Kenyan closure of Dadaab refugee camp blocked by high court

27 minutes ago

>From the sectionAfricaShareImage copyrightAPImage caption

Set up in 1991, Dadaab refugee camp is the size of a cityThe High Court in
Kenya has blocked the government's bid to close the largest refugee camp in
the world.

A directive to shut the Dadaab camp and forcibly repatriate about 260,000
Somali refugees living there was issued last year.

The deadline for its closure had been extended until May, but a high court
judge ruled the decision was tantamount to an act of group persecution.The
government had argued it was an issue of security.It said that attacks on
its soil by the Somalia-based al-Shabab group had been planned in the camp.

Dadaab was set up in 1991 to house families fleeing conflict in Somalia,
and some people have been living there for more than 20 years.

The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights and lobby group Kituo Cha
Sheria challenged the decision in court, saying it was discriminative and
contrary to international law.

"The government's decision specifically targeting Somali refugees is act of
group persecution, illegal discriminatory and therefore unconstitutional,"
Judge John Mativo said.

The orders are excessive, arbitrary and disproportionate, he said.

The BBC's Nancy Kacungira in the capital, Nairobi, says the government
could still appeal against the court's decision, but the ruling means it
has to start putting in place mechanisms that will restore regular
operations at the camp.

Amnesty International welcomed the ruling, saying it affirmed Kenya's legal
obligation to protect people who seek safety from harm and
persecution."Today is a historic day for more than a quarter of a million
refugees who were at risk of being forcefully returned to Somalia, where
they would have been at serious risk of human rights abuses," the rights
group's Muthoni Wanyeki said in a statement.

Somalia's UN-backed government, with the help of a 22,000-strong African
Union force, is battling Islamist group al-Shabab to regain control of the
country.But it has only managed to secure major towns.The militants, who
impose a strict version of Islam in the areas they control, still mount
deadly bombings and have carried out a string of attacks in neighbouring
Kenya.

Related Topics

Kenya

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