Donation Amount. Min £2

 

NAIROBI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - LGBT+ people living in a refugee camp in northwestern Kenya urged U.N. officials on Friday to move them to a safer area following a series of homophobic attacks by other residents and locals.

The refugees, who come from countries including Uganda, Burundi and the Democratic Republic of Congo, said a section of the Kakuma camp occupied by 135 LGBT+ refugees had been attacked at least five times since the start of the year.

In one incident last month, three gay men needed hospital treatment for burns after attackers set their bedding alight as they slept.

LGBT+ refugees have also been beaten, pelted with rocks and stabbed, said Gilbert Kagarura, spokesman for the camp’s “Block 13” area.

“We left our homes and came here to be safe, but even here we are hunted and attacked. We want to be moved to another area of camp,” said Gilbert Kagarura, who fled persecution in Uganda two years ago.

“Violence against LGBT+ people in Kakuma camp has been happening for years. Homophobia is ingrained here. The other refugees and community members simply look for excuses to come after us and attack us,” he said.

The U.N. refugee agency (UNHCR), which runs the Kakuma camp, said Kenyan police were investigating the suspected arson attack and that the victims had received psychological support.

It said relocation decisions are made on “an individual and case by case basis” following a thorough assessment jointly with Kenyan authorities and local partners.

“UNHCR has continued to engage individually with LGBTIQ+ refugees. Some 30 persons have been relocated to other areas of the camp over the past few months,” said a UNHCR statement emailed to the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

LGBT+ refugees said they want to be relocated as a group for safety reasons.

Over the last three years, LGBT+ refugees in Kakuma - a sprawling camp home to more than 160,000 people - have repeatedly complained about their security and have staged demonstrations to demand safe shelter.

In December 2018, the UNHCR relocated about 200 LGBT+ refugees from the camp to Nairobi as an emergency measure after a spate of violent attacks against them.

But Kenya requires most refugees to stay in designated camps and some of them were returned to Kakuma. New LGBT+ refugees are also mostly being sent there.

There are currently about 300 LGBT+ refugees in the camp in total, with the vast majority living in relative safety, according to the UNHCR, adding that more police had been deployed to areas where LGBT+ refugees reside.

Although gay sex is punishable with up to 14 years in jail in Kenya, the law is rarely enforced and the east African nation is seen as more tolerant than neighboring Uganda and Tanzania, though discrimination is widespread.

LGBT+ rights groups Pan Africa ILGA and the Global Interfaith Network have voiced concern about the attacks at Kakuma and are backing calls for the refugees to be relocated.

“We urge UNHCR to take this crisis seriously and to take all members of Block 13 to a temporary safe place as they await evacuation from a clearly highly homophobic camp,” they said in a joint statement last month. -  Nita Bhalla, Thomson Reuters Foundation

About IEA Media Ltd

Informer East Africa is a UK based diaspora Newspaper. It is a unique platform connecting East Africans at home and abroad through news dissemination. It is a forum to learn together, grow together and get entertained at the same time.

To advertise events or products, get in touch by info [at] informereastafrica [dot] com or call +447957636854.
If you have an issue or a story, get in touch with the editor through editor[at] informereastafrica [dot] com or call +447886544135.

We also accept donations from our supporters. Please click on "donate". Your donations will go along way in supporting the newspaper.

Get in touch

Our Offices

London, UK
+44 7886 544135
editor (@) informereastafrica.com
Slough, UK
+44 7957 636854
info (@) informereastafrica.com

Latest News

Mixed Reactions After UK Embassy in Nairobi Shares Video Promoting LGBTQ

Mixed Reactions Afte...

The British High Commission in Kenya stirred controversy after sharing a video of its staff members...

Effects of climate change on key infrastructure

Effects of climate c...

BY MOSES MUTUA Heavy rains have poured across Kenya causing much damage on infrastructure, breaking...

Patients with a chronic lung disease who live further from hospital or in the most deprived areas have a poorer survival rate

Patients with a chro...

IEA News Peer reviewed – Retrospective cohort study - People Patients with pulmonary fibrosis from t...

Pope appoints Ennis Monsignor to new position in South Sudan

Pope appoints Ennis...

FROM a childhood altar server at Ennis Cathedal, Clare’s Monsignor Séamus Horgan has now been appoin...

For Advertisement

Big Reach

Informer East Africa is one platform for all people. It is a platform where you find so many professionals under one umbrella serving the African communities together.

Very Flexible

We exist to inform you, hear from you and connect you with what is happening around you. We do this professionally and timely as we endeavour to capture all that you should never miss. Informer East Africa is simply news for right now and the future.

Quality News

We only bring to you news that is verified, checked and follows strict journalistic guidelines and standards. We believe in 1. Objective coverage, 2. Impartiality and 3. Fair play.

Banner & Video Ads

A banner & video advertisement from our sponsors will show up every once in a while. It keeps us and our writers coffee replenished.