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Staff blog: Sabine Wilke, Emergency Media Officer, in Dadaab

Newly arrived refugee children in Dadaab. © CARE / Deborah UnderdownNewly arrived refugee children in Dadaab. © CARE / Deborah UnderdownAugust 9, 2011

“It is unfortunate that the rains have decided to not fall for the last two years.” The Kenyan man sitting next to me on the plane to Nairobi has a very poetic choice of language, which makes for a rather stark contrast when you consider what he refers to: His country and the whole region are in the middle of a humanitarian crisis triggered by a severe drought, which is affecting almost 11 million people. And yes, some parts of this region have not seen rainfall in two years.

My neighbor continues: “It is all about water. If you don’t have water, you cannot raise animals. And without animals… well, that is their life insurance.”

Touching down in Dadaab the next morning, I remember that friendly voice. The refugee camp in the North of Kenya is now home to more than 400,000 mostly Somali refugees. Their numbers have risen immensely in the last weeks, due to the ongoing drought and insecurity in their own country. The landscape is dry and plain up here, and one wonders how any group of people, let alone such a high number of refugees, can survive in these difficult circumstances.

This is my first time to Dadaab, but weirdly enough, everything seemed very familiar. Maybe that’s a CARE thing: The refugee assistance program for Dadaab is one of our longest humanitarian missions, many colleagues have worked here at one time or another. And for years, we have continuously talked about it to the public, launched appeals and tried to get journalists interested. But now, with an average of more than 1,000 new arrivals every day and extremely high numbers of malnutrition, Dadaab has become something like the epicenter of the current humanitarian crisis in the horn of Africa.

But a walk through Dagahaley, one of the three camps, also shows the impressive efforts by all the agencies on the ground to provide basic services to all these people. We pass by the reception area where CARE distributes food and other relief items to new arrivals, we see trucks delivering water, and visit the service tents – all of this I have heard about before, but it is still a whole different story to see the work with your own eyes and listen to the admirably energetic colleagues explaining their work.

And we meet Amina Akdi Hassa, who serves as chairlady for the camp Dagahaley. She has been living here for 20 years and is a leader and an advocate for her community. “I want the world to know that they should please share our problems with us”, she explains. “We have had five schools here since the 1990’s, but now there are so many more children.”

The people of Dadaab are talking. But is the world listening?

Sabine Wilke
Emergency Media Officer CARE International

 

Please donate to our emergency response fund

Longer term work

In addition to our immediate response in the face of this current food crisis CARE International emphasises the need to tackle the long-term, underlying causes of poverty. We have been present in the region for over 25 years and are helping families to break the cycle of hunger and to adapt to the changing climate and recurring droughts.

Our ongoing work in the region includes:

  • Maintenance, protection and development of water points and wells.
  • Working with women in Mandera, Kenya to revive traditional food preservation techniques.
  • Vaccination of animals to prevent diseases breaking out as they congregate at remaining water points.
  • Helping families have more consistent sources of income by supporting them in diversifying their work.

Read more stories from the East Africa Food Crisis:

Staff blog: Sabine Wilke, Emergency Media Officer in Dadaab - 12 August

Video: East Africa Crisis - CARE's response - 12 August

Slideshow: Dadaab refugee camp - 12 August

Somalia to Dadaab: a journey filled with danger - 10 August

Somalia: famine declared in three additional regions of South-Central - 5 August

Ethiopia: in a drought prevention pays - 26 July 2011

Staff Blog: Confusion and waiting in Dadaab, Kenya - 18 July 2011

Staff Blog: "The need for food assistance is increasing at alarming rate" - 16 July 2011

Urgency grows in the Horn of Africa - 15 July 2011

Slideshow: More pictures from the East Africa Food Crisis - 14 July 2011

Staff Blog: Horn of Africa Food Crisis - Dadaab refugee camp - 8 July 2011

Slideshow: East Africa Food Crisis - 8 July 2011

Horn of Africa: The most severe food crisis in the world - 1 July 2011

Reviving traditions to survice drought in Kenya - 3 June 2011

Ethiopia food shortage: The worst is yet to come - 25 May 2011

Press releases from the East Africa food Crisis:

Saving cattle can save lives in drought-stricken Africa - 29 July 2011

DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal reaches £30 million - 25 July 2011

DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal reaches £27 million - 22 July 2011

Somalia famine: CARE scales up response and urges easing on restrictions to aid delivery - 20 July 2011

DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal reaches £20 million - 18 July 2011

DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal reaches £18 million - 18 July 2011

Violence against women doubles in giant East Africa refugee camp - 17 July 2011

DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal reaches £15 million - 14 July 2011

DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal reaches £13 million - 13 July 2011

DEC agencies prepare to scale up work in Somalia - 13 July 2011

Reported cases of sexual violence have quadrupled among refugees - 12 July 2011

Horn of Africa food crisis: CARE launches £16 million appeal - 11 July 2011

UK donations for East Africa Crisis Appeal reach £8 million - 10 July 2011

DEC aims to help prevent East Africa Crisis becoming a catastrophe - 10 July 2011

DEC East Africa Crisis Appeal reaches £6 million - 9 July 2011

Aid delivered in East Africa as DEC Appeals broadcast in UK - 8 July 2011

Africa’s newest country in grip of food crisis - 8 July 2011

DEC announces East Africa Crisis Appeal - 7 July 2011

Drought in Kenya: “Situation of refugees is grave” - 4 July 2011

Horn of Africa: CARE calls for more attention to severe food insecurity - 19 May 2011

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Note to editors

CARE fights poverty and injustice in 87 countries around the world to help the world’s poorest people find routes out of poverty. CARE also delivers emergency aid to survivors of war and natural disasters, and helps people rebuild their lives in the aftermath.

Press Officer contact information:

Kathryn Richards - Senior Press Officer
Email: richards@careinternational.org
Tel: +44 (0)207 091 6047

Deborah Underdown - Press Officer
Email: underdown@careinternational.org
Tel: +44 (0)207 091 6063

Josephine Broughton - PR and Communications Executive
Email: broughton@careinternational.org
Tel: +44 (0)207 091 6014

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