# taz.de -- Migration policy in Kenya: How Refugees became terrorists
       
       > Kenya has been the largest refugee camp in the world for 25 years. Now it
       > is to be closed. The Somali refugees were declared terrorists.
       
 (IMG) Bild: Refugees from Somalia await registration in Dadaab, Kenya
       
       „There must be an end to shelter refugees,“ Kenya's government announced in
       May 2016. A quarter of a century is the world's largest refugee camp. It
       had once been punched by UN relief organizations from the barren deserts.
       Under the Somali name „Dadaab“, the tent town, which is not listed on any
       map, has acquired sad fame. Photos of children starved to the bone in the
       wilderness went around the world. In 1992, the camp was built in the
       north-east of Kenya along the border with Somalia for some 30,000 people
       who escaped to the neighboring country before the outbreak.
       
       Over the decades, Dadaab has grown to become the world's largest refugee
       camp. About half a million people lived there under wretched conditions at
       weddings, when war, drought and famine prevailed in Somalia in 2011 and
       2012. About 35,000 voluntarily returned to their homeland in the past
       years, some 16,000 have been expelled to third countries, most of them to
       the USA, to Great Britain or Sweden. Around 40,000 Kenyan passports were
       received.
       
       14,000 non-Somali refugees were transferred to another camp in the
       north-western region of Turkana. There, the second-largest camp, Kakuma,
       near the border to southern Sudan currently provides protection for 186,000
       refugees, most of South Sudanese. Also Kakuma should be sealed according to
       plans of the government. But then, in July 2016, war broke out again in
       Southern Sudan, thousands of South Sudanese are saved daily across the
       border.
       
       Kenya had to keep the camp. It is now being further expanded.In November
       2016, according to UNHCR figures, about 275,000 refugees were living in the
       five Dadaab settlements, almost all of Somali. The UN estimates that the
       final, voluntary return of all refugees could not take place until 2032.
       But Kenya's government does not go fast enough. In May 2016, the Interior
       Ministry announced on the basis of a decision by the National Security
       Council that the camp would be closed by the end of November 2016. There
       would be no new arrivals registered there. On the contrary, the Somali are
       to be brought back to their homeland via the border some 100 kilometers
       from Dadaab.
       
       Shortly thereafter, according to UNHCR figures, some 17,000 Somali refugees
       packed their belongings. There were about 5,000 families transported by
       UNHCR in buses or by plane to their homeland. Four zones have been defined
       as safe, including Somalia's capital Mogadishu and the port city of
       Kismayo. 150 dollars and food rations for six months receive return
       volunteers per person as a starting package from UNHCR.
       
       Three quarters of the returnees had decided to go to Kismayo, even though
       half said they were not from there. But the UNHCR and other NGOs have
       invested in a displaced camp. The overwhelming majority stated in a UNHCR
       survey that they would regard the region as safe and to be received there
       by family members. The survey found that most of the returnees were
       unemployed or students and they promised more employment opportunities in
       their homeland. Kenya does not offer them any future. Over 10,000 gave
       reasons for the questionnaire, they feared insecurity and deportation.
       
       ## (Un-) voluntary return
       
       As early as 2013, Kenya's and Somalia's governments had agreed in a
       trilateral agreement with the UNHCR on the closure of camps in Kenya. The
       deadline for a voluntary return was set at the end of November 2016.
       Somalia and Kenya's governments wanted to hold on to this date and
       increased the pressure accordingly. The UNHCR, on the other hand, insists
       on the international principle of voluntary return and remains up to the
       year 2032 in its calculation.
       
       Hassan Sheikh Mohamud visited Dadaab as the first Somali president in June
       2016. He promised his landlords: „We do not want you to return without your
       accommodation, education and health care.“ Whoever should pay for it, he
       said nothing. The UN refugee agency UNHCR did not receive a third of the
       estimated $ 150 million for Somali refugee aid in 2016.
       
       The inclusion of so many returnees in a short time is a herculean task for
       a country that is almost completely destroyed after over 20 years of war,
       Somalia's government spokesman Daud Awais admitted. But Somalia's federal
       transitional government needs the Somali population at home. An estimated
       eight million were once before the beginning of the war, more than half are
       said to live in exile, according to Weltbank. At the end of 2016 elections
       are held, in which the Klanchefs elect a new government. The return of the
       refugees would contribute to the democratization and legitimacy of the new
       transitional government, and thus to the stabilization of the country, and
       the possibility could be thought of by the electoral participation of the
       whole population, „Keep in mind that your return is a sign of the revival
       of peace In Somalia and that you can make a difference for your country
       when you return.“
       
       Kenya's interior minister, Joseph Nkaissery welcomed Somalia's president in
       Dadaab, stressing that Kenya would help with the return. Keep to the date
       of closure. After that, Mohamud met his colleague Uhuru Kenyatta in Kenya's
       capital, Nairobi. The beginning of a good neighborhood relationship? The
       two countries which have been at war on each other since independence at
       the beginning of the 1960s have never been as unanimous as they are now in
       the refugee question.
       
       The reason for this is mutual interest in the international community:
       money and security. Kenya wants to get rid of the refugees because of the
       terror threat and demands more money not to close the camps immediately.
       Somalia's government wants its people back and hopes to finally get all the
       money that the international community is pumping to Kenya so far. Together
       they put pressure on the Western donors.
       
       ## Battlefield in the fight against terror
       
       In the order to close Dadaab finally, the Ministry of Interior mentions the
       threat to national security as well as environmental disturbances as
       reasons. It is the most powerful ministry, directly under the presidency,
       and thus the prolonged arm of President Kenyatta's power.
       
       Somalia's Islamist terrorist Al-Shabaab has committed numerous attacks in
       Kenya over the past few years. In 2013, they killed 71 people in the
       capital city of Nairobi in the luxury shopping center Westgate, where
       Kenya's middle class and foreigners spend their weekends. In 2014, they
       attacked tourist resorts along the ocean coast in Lamu. The tourism sector,
       one of the most important economic sectors in Kenya, broke out. In 2015, a
       massacre took place in the eastern provincial capital of Garissa, not far
       from Dadaab, in the university, where 148 students were killed. They can
       all be read as retaliation campaigns of the Shabaab, which avenged the
       invasion of Kenyan troops in Somalia.
       
       The invasion took place shortly after the abduction of two Spanish nurses
       from Dadaab in 2012 working for MSF. The operation ended in disaster and
       provoked revenge. The militia kept pushing forward to Kenya. Even in Dadaab
       she put explosives and rammed the barracks of the Kenyan security forces
       with bombs. The UN agencies had to upgrade their homes with meter-high
       shatter-proof concrete walls. Since then, NGO employees have been moving
       through the camp with only a military force.
       
       To date, the Kenyan army has deployed more than 3,000 soldiers in Somalia,
       as part of the African Union Peace Mission in Somalia, AMISOM, financed by
       the EU as a whole. At the beginning of 2016 the EU had announced to reduce
       the funds. Kenya threatened with the trigger. Shortly thereafter, the EU
       granted additional funds.
       
       ## Powerless police
       
       Kenya's prosecutor's office had identified telephone contacts of the
       assassins in the refugee camps after the Westgate attack. Since then,
       Dadaab has been accused as a breed of terror. Anti-terrorist units stormed
       the tent town, arrested thousands of suspects, took them to Nairobi, and
       brought them to justice there within 24 hours.Kenya's police force has only
       limited control over the camps. They are considered a law-free space with
       their own laws. In this, the Shabaab has more say than Kenya's police. This
       is so corrupt that it is predicted by security experts a failure in the
       fight against terror. For 2017 elections are held in Kenya, the potential
       for violence increases due to internal-ethnic conflicts. The closure of
       Dadaab is considered a preventive measure to prevent further riots.
       
       International human rights organizations such as Amnesty International (AI)
       and Human Rights Watch (HRW) are criticizing that Somalia is not secure
       enough, and most returnees will end up in displaced camps in their
       homeland. Many of the returnees interviewed by HRW had decided to return
       only because they feared that Kenya's authorities would force refugees
       across the border. This had already happened after the Westgate attacks,
       when thousands of Somali were forcibly deported. Most of them prefer to
       take money and rations with them. This does not correspond to the
       definition of „voluntariness“ and violates international law, says Victor
       Nyamori of Amnesty International in Kenya. There are more „push factors“,
       especially the fear of violent deportation, than „pull factors“ like a
       better life in the home.
       
       Kenya's human rights organizations went to court: The government's decision
       to close down Dadaab would violate international human rights, according to
       the prosecution. HRW and Amnesty had interviewed families who had returned
       to Somalia, where they had not found any security or shelter as described.
       They then sought shelter again in Dadaab. HRW criticizes Kenya's government
       to refuse to allow these families to register again – and thus the food
       rations.
       
       NGOs complain that another government action is unconstitutional: in a
       statement of May 2016, the Minister of the Interior had dissolved the
       refugee affairs section under him. It was created in 2006 in the course of
       the refugee law adopted at the time to implement the rights of refugees.
       The original Refugee and Asylum Act of 1993 had never mentioned the Geneva
       Convention on the Worldwide Protection of Refugees.
       
       The complaint by the human rights organizations is formally directed
       against the government's approach, says Andrew Maina of Kenya's Consortium
       for Refugees (RCK), which supports the petition. The Minister of the
       Interior can not simply change regulations by law and dissolve authorities,
       even if they are under him, so the lawyer and chief of the RCK research
       department. Even before the end of the closure period in November, the
       ruling should be final. But at the first hearing, the judge did not appear.
       
       „Maina is particularly concerned about the draft of a new refugee law,
       which is currently being debated in Parliament, because this is“ backwards
       „in terms of rights and protection, according to Maina. To date, the
       refugee agency has not fulfilled its duty to actually register the
       refugees. The issue of a refugee passport, through which they are
       internationally protected, has so far been handled by UNHCR. Kenya's
       refugee department in the Ministry of the Interior did not have an overview
       of how many people live in the camps. This is to change now – also due to
       the danger of terror
       
       ## General condemnation against refugees
       
       Somali refugees have been granted asylum as soon as they are registered by
       UNHCR in Dadaab. This regulation was also repealed on the instructions of
       the Minister of the Interior. In future, all applicants will be examined
       individually. To this end, a committee is to be set up to compare the
       personal details of asylum seekers with intelligence databases in order to
       avoid the protection of terrorists. This commission is to be subordinated
       to the Ministry of the Interior, which is also under the supervision of the
       intelligence service and anti-terrorist units of the police. Together,
       these departments are to remove terrorists from asylum seekers.
       
       This is also important in the event of a possible deportation. Since the
       government did not register the refugees so far, it could not deport
       non-recognized asylum seekers. Even if the UNHCR denied the status of
       anyone, there was no instance to refer to that person of the country. This
       is also to become possible with the new law more quickly.
       
       There is also a default on relief funds „The funds are often spent for
       those refugees fleeing to the West,“ complained the Kenyan interior
       minister. The UNHCR budget for Somalis and South Sudanese refugees in 2016
       has enormous supply gaps. Not even half of the food and money needed had
       been donated by the international community. In December 2016, the food
       rations must be reduced by half. Kenya can not close these gaps, and is now
       afraid to be left alone with the refugee problem. „Not a single Western
       country“ has so far received so many refugees, complains Kenya's
       government.
       
       Support is now provided by Turkey. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan traveled
       to Nairobi in June 2016 and criticized the EU and the US for developing
       countries to bear the burden of the refugees and the accompanying terrorism
       alone. Turkey has always been very generous in Dadaab. The Dadaab district,
       with the largest mosque financed by Turkey, is the name of the refugees
       „Istanbul“.
       
       ## Temporary eternity
       
       The international community is critical of the possible closure of Dadaab.
       US Secretary of State John Kerry expressed his „deep concern“ and warned of
       forced repatriations. The UN is pushing to be „flexible“ in the deadline of
       the camp closure, and asked the Western donors to increase the budget for
       Somali refugees by 115 million to 485 million dollars. All refugee camps in
       Kenya will be operated exclusively by international donors. Refugees are
       not allowed to move freely in the country according to the law, but must
       live exclusively in camps. Unlike in Uganda, where refugees are assigned a
       piece of land to cultivate corn and beans and to feed themselves in the
       long term, no „permanent“ dwelling can be established under the law. Even
       after 25 years, they still live under tarpaulins.
       
       Thus, all refugees are automatically dependent on relief supplies from the
       international community: from food, to health care, school education to
       housing. For the refugees a miserable situation, for donors an expensive
       undertaking. Kenya is thus clear: the camps are only temporary, and
       integration into the Kenyan society remains impossible.
       
       It is not easy for Somali in Kenya to acquire citizenship. Since the
       establishment of the borders to colonial times, a Somali minority lives in
       Kenya, most of them in the northeast province along the Somali border with
       the county capital Garissa and the camp Dadaab as the largest conurbation
       and economic factor. After independence from the British colonialists, the
       decision was made to attribute the province of Somalia. The local
       Somali-speaking population was opposed to the independence government in
       Nairobi. She refused the defection. Since then there have always been
       revolts, which have been violently crushed. Massacres of the Somali
       minority were documented. Until 1992, that is until the founding of
       Dadaabs, there was an exception in the province. The collective suspicion
       of terror against the Somali refugees can also be explained against this
       background.
       
       ## Kenya and the world
       
       Nairobi has become an attraction for migrant workers from all over Eastern
       and Central Africa. In the course of the integration into the East African
       Union (EAC) and its agreement on the free movement of goods and persons,
       also with regard to workers and services, more and more well-trained
       Ugandans, Rwandans or Burundians in Nairobi are looking for jobs, And
       services. For Western employees of international NGOs, it will be more
       difficult to get a work permit in Kenya. The government wants to give
       well-paid jobs to their own countrymen. Europeans and Americans are
       systematically denied work permits.
       
       Even though Kenya is now a middle-income country, the development in the
       periphery remains unstable, corruption is enormous. The country remains
       dependent on development aid. This is, however, increasingly reduced, the
       extreme corruption is detrimental to Western donors. ODA funds can no
       longer be claimed because of the categorization as middle-sized countries.
       
       Kenya is de facto unimportant to the EU in terms of immigration protection:
       just 480 illegal immigrants from Kenya arrived in the EU in 2015. Of these
       130 were already rejected at the external border, 310 the asylum
       application was refused, 60 granted. Kenya is considered a safe country of
       origin – except for gays and lesbians. Fears, tens of thousands of Somalis
       would be on the way to Europe in the course of the closure of Dadaab, are
       unfounded. The refugee spokesman of Dadaab, Abdullahi Ali Aden, states that
       the consideration of many young men fails due to the lack of money. A trip
       to Europe would only be possible by boat life, but due to the lack of
       freedom of movement in Kenya, the numerous road blocks and the investment
       of more than 10,000 dollars for a boat trip through the Gulf of Aden to the
       Red Sea, Refugees in Dadaab prohibitive. To Uganda, many want to enjoy more
       liberties and leisure opportunities there – but not to Europe.
       
       Accordingly, Kenya has received little funding from the EU Treasury Fund
       for Africa at the EU-Africa Migration Summit in 2015 in Malta's capital
       Valletta. Within the framework of the support of pastoralist peoples in the
       border region between South Sudan, Ethiopia and Kenya, the EU will invest
       28 million euros in agricultural projects and food security. In addition,
       12 million euros. These are to be invested in improved economic
       opportunities for young people living in underdeveloped regions along the
       coast to Somalia or the north along the border with South Sudan. Above all,
       vocational schools should be established.
       
       ## Low support for the most necessary
       
       The European Commission has increased the budget of the Action Plan for
       so-called mixed migratory flows in the Horn of Africa to six million by
       2015. The countries, including Kenya, are to be supported to expand their
       capacities to deal with migratory movements. The share for Kenya is
       marginal.
       
       Kenya is a rather negligible partner country of the EU in the Khartoum
       process. Under the heading „Better Migration Management“, the EU will
       implement 45 million euro projects to better regulate migration in nine
       countries in the Horn of Africa, including Kenya.
       
       In Dadaab, the EU has so far supported the NGOs active there and the UNHCR
       with funds. In the past eight years, the EU aid agency ECHO has received
       EUR 1.5 million a year for water and sanitation projects. The Federal
       Foreign Office has also financed water supply and education projects in
       Dadaab.
       
       The German Association for Technical Cooperation provides assistance to
       South Sudanese refugees and receiving communities in Kenya through measures
       for food security, better medical care. Strengthened conflict resolution
       mechanisms are equally aimed at the refugees and the local population in
       the border region to southern Sudan, ie in and around the Kakuma camp. All
       projects in Dadaab have already been completed
       
       The Federal Government is the second-most important partner of Kenya,
       according to the USA. Development Minister Gerd Mueller visited Dadaab in
       March 2016: „60 million refugees around the world are facing huge
       development challenges for many developing countries,“ he said. „90 percent
       have sought shelter in developing countries. In a joint effort, the
       international community has to give people on the ground a new
       perspective.“
       
       ## Upgrade in billions
       
       After the Westgate attack Kenya has upgraded. The budget deficit is worth
       2.6 billion dollars in 2016/2017, 1.2 billion of which goes to the
       intelligence service and 1.2 billion to the Ministry of the Interior, which
       is home to police and anti-terrorist specialists – a gigantic budget for an
       African country. The upgrade is visible: surveillance cameras are
       everywhere in Nairobi, heavily armed security forces are stationed in
       anti-terrorist units, even in supermarkets or banks. The international
       airport in Nairobi was equipped with surveillance cameras, as well as the
       container port in the coastal town of Mombasa. Each departure hall of the
       large airport in Nairobi is equipped with full-body scanners.
       
       Kenya's border posts were equipped with computers, fingerprint scanners and
       facial recognition systems. In recent years, an Israeli company has been
       printing biometric passports for Kenyans and building the databases.
       Biometric identity cards were also issued. There were controversies in the
       award of the contract, the Presidential Office had purportedly decided
       which companies would be awarded the contract. A British security company
       with a daughter in Kenya was given the order to print the passports. Nadra,
       an agency of the Pakistani Ministry of Interior, is developing the
       software. From 2017, the member states of the East African Union (EAC) want
       to introduce common passports.
       
       As a result of increased security technologies, airlines have recently been
       able to take back direct flights between Nairobi and Mogadishu. The
       electronic visa procedure now also gives Somali entry to Kenya. Each visa
       application is synchronized with the secret service database. Direct
       flights to the USA are also expected to be possible again in 2017. The
       state carrier KenyaAirways had to take enormous losses because of the
       security risks and was close to the bankruptcy. Slowly, Kenya's tourism
       sector is recovering, the most important economic activity and foreign
       exchange factor. He had broken in the course of the Westgate attacks and
       the raids in the coastal town of Lamu. The confidence of Western safari
       tourists in the security agencies is slowly returning. Only in 2016, the
       tourist numbers rose again.
       
       ## A wall of Israel
       
       „It was worth it,“ Kenya's vice president William Ruto emphasized when he
       announced the decision to build a wall in Somalia in 2015. Over 700
       kilometers the border section is long, right through the desert and the
       Shabaab area. Concrete walls, border systems, surveillance cameras and
       patrol vehicles are required.
       
       German companies have also been interested in this major contract. In 2015,
       the German International Chamber of Commerce organized a „market journey“
       in the area of civil safety technology to Kenya. Meeting with the Ministry
       of Defense and anti-terrorist units were on the agenda. Germany's leading
       armaments and security companies such as Rheinmetall and Siemens were
       present.Ultimately, the Israeli company Magal Security was awarded the
       contract for the construction of the wall as well as the security of the
       airport and port. Israel had been a close partner since the Westgate
       attacks. The shopping center belongs to an Israeli investor. At the
       entrance gates with security scanners, Israeli security guards are now
       posted in civilian clothes.
       
       Israel's border installations to Palestine, Egypt and Jordan are a
       prototype of modern high-tech fences with ground sensors, thermal imaging
       cameras, as well as satellite and drone monitoring from the air. Kenya's
       ambitious plans fail, however: construction work, protected by the army,
       had to be dealt with due to Shabaab attacks. As overpriced, the effort is
       always, since the terrarium has long been inside Kenya bases. George
       Morara, deputy director of Kenya's Human Rights Commission recently
       criticized the construction of the wall as „summit of senselessness“.
       
       12 Dec 2016
       
       ## AUTOREN
       
 (DIR) Simone Schlindwein
       
       ## TAGS
       
 (DIR) migControl
       
       ## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA