From: hrw
The Kenyan authorities should reconsider a new plan to forcibly move
50,000 registered refugees and asylum seekers from cities to overcrowded
and underserviced refugee camps. News media reported that Interior
Cabinet Secretary Joseph Ole Lenku made the announcement on March 25,
2014, two days after unidentified attackers killed six people in a
church near Kenya’s coastal city of Mombasa.
Such a move would violate a July 26, 2013 Kenyan High Court ruling, which quashed an identical government refugee relocation plan from December 2012. The court said the relocation would violate refugees’ dignity and free movement rights, and would risk indirectly forcing them back to Somalia.
It also said the authorities had not proved that the move, which
followed a series of grenade and other attacks in Kenya by unidentified
people, would help protect national security.
“Kenya is once again using attacks by unknown criminals to stigmatize all refugees as potential terrorists,” said Gerry Simpson,
senior refugee researcher. “This plan to force tens of thousands of
refugees into appalling conditions in severely overcrowded camps flouts a
crystal clear court ruling banning such a move.”
Ole Lenku said on March 25 that,“All refugees residing outside the
designated refugee camps of Kakuma and Dadaab are hereby directed to
return to their respective camps with immediate effect.” Citing
“emergency security challenges” in Kenyan towns, he also said that, “Any
refugee found flouting this directive will be dealt with in accordance
with the law.”
In January 2013,
Human Rights Watch called on the authorities to drop their first
relocation plan. Human Rights Watch said then that the authorities had
failed to show, as international law requires, that the plan was either
necessary to achieve enhanced national security or the least restrictive
measure possible to address Kenya’s national security concerns. The
plan also unlawfully discriminated against refugees because it would
allow Kenyan citizens to move freely while denying refugees that right.
Kenyan police operations in Nairobi and Mombasa have frequently
committed serious human rights violations against both refugees and
Kenyan citizens in the wake of attacks.
A May 2013 Human Rights Watch report described
how Kenyan police in Nairobi tortured, raped, and otherwise abused and
arbitrarily detained at least 1,000 refugees, including women and
children, between mid-November 2012 and late January 2013 following
grenade and other attacks. The police called the refugees “terrorists”
and said they should move to the camps.
The new relocation order comes after numerous statements by senior Kenyan officials, going back as far as March 2012, calling on Somali refugees to return to Somalia.
On January 17, the United Nations refugee agency, UNHCR, issued guidelines
on returns to Somalia and called on countries not to return anyone
before interviewing them and ensuring they do not face the threat of
persecution or other serious harm if returned. On January 28, UNHCR also
issued a news release
about the guidelines, appealing to all governments “to uphold their
obligations” not to forcibly return anyone to Somalia unless they are
convinced the person would not suffer persecution or other serious harm
upon return.
UNHCR said that southern and central Somalia “remains a very dangerous
place” and that it “consider[s] the options for Somalis to find
protection from persecution or serious harm within Southern and Central
Somalia to be limited.” The agency said that this “is especially true
for large areas that remain under the control of the Islamic militant
group Al-Shabaab,” which “prohibits the exercise of various types of
freedoms and rights, especially affecting women” and uses “public
whipping, amputation … and beheadings” as punishment.
UNHCR also said that al-Shabaab attacks in Mogadishu, the capital, that
killed civilians had increased in 2013 and that the Somali authorities
are “reported to be failing to provide much of [the] population with
basic security.”
Kenyan authorities should not press refugees to return to Somalia. Such
pressure would violate Kenya’s obligations not to forcibly return – or
refoule – refugees to situations of persecution or generalized
violence.The ongoing humanitarian crisis in the Dadaab camps in Kenya –
where about 400,000 refugees are crammed into space meant for 170,000 –
and the lack of properly developed new camps there or near the Kakuma
camps means that any transfer of refugees from the cities to the camps
would also breach Kenya’s international legal obligations.
They require
Kenya not to adopt “retrogressive measures” that would negatively affect
refugees’ rights to adequate standard of living – including food,
clothing and housing – and to health and education.
On March 10, the international humanitarian organization Médecins sans
Frontières, which runs health care programs in the refugee camps, released a report describing the serious humanitarian conditions and insecurity in the camps.
Foreign donors to Kenya and UNHCR should oppose the new relocation
plan, based on its inevitable violation of refugees’ rights to free
movement, basic social and economic rights, and the right not to be
forcibly evicted. “The new plan risks riding roughshod over Kenya’s High Court and a
range of refugees’ fundamental rights,” Simpson said. “Foreign donors to
Kenya and UNHCR should encourage Kenya to abandon the plan.”
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