a food distribution center in Dagahale, one of several refugee settlements in Dadaab, Kenya, on October 8, 2013. Kenya has vowed to close the camps and... Siegfried Modola/Reuters

Hot, dusty wind has constantly passed through the thatch and thorn of Kenya's Dadaab refugee camps since they opened in the early 1990s.

In May, however, a new wind created a chill among the estimated 340,000 mostly Somali refugees living here when President Uhuru Kenyatta declared that Dadaab would be closed by the end of 2016.

After the announcement, Kenyan authorities, together with officials from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR), stepped up a program to identify and process refugees willing to go back to Somalia.

Refugees opting for "voluntary repatriation" were promised a cash grant of $200 per person upon leaving and another $200 upon arrival, as well as utensils and other household items and a promise of six months of food assistance—though it is unclear that continuing support is really occurring. Those who refused were given no assurances that they would be allowed to stay.

A Human Rights Watch (HRW) team was in Dadaab from August 17-24 interviewing refugees about the nightmare they have endured for the past four months and the anxiety they are now experiencing about the four months to come. Some have agreed to return, others have said they want to stay, but all express the same fear: "What happens if we don't accept the money and assistance to repatriate now? Will we be loaded onto trucks and forced back with nothing later in the year?"

No official has assured any of the people we interviewed that they will not be forced back if they do not agree to go now.

Conditions in Somalia do not appear conducive to refugees returning. The U.S. Agency for International Development's July 2016 assessment of conditions in Somalia said that malnutrition rates in the Horn of Africa country remain among the highest in the world and recorded 10,000 cholera cases in the first six months of 2016. UNHCR's latest assessment of conditions in southern/central Somalia in May found: "Civilians continue to be severely affected by the conflict, with reports of civilians being killed and injured in conflict-related violence, widespread sexual and gender-based violence against women and children, forced recruitment of children, and large-scale displacement."

At the moment, it is not even clear whether local Somali factions will allow returns to and through their areas of control.

In 2013, Kenya, Somalia, and UNHCR signed a Tripartite Agreement—set to expire in November—that outlined the standards for voluntary repatriation of Somali refugees. In June, they reiterated their commitment to work within the framework of that agreement, yet also noted the "prospect" of reducing the Dadaab refugee population by 150,000 by the end of 2016.

The communique of the June meeting said nothing about the fate of the other estimated 190,000 refugees in the camps. UNHCR's silence, combined with Kenyan government statements that Dadaab will be closed by the end of November—repeated daily in radio broadcasts here—is why so many of the Somali refugees we have talked to feel that they have no choice but to leave.

The refugees' fears are reinforced by their memories of the Kenyan government's previous heavy-handed efforts to coerce Somalis to go home, including Operation Usalama Watch in 2014, which featured harassment, arbitrary detention, forced relocation to refugee camps and summary deportations.

How many of the more than 20,000 Somali refugees who have "voluntarily" returned are now displaced internally in unsustainable and unsafe areas of Somalia because they thought if they didn't "choose" to go with money and assistance, they would be dumped there with nothing in the next few months? How many of the 1,000 people per day the Kenyan government is now sending back will be heading into danger?

If they truly care about being respectful of refugee wishes, UNHCR, the U.N. agency mandated to protect the world's refugees, and the Kenyan government need to acknowledge that refugee repatriation cannot be considered remotely voluntary unless refugees are assured that an option to stay in dignity actually exists.

Bill Frelick is the director of Human Rights Watch's Refugee Rights Program.

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