Tag Archives: Kenya

For Somali refugees, handwashing lessons from a surprising teacher

Farhiya, center, washes her hands as a crowd looks on. Photo courtesy of CRS

In a refugee camp in northern Kenya, someone is teaching people how to wash their hands properly. The demonstrator lathers the soap, pours water, and rubs her hands together in a circular motion. She works slowly and systematically, making sure her nails are clean too. A crowd of children gathers, watching. Their “teacher” is three years old.

The little girl, Farhiya, is probably saving some of her friends’ lives. Hundreds of thousands of Somali refugees like her are crowded into the camp, and disease spreads quickly. In East Africa, thousands of children die of diarrhea.

Farhiya learned about good hygiene because of sanitation programmes carried out by CRS (a Caritas member based in the US). ‘’My father, who works for CRS, taught me to wash my hands to remove dirt and germs which might make me sick,” she says. Her father fled a port city in Somalia in September 2011 to escape fighting, bringing his wife and three children to Dadaab camp.

In Dadaab refugee camp, CRS has built latrines to serve thousands of Somali refugees who fled drought and conflict in their country. Photo courtesy of CRS

The CRS project—in a part of the camp called Kambioos—is helping more than 13,000 refugees. CRS builds latrines and trains the refugees to keep the latrine areas clean. CRS also trains community members to teach others about good hand washing practices. To reinforce the message, CRS is distributing soap and installing hand washing stations. “Hygiene promoters” from a local partner organization called FaIDA (Fafi Integrated Development Agency) are paid a stipend to train their fellow refugees.

Farhiya might not understand the exact connection between germs and diarrhea, but she has perfected the art of hand washing. When asked what else she can use if there is no soap, she says that there is always soap from the soap distribution; as if to prove her point, she runs to the side of a tent and comes back with a bar of soap and a soap dish. She quickly fetches a jerry can of water and motions her father to pour water on her hands as she lathers the soap. After following the handwashing steps she’s learned, she shakes the water off and proudly stretches her arms out in front of the crowd, saying, ‘’Look at my clean hands.”

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Caritas aids Somali refugee women in Kenya

In summer 2011, when famine and violence were engulfing her country, Fadumo “Mama” Sharif Mohamed left Somalia with her husband and ten children. On their eight-day trek to the Dadaab refugee camp in Kenya, militia attacked them and they lost the family’s food. Her children, like thousands of others, suffered from malnutrition.

But she and her family made it to the refugee camp and were put in a section called Kambioos, where Catholic Relief Services (a Caritas member based in the USA) is working to build and improve water systems.

Fadumo became a leader as she settled into camp life. She was the founding member of the MIDNIMO women’s group, which began with 25 people and today has 183 members. The group does basket weaving, woodcarving, and henna decorating, and also bakes traditional bread. Due to strong management, the women’s group is able to successfully earn money by selling their wares in one of the marketplaces in the refugee camp. The profit they earn from their sales is put back into the business and it is then subdivided amongst group members. Continue reading

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Filed under East Africa Food Crisis 2011

Radio interview: Kenya food crisis

While Caritas and other aid agencies have helped millions of East Africans through the worst of the region’s food crisis, more remains to be done. Susan Hodges of Vatican Radio interviews Caritas’ Laura Sheahen about her visit to Caritas projects in Kenya–and about the ongoing impact of the 2011 drought. Listen to the interview

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Filed under East Africa Food Crisis 2011, Emergencies

Slum fire in Kenya puts focus on social injustice

Rt. Rev Martin Kivuva, talking to one of the victims at Tom Mboya Camp during his visit. Credit: Caritas

Caritas Kenya is supporting survivors of a huge fire that devastated the Sinai slums in the Kenyan capital Nairobi on 12 September.

Over a hundred people were killed and a hundred more injured after a pipeline burst and leaked fuel into the Ngong river, which passes through this slum area. Kenya Pipeline Company  managing director Selest Kilinda blamed a faulty valve.

People from the densely populated shanties had already started siphoning the fuel when the fire started. People cooking close to the pipeline may have sparked off the inferno.

A group of Caritas staff members and church leaders visited the site of the disaster and met with survivors in a temporary camp and those with serious burn injuries in the hospital.

The camp hosts about 200 men, women and children. Caritas Kenya jointly with Caritas Nairobi donated food items, blankets and mosquito on 14 September in the camp.

Rt. Rev. Martin Kivuva, Bishop Chairman of Caritas Kenya sent condolence message to the relatives and friends who have been affected.

A statement by the Bishops Conference said the scale of the tragedy was of unheard of proportions and urged the Kenya government to take greater responsibility in preventing future disasters.  “The government must in effect take full responsibility to transform the living environments of the citizens,”it said. The statement urged political leaders to be the agents of development in the country and not of corruption and poverty.

A similar tragedy occurred in Sachang’wan in 2009 when two people were killed as they scrambled to collect spilt fuel, and the Kenyan bishops say this shows there is an urgent need for civic education about the inherent dangers.

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Fleeing Somalia: the men who kill for goats

A Somali refugee mother (right) whose 4-year-old son was killed by militants. Her sister-in-law sits next to her. She and her remaining children now live in a refugee camp near Dadaab, northeast Kenya. Following a severe drought, many families faced starvation and left Somalia on foot, risking attacks by armed bandits and wild animals. Thousands of refugees are flooding into Dadaab every week. Photo by Laura Sheahen for Catholic Relief Services

By Laura Sheahen

“Aden, my oldest son, was four years old. He was watching our goats,” says Ahada, a Somali woman in her early twenties. “Men with guns came and wanted the animals. Aden shouted, ‘Don’t take our goats!’”

Ahada’s small son was caught in the midst of the chaotic, seemingly never-ending war in Somalia. Armed bandits, militias and other violent groups terrorize the country’s rural population, who are mostly nomadic herdsmen. Children are not spared. Aden wasn’t.

Aden was shot and killed in the midst of a drought that was leading to famine. Ahada’s husband was also killed by militants. After that she knew she had to flee. She’d heard of a country called Kenya, so she took her two children there, crossing the border.

Thousands of other mothers were making the journey as well. Thirty-year-old Hawa, a mother of seven, was eight months pregnant as she walked for ten days, carrying her toddler on her back.

Children were dying where she lived, but more slowly, not from bullets. “Animals, people died due to drought,” she says. “They died of hunger. Many children died, too many for me to count.”

In June 2011, Ahada and Hawa reached the sprawling refugee camps of Dadaab in northeast Kenya. There they joined fellow Somalis who made the same journey decades ago.

“I was 10 years old when we came here,” says a man named Somai. His story is similar to Aden’s, but he lived. “One day when we were living in Somalia, people attacked us, took our goats, and killed my father,” he says. “They hit me in the chest with the butt of a gun, and I fell unconscious.”

He recovered enough to flee on foot with his family. “I will never forget that trip. We had no food. We were eating leaves,” he says. “My brother was almost five. He died of hunger on the way.”

Today, the camp hospitals are full of weak, listless children who survived the journey but are on the edge of starvation. Brought to the hospital in wheelbarrows or on donkey carts, or their mother’s arms, the ones who can swallow are given a high-nutrient paste. Others are hooked to IVs.

And then there are refugee children who are saved, and whose families are alive–but who have lost, forever, the security of having two parents. Mahamud was separated from his wife and children 8 years ago; he was in Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, when war flared up badly. By the time he got to where his family was staying, “everyone was gone,” he says. They had fled from Somalia to Ethiopia, which closed the border. So Mahamud went to Kenya, surviving on grass and leaves as he walked hundreds of miles. Now he’s able to talk to his children every few months, but doesn’t know how he will see them again. He worries they don’t have enough food; Ethiopia has bit hit badly by the recent drought as well.

Though the newly-arrived refugees in the Kenyan camps are putting a strain on water and aid for older residents, Mahamud isn’t upset. “When I see the new arrivals, I always remember what happened to me in Somalia,” he says. “It reminds me that my children are suffering the same way that these people are suffering.”

Laura Sheahen is CRS’ regional information officer for Asia. She is reporting from Kenya.

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Filed under East Africa Food Crisis 2011, Emergencies

Somalis face perilous journey to escape famine

Miss Hawo Abdi sits with her mother and father at Dagahaley camp. Credit Laura Sheahen/CRS

By Laura Sheahen,

Death by starvation, death by lions and hyenas or death by armed bandits. Which do you pick? For refugees streaming out of Somalia, there’s no luxury of choice. They’re facing all three.

Carrying babies in front and toddlers piggyback, clutching small plastic bags of belongings, thousands of Somalis are trudging barefoot for dozens or hundreds of miles. For months, as no rains fell in their homeland, they watched their cattle and goats die of thirst and hunger. Their stocks of corn or flour ran out, and they watched their children growing thinner and weaker. Finally, they gave up hoping that something would change and they left.

They travel in groups of about 50 because danger is all around them: ambushes by men with guns are common in the area. So when they see something threatening in the distance, they run for what cover they can find—not easy in empty brush terrain. “We were running and hiding behind small shrubs,” says one little boy. Some refugees are robbed at gunpoint of their food and few remaining possessions. Some are raped or killed. “They took our clothes, but didn’t hurt me,” says a mother named Ambiya.

At night, packs of hyenas and lions move towards them. “Five or six lions came, and we threw stones to make them go away,” says Bishar, a father of five. “There was the possibility that hyenas would eat us,” says a woman named Amina. “They tried to attack, but we were in group” and escaped.

Some of the Somali refugees don’t even know exactly where they’ve going. “We heard there was a country known as Kenya where people are helped,” says Bishar, hugging his small daughter and looking at her dry, cracked feet.

After ten days of walking, he and his family have reached the refugee camps in the Kenyan area of Dadaab. But they’re still sleeping outside–so many refugees arrive every day that there aren’t enough tents. Some refugees use long sticks to make a dome-shaped skeleton, then cover it with whatever cloth or plastic they can find. Bishar and his family don’t have the sticks, and bandits took their clothes.

Water is available if they walk for it, but they don’t have anything to carry it in.

The official camps have overflowed with people; now refugees are setting up makeshift living spaces on a floodplain that will be a swamp in the autumn. They keep coming, faces seamed with the orange dust that rises from the road. They’ve made it past militants and wild animals. What they don’t know is what they’ll face next.

Laura Sheahen is CRS’ regional information officer for Asia. She is reporting from Kenya.

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Filed under East Africa Food Crisis 2011, Emergencies