MSF warns of looming health crisis in Kenya’s Dadaab refugee camp

This follows a cholera outbreak in the camps which has so far affected 2,786 people

In Summary
  • MSF country director in Kenya Hassan Maiyaki called for immediate action from donors and aid agencies to address the unsanitary conditions and overcrowding in the camps.
  • Maiyaki said more funding is urgently needed to avert a looming health catastrophe in refugee camps.
An aerial view of the Dadaab refugee camp.
An aerial view of the Dadaab refugee camp.
Image: FILE

Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders have warned against a looming catastrophe in Kenya's Dadaab refugee camp.

This follows a cholera outbreak in the camps which has so far affected 2,786 people and there is an imminent risk of outbreaks of other gastro-intestinal diseases.

MSF country director in Kenya Hassan Maiyaki called for immediate action from donors and aid agencies to address the unsanitary conditions and overcrowding in the camps.

Maiyaki said more funding is urgently needed to avert a looming health catastrophe in refugee camps.

The three refugee camps which make up the Dadaab complex, located in Kenya’s northeastern region, are home to over 300,000 refugees.

Their population has grown rapidly in recent months due to an extended drought in Somalia, leading to severe overcrowding and increased pressure on existing services, including supplies of drinking water and latrines.

“The gravity of the situation demands urgent attention, particularly in the areas of water, sanitation and hygiene,”  Maiyaki said.

He said they have already seen the worst cholera outbreak in five years and the risk of other epidemics breaking out is high.

"If this occurs, it would outstrip medical capacity in the camps, with potentially catastrophic consequences," he said.

The current cholera outbreak is linked to reductions in essential water and sanitation activities in the camps, including providing clean water, distributing soap, constructing and repairing latrines, and organising waste management.

According to humanitarian organisations working in the camps, almost half the camps’ population have no access to functional latrines, leading to open defecation which raises the risk of disease outbreaks.

The Ministry of Health and humanitarian agencies carried out cholera vaccinations and health promotion campaigns to help people protect themselves from the disease.

“Despite our health promotion activities and vaccination campaign, controlling this cholera outbreak remains elusive without the prioritisation of resources towards sustained preventive water, sanitation and hygiene interventions,” MSF medical coordinator in Kenya Nitya Udayraj said.

Udayraj said if they are not improved in quality and scale, it is just a matter of time before they see other epidemics erupt in the camps such as Hepatitis E.

MSF runs a hospital in Dagahaley, one of the three camps that make up Dadaab.

In Dagahaley alone, MSF teams have reported more than 1,120 cases of cholera and two deaths since the start of the outbreak in November 2022. 

MSF water and sanitation teams are currently trucking 50,000 litres of drinking water each day to the outskirts. 

In recent weeks they have built 150 communal latrines, both within the camps and on the outskirts, where around 9,000 newly arrived refugees have set up rudimentary shelters in the surrounding desert. 

So far, MSF has provided around 1,000 of these households with plastic sheeting, mats and liquid soap. But much more needs to be done to meet people’s needs and prevent a humanitarian crisis. 

The government has announced plans to reopen a fourth camp – Ifo 2 – to accommodate new arrivals and alleviate the strain on resources in the existing camps.

MSF is calling for these plans to be enacted as a matter of urgency, and to include increased funding for water and sanitation across all four camps. 

“The relocation to Ifo 2 should be hastened to ease pressure on the existing camps,” Maiyaki said. 

“All efforts to ease the overcrowding must include significant investment in the water, sanitation and hygiene sector to ensure a minimum standard of living for refugees in all the camps.”

The humanitarian organisation further called on the international community, donors and aid agencies to respond urgently to the unfolding crisis in Dadaab, taking immediate action to address the alarming sanitary conditions and prevent the further spread of disease. 

In the longer term, MSF called on the government and UNHCR to find durable solutions for the refugees confined within the camps at Dadaab. 

The three camps of Dagahaley, Ifo and Hagadera currently host more than 245,000 registered refugees, many of whom have lived in the camps for more than three decades. 

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