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From: IRIN <[email protected]>
Date: Tue, Aug 23, 2011 at 12:34 PM
Subject: KENYA-SOMALIA: The nitty-gritty of flight
To: Jean-Francois Darcq <[email protected]>


KENYA-SOMALIA: The nitty-gritty of flight

LIBOI-DOOLOW, 23 August 2011 (IRIN) - The vast number of people
fleeing famine and drought in Somalia for neighbouring Kenya
overshadows the fact that each journey begins with a tough decision to
leave that is prompted by specific events and is followed by a series
of more mundane choices, such as what to pack.

IRIN recently discussed the details of their flight with several
families on the Kenya-Somalia border.

 "We have been experiencing droughts since 2008, 2009," explained
Abdullahi Ahmed, as he sat under a tree with his family in the Kenyan
town of Liboi, after a 300km journey.

 They had walked from their village outside Baidoa - a town controlled
by Al-Shabab militia in the Bay region - where he grew cash crops and
raised livestock.

 After two failed rains, "I gave it another year," he said, but to no
avail: in late 2010 his animals died.

 "People were dying in our village, there was no food. I could not let
my family die - we had to leave."

 Like many refugees, he had heard from radio reports and other
travellers that help was available in Dadaab, the world's largest
refugee complex, in Kenya.

 Some NGOs in Somalia provide food to the needy, said another refugee,
Hassan Mohammed, a pastoralist who had walked 700km from his home near
Mogadishu, the capital.

 "But Al-Shabab takes the food from them saying they will give it to
the people but they only lock it away."

 Family decision

 In Somali society an individual's independence is greatly valued.
When any decision affecting the household is taken, every member of
the family's opinion is taken into consideration.

 After 16 people died in his community, Hassan Mohammed said he sat
down with his family to explain they had a long journey ahead. "We are
pastoralists, so we do travel long distances in search of pasture but
the children don't always come. They asked how far they will have to
walk, I told them it was going to be a long walk but we had to find
our new home."

 Aden Buale, 80, spat on the ground as he mentioned Al-Shabab. "Those
people are evil. We heard on the radio that humanitarian people could
not come and help us but help was available on this side of the
border. Instead of waiting to die, we thought, 'We have to walk'."

 Some of those with surviving livestock sold them for cash, often to
buy a donkey and cart to transport the elderly and children.

 But Mohammed and his wife, Fatima, decided to take turns carrying
their five- and six-year-old. Their other five children, all
teenagers, could walk by themselves.

 What to pack?

 During a security inspection in Liboi one refugee opened a small
hold-all to reveal a hijab, a piece of silky fabric and plastic
flip-flops. An 80-year-old clutched his almost brand-new umbrella.

 Almost all the refugees in Liboi held plastic bags or tiny suitcases
packed with clothes. Some had plastic-wrapped mobile phones tied to
their waists. Empty jerry cans and cane mats formed the bulkiest part
of their luggage.

 "We have left the most important belonging, our home, behind. The
rest of this does not really matter," said Mohammed.

 How much farther?

 Buni Ali Borow and family, whom IRIN met in the Ethiopian town of
Doloow after their 18km trek, decided to begin their journey at night,
so as to set off unnoticed.

 "Al-Shabab caught people leaving for the government-controlled areas
in our village. They were beaten up."

 The first two days were the hardest for the children. "They would cry
'How much farther, Daddy, how much farther?' But on the third day,
they were asking, 'When will we get to our new home?'" said Mohammed.
His five-year-old, Mohammed Hassan, pointed to the cuts on his feet:
"It is sore."

 Some packed tea in the jerry cans and carried whatever food they had
- mostly biscuits, which were rationed. Each child got two a day, the
adults one. People in the settlements en route would help out with
whatever they had. "Everyone shares in our culture," said Mohammed.

 But at times they had to search for food. During one such night, when
Abdullai Ahmed and his family of eight were out foraging, hyenas
pounced on his six-year-old, who had lagged behind, and took him away.
"It all happened suddenly - we heard him scream and he was gone."

 In many instances, the refugees were fortunate to travel in the
Muslim holy month of Ramadan, when charity is greatest.

 Towards the end of their journey, Mohammed said, "A driver took pity
on my family and he gave us a lift in his car for some distance." The
driver even bought them a 15kg bag of rice.

 Others came across Muslim organizations distributing dates. When they
arrived in Dobley, a town between the Kenyan and Somali border near
Liboi, they received boxes of biscuits from the UN World Food
Programme, which helped them on the last leg of the 20km journey to
Liboi.

 In the past two months since famine was declared in parts of Somalia,
aid agencies estimate that at least 1,500 Somalis arrived in Dadaab
every day, with the UN Refugee Agency estimating the total at 70,000
people. Agencies say the number has slowed down in the past two weeks
to about 700-800 a day.

 "Our homes are still there - we will go back if it rains," said
Mohammed. "We are just hoping for some food, water, healthcare and
shelter until then."

 But the possibility of expelling Al-Shabab is viewed with some
apprehension. "No, I don't think we can drive them out," said Buni
Ali. "Everyone fears them."

 jk/am/mw[END]

This report online: http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportID=93564



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