By LILLIAN ONYANGO laonyango@ke.nationmedia.com
Posted Tuesday, July 30 2013 at 17:52
Posted Tuesday, July 30 2013 at 17:52
The United Nations refugee agency has welcomed Kenya’s High Court ruling which stopped the government’s plans to relocate urban refugees.
The United Nations High Commission for Refugees
(UNHCR) said the government directive issued last December to move the
refugees to camps in Dadaab and Kakuma resulted in their harassment by
police, detention and extortion mainly in Nairobi.
"Many of them could not move about freely and fear
of such treatment led hundreds of Somali refugees to return to Somalia
or move to neighbouring countries,” UNHCR spokesperson Fatoumata
Lejeune-Kaba said during a press briefing in Geneva.
According to the agency, when the directive was issued there were a total of 51,000 mainly Somalia urban refugees in Kenya.
"Most of the refugees living in urban areas have
developed coping mechanisms, and so do rely on humanitarian assistance.
There are also large numbers of refugee children attending schools in
urban areas whose education would have been compromised had the
relocation order been carried out,” the official said.
UNHCR appeared in the petition as a "friend of the
Court" and provided advice on the applicable international refugee and
human rights laws.
In its ruling, the Court stated that the
government did not show that the plans to relocate the refugees would
heighten the country’s national security.
Ms Lejeune-Kaba said UNHCR hoped the government
will implement the “important constitutional decision” and move fast to
resume legal services that were suspended pending the court process.
"These include the registration and issuance of
documents to refugees and asylum seekers, which are essential for their
freedom of movement, access to social and community benefits, as well as
their protection against arbitrary arrest,” read her statement which
was posted on the agency’s website.
Currently, Kenya hosts some 600,000 refugees.
The UN has maintained that such a move should be
done voluntarily and only when the security situation in the previously
war-torn country has sufficiently improved.
The petition filed by legal aid organisation Kituo
Cha Sheria contested the legality of the relocation plan in January,
and the court ordered the plan suspended pending its decision.
Last month, Kenya and Somalia formed a joint task force to supervise the voluntary repatriation of Somalia refugees.
The Director of the Office of the Great Lakes
Region Ken Vitisia said Kenya would lobby for the return of Somali
refugees during the regional leaders' meeting in Nairobi this week.
He said the hosting of Somalia refugees has become
an unbearable “burden” and that the government would lobby for the
region to take a “common stand” on the issue.
“It is in Kenya’s interest that we don’t have
regional conflicts because we are a trading nation. If we have peace and
stability in the region, it means we can trade more,” Mr Vitisia told
reporters.
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