Beautiful photos, terrible story, from Time Light Box. Photos from a the world's largest refugee camp in Dadaab, Eastern Kenya.
For more photos and the full story click here.
Somalis fleeing drought and famine in the Horn of Africa. Hawa, 40, who arrived here recently after a 23-day trek with seven children, is disappointed. “What I found is that there is little difference between Somalia and a refugee camp,” she says. The Somali refugees must make a perilous journey from their conflict-ridden country. They navigate for days through forbidding terrain, usually on foot. Most of those who arrive are badly malnourished; aid workers say many children don’t survive the trip, and some die as soon as they arrive. Inside the Dadaab refugee complex, the world’s largest, 380,000 people are crammed into a space meant to hold a fourth of that number. Built in the 1990s, mainly for Somalis escaping a war between the government and Islamic militants that rages to this day, the complex cannot accommodate the influx of refugees streaming across the border: 30,000 people are estimated to have arrived in June, a steep climb from the monthly average of 5,000 last year. “This is the most problematic and challenging refugee situation in the world,” said António Guterres, chief of UNHCR, the U.N. agency that runs the camps, after a visit in early July.
Under pressure from Guterres and with promises of aid from donors around the world, the Kenyan government may open a new encampment. But it would serve only 40,000 people, not nearly enough to hold the tide of human misery outside the fence.
Sam Loewenberg is a freelance journalist based in Berlin. Loewenberg, the 2012 Neiman Global Health Fellow, previously reported for TIME in Spain. Loewenberg’s trip to Dadaab was funded by the Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting. Jehad Nga is a freelance photographer based in Nairobi. Nga recently wrote for LightBox about his family’s experiences in Libya before Gaddafi.
For more photos and the full story click here.
Haven and Hell: The World’s Largest Refugee Camp
Jehad Nga for TIME |
Somalis fleeing drought and famine in the Horn of Africa. Hawa, 40, who arrived here recently after a 23-day trek with seven children, is disappointed. “What I found is that there is little difference between Somalia and a refugee camp,” she says. The Somali refugees must make a perilous journey from their conflict-ridden country. They navigate for days through forbidding terrain, usually on foot. Most of those who arrive are badly malnourished; aid workers say many children don’t survive the trip, and some die as soon as they arrive. Inside the Dadaab refugee complex, the world’s largest, 380,000 people are crammed into a space meant to hold a fourth of that number. Built in the 1990s, mainly for Somalis escaping a war between the government and Islamic militants that rages to this day, the complex cannot accommodate the influx of refugees streaming across the border: 30,000 people are estimated to have arrived in June, a steep climb from the monthly average of 5,000 last year. “This is the most problematic and challenging refugee situation in the world,” said António Guterres, chief of UNHCR, the U.N. agency that runs the camps, after a visit in early July.
Under pressure from Guterres and with promises of aid from donors around the world, the Kenyan government may open a new encampment. But it would serve only 40,000 people, not nearly enough to hold the tide of human misery outside the fence.
Sam Loewenberg is a freelance journalist based in Berlin. Loewenberg, the 2012 Neiman Global Health Fellow, previously reported for TIME in Spain. Loewenberg’s trip to Dadaab was funded by the Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting. Jehad Nga is a freelance photographer based in Nairobi. Nga recently wrote for LightBox about his family’s experiences in Libya before Gaddafi.
No comments:
Post a Comment