Ethiopia: UN to Open New Camp in
Ethiopia to Host Refugees
Addis Ababa — The
United Nations refugee agency yesterday announced it will open a new camp in
Ethiopia as the number of Somalis fleeing conflict and insecurity in their
country continues to grow, according to UN report.
"With people
still arriving at Dollo Ado, the Ethiopian Government has authorized the
opening of a sixth site and land for this has been designated between the town
of Kole and Kobe camp, some 54 kilometres north of Dollo Ado town," a
spokesperson for the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR),
Andrej Mahecic, told reporters in Geneva.
Situated in the
southeast of Ethiopia, Dollo Ado is the second largest refugee complex in the
world after Dadaab, located in Kenya. Last week, according to UNHCR, the
population at Dollo Ado passed the 170,000 mark, with new arrivals citing fear
of harassment and forced recruitment by armed groups which control large rural
areas of Somalia.
Somalia has been
affected by conflict for more than two decades, which has forced more than two
million people to seek safety and shelter either elsewhere, inside the country
or beyond its borders. This was exacerbated by last year's drought and ensuing
famine, which uprooted an additional half million people.
Overall, the number of
Somali refugees in neighbouring countries numbers more than a million. Half of
these are in Kenya, while Ethiopia now hosts 214,000 displaced persons, in five
camps at Dollo Ado as well as several hundred kilometres to the north at the
eastern Ethiopian city of Jijiga.
"The cost of
opening the new camp, setting up basic services and infrastructure including
medical, education and warehousing facilities is more than $5 million,"
Mr. Mahecic said. "We are seeking support from donors and partners,
including resources for non-governmental organization partners who would be
working in the camp."
For the initial phase,
UNHCR urgently needs $1.5 million for site preparation, land demarcation and
the setting up of basic infrastructure, Mr. Mahecic added, noting that the
rocky terrain in the Dollo Ado area poses additional challenges.
So far this year,
UNHCR has received $44 million of the more than $112 million sought for its
activities associated with the refugees.
"Refugees
typically arrive with a few belongings only. Their most urgent needs are
emergency shelters, food and essential aid items," Mr. Mahecic said.
"To address these needs, we dispatched a convoy of nine trucks from Kenya
last week, carrying 10,000 plastic sheets, 500 plastic rolls, 20,000 blankets,
15,000 sleeping mats, 15,000 mosquito nets, and 10,000 collapsible jerry
cans."
In addition, the
spokesperson stated that a long-awaited 1,600 metre all-weather airstrip opened
in Dollo Ado two weeks ago, significantly upgrading access for humanitarian
staff and transportation of cargo. Funded by the United States Government, the
airstrip was constructed by a field-engineering team from the UN World Food
Programme (WFP), which worked closely with the Ethiopian civil aviation and
road authorities.
"This is an
important and major improvement for humanitarian organizations working in Dollo
Ado as adverse weather conditions often rendered the old airstrip
unusable," Mr. Mahecic added. "The only other access involved a three
day trip on poor roads, severely delaying emergency interventions and urgent
medical evacuations." http://allafrica.com/stories/201210230108.html
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