NAIROBI
The UN refugee agency said a total
of 26,819 Somali refugees have confirmed their intention to voluntarily return
home and are waiting to be facilitated to return to the Horn of Africa nation.
The UNHCR said in its bi-monthly
report released on Sunday that some 2,525 returnees were supported to
voluntarily return to Somalia by flight and road convoys from September 16-30.
“In total as of September 30, 32,949
somali refugees had returned home since December 8, 2014, when UNHCR started
supporting voluntary return of Somali refugees in Kenya, out of which 26,848
were supported in 2016 alone,” UNHCR said.
Kenya in collaboration with the UN
refugee agency are working on a program that will ensure a smooth and voluntary
repatriation of over 300,000 refugees living in five sites at the Dadaab
refugee camp after Nairobi announced the closure of the camp.
Kenya, which hosted protracted
negotiations that culminated in the formation of the transitional federal
government of Somalia, says the refugee situation continues to pose security
threats to Nairobi and the region apart from the humanitarian crisis.
According to the UNHCR, road convoys
were suspended from August 30, after the Jubaland administration notified UNHCR
Somalia about their decision not to receive any more returnees until
integration processes inside Somalia are addressed.
FLIGHTS SUSPENDED
“The road convoys still remain
suspended and refugees are not currently travelling by road any more.
Similarly, flight departures to
Mogadishu have been suspended on September 25 because of security related
issues in Mogadishu, but flight departures are expected to resume once the
security context improves,” UNHCR said.
The statement comes after
international medical charity, Medicins Sans Frontieres (MSF) said a vast
majority of refugees do not want to go back to Somalia and urged Kenya thus to
consider alternatives to closing down the Dadaab camp.
Many refugees surveyed cited by the
charity list their main concerns as fear of forced recruitment into armed
groups and the threat of sexual violence.
Other concerns are the absence of
health care in Somalia, the medical aid group said. MSF said its findings raise
doubts about the voluntary nature of the repatriation programme being carried
out by the Kenyan government and the UNHCR.
“It is unacceptable that, without
any other solution being offered, thousands are essentially being pushed back
into conflict and acute crisis — the very conditions they fled,” said Liesbeth
Aelbrecht, the head of the MSF mission in Kenya.
According to the MSF report, 86 per
cent of surveyed refugees in Dagahaley do not want to go back to Somalia. Fears
around insecurity were acute with nearly all — males and females — stating that
the risk of sexual violence is high. MSF is therefore questioning the
“voluntary” nature of the returns that the UNHCR is helping facilitate.
‘‘Any return is voluntary, and
refugees must have all necessary information about the services and conditions
which will meet them in Somalia,” said Liesbeth.
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